Here comes the sun
Dutton Hospice
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday September 1,1987 Vol.98.No.8
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Gov. Mike Hayden speaks to members of the Kansas House and Senate about his $1.71 billion highway plan.
Hayden presents his highway plan
By AMBER STENGER
TOPEKA — Gov. Mike Hayden urged the Kansas Legislature to approve his comprehensive highway plan yesterday morning at the beginning of the first special session called in 21 years.
Staff writer
"I firmly believe in your responsibility to either adopt my plan or to develop a responsible alternative of your own," Hayden told legislators.
Special Session '87
Hayden's
Highway Plan
Hayden presented his two-part plan to a joint session of the House and Senate in the House chambers. One part of his plan is a $1.71 billion resolution for highway construction projects. The second part is a bill that would finance the plan through increases in gasoline and diesel fuel taxes and in vehicle registration fees.
"The plan that I present to you today is based on user fees." Hayden said. "Since 1928, user fees have been the primary source of funding for this state's highway system. I continue to believe that it's the best and most efficient way in which our roads and highways should be financed."
If Hayden's plan is approved, the state's gasoline tax would increase from 11 cents to 16 cents a gallon, and the diesel tax would increase from 13 cents to 18 cents. Vehicle registration fees would increase about 50 percent
for trucks and 100 percent for passenger cars. The state also would issue $1.3 billion in revenue bonds. The taxes and fees would be adjusted annually for inflation.
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, said he favored Hayden's plan but had some reservations about it.
He said he agreed that user fees were the best way to finance the highway improvements, as opposed to the increase in state sales tax that some other legislators have proposed.
Kansas, Nebraska to see candidates
"The fuel tax and registration fees proposed ensure that those who use the roads and benefit directly will pay for them." Winter said.
Hayden especially stressed the need for a new highway between Wichita and Joplin, Mo., to help economic development in southeast Kansas.
Charles Krider, a KU professor of business, has publicly supported highway development in the southwestern portion of the state for the same reason.
One of the designated projects in Hayden's plan is a trafficway that would bypass Lawrence on the southwest. Seventy-five percent of the trafficway's cost would be financed by the state, and 25 percent would be
By VALOREE ARMSTRONG
As the 1988 presidential race gathers momentum, candidates and national leaders are beginning to cross the country looking for money and votes. A few of them will even hit Kansas and Nebraska in the coming months, party officials say.
Michael Dukakis, Massachusetts governor and Democratic presidential candidate, will visit Wichita on Sept. 27. He will appear at a public fund-raiser in support of former Democratic Lt. Gov. Tom Docking, who was defeated in a 1986 bid for the Kansas governorship. Money raised will go toward paying the debts Docking accumulated in that race against Gov. Mike Hayden.
Other politicians scheduled to appear in Kansas are:
The Rev. Jesse Jackson, a probable Democratic candidate for president, will appear in Hutchinson at the Kansas State Fair, which runs Sept. 11 to Sept. 20. The exact date of Jackson's appearance has not been decided, but a public fund-raiser has been planned.
President Reagan and Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., will visit Topeka briefly Sunday to celebrate former Kansas Gov. Alf M. Landon's 100th birthday. Dole is a probable Republican candidate for president.
Kevin Yowell, communications director at the Kansas Republican Headquarters in Topeka, said that because the state Republican party had endorsed Dole, few other Republicans would visit the state.
"They don't see the point in coming here now," he said.
In Nebraska, an agriculture forum for presidential candidates will take place Sept. 18 in Lincoln in conjunction with the Farm Aid III concert. The forum was intended to include all presidential candidates, but only two have tentatively consented to appear.
Because of candidates' unwillingness to commit to the forum, it has been changed to include leaders on farm issues.
Larry Hall, an official of Farmers Union of Nebraska, said that after inviting every candidate from both parties, the organizers had received tentative commitments from only Jackson and Richard Gephardt.
The forum instead will be led by Jackson and Gephardt and various interested agricultural leaders, including leaders in organized labor, farm crisis hotline workers, a member of Women Involved in the Farm Economy, and the presidents of the National Farmers' Union, the American Agriculture Movement and the National Farmers' Organization.
"But it's still an important idea — a meaningful discussion of farm
The forum will be in Stuart Theater in Lincoln, which seats 900.
Also in Nebraska, former president Jimmy Carter will speak Sept. 22 at Creighton University in Omaha, as part of the annual John B. Begley Lecture Series.
Stench still lingers despite Union efforts
A breakfast at 7:30 a.m. will precede the 8:10 a.m. speech.
See SESSION, p. 6, col. 1
Only time will clear the air in Woodruff Auditorium, Jim Long, director of unions, said yesterday.
A stench that filled the auditorium in the Kansas State in October 1968 has abated, but it's still noticeable in the back right section of the auditorium. Long said. It's especially noticeable when the auditorium ventilation system is turned off, as it was this summer.
By NOEL GERDES
Staff writer
The stench was noticed after Student Union Activities showed the film "Hail Mary" on Oct. 8 and 9 in the auditorium. The film was a contemporary version of the biblical story of Mary and Joseph.
The film portrayed Joseph as a cab driver, showed Mary nude and contained profanity. About 150 people, mostly Roman Catholics, protested in front of the Union during the film.
One theory about the stench is that someone released a stink bomb during the release as a protest. However,
Long sai no one had complained about the odor since last spring.
Robert Taylor, lecturer in business, teaches two sections of Business 240 in Woodruff Auditorium this semester. He said that no students had complained but that a teaching assistant had noticed a peculiar odor near the far right side of the auditorium.
"Whatever it was, it did create a problem," Long said. "Right after it happened it was pretty tough to handle."
Long said Union staff had tried industrial-aerosol strength aerosol sprays, professional carpet cleaners and new ventilation filters to get rid of the unpleasant smell. But nothing will remove it completely, save time.
Long said that no one knew for certain what chemicals caused the smell and that Union officials had found no evidence of a stink bomb.
"It's such a faint odor," Taylor said. "It has not disrupted the class at all."
Students returning to KU create job opportunities
By MARK TILFORD
Staff writer
KU students looking for part-time employment should find a wealth of opportunities around campus and Lawrence this fall.
With the return of students, a dire need for help has come up, many employers say.
Residence hall caterakers, for example, are one of the best places to hunt for jobs. Fifty positions there remain unfilled, said Lenoir Ekdahl, director of food services for the student housing office.
"We don't have enough." Ekdahl said of her student employees.
Part of the problem is that students haven't had a chance to settle into their residences yet, she said. "After Labor Day, we might be able to pick up more people," she said.
"We make it, but it is much more comfortable to have full staffs," she said. "We also like to have them on the team. We have every other week off."
Ekdahl said that a reduced number of workers did not provide a real problem for diners but that it could be taxing on the staff.
But even after full staffs have been set, lunch time is a problem because of student workers' schedules.
"We will never be good on noon meals," Ekdahl said. "We also
need people to stay to clean up after breakfast, but students have to leave for their 9:30 classes. "
Carol Cooper, payroll clerk in the student housing office, said most positions for security monitors and desk assistants in the residence halls had been filled. She said the housing office employed about 750 students on a part-time basis.
Difficult student schedules are also a problem for some off-campus employers.
See related story p. 7
The primary handler of on-campus jobs, the student financial aid office, is waiting for students who have been accepted into its program to come to the office to pick up eligibility cards, said Julie Cooper, director of student employment.
She said that about 400 to 450 students had been accepted into the college work-study program,
He said the service, which is run by the state, handled the placement of about 5,000 to 6,000 employees a year, 20 to 25 percent of which are students.
Ed Mills, manager of the Lawrence Job Service Center, 833 Ohio St., said scheduling around student class schedules was the main problem between students and employers who were matched by the service.
Only about one out of every five of the students, though, has picked up his card. Students need the cards to prove they're eligible for work-study cards.
The state job program, Cooper said, is not applied for as a financial aid service, but the office does match employers and employees for it.
"We would like to tell students who applied to please come and pick up their cards." Cooper said. "These are crying for help right now."
For students who apply for either the college or state work-study program, cards listing available positions are posted outside of the financial aid office in the basement of Strong Hall.
which is directed by the federal government and for which students apply through financial aid packages.
The office also handles student hourly positions.
Cooper said Watson Library and the residence hall system were the two places on campus with the greatest need for employees.
Most students average about minimum wage on campus jobs. Cooper said her office recommended that students not work more than 15 to 20 hours a week because of their class schedules
See JOBS, p. 6, col. 1
Dave Niebergall/KANSAN
East
Haymond Magness, Fairland, Okla., junior, reshelves books in the stacks at Watson Library. Magness works 13 hours a week through the federal work-study program.
Russians may allow bomb test
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A leading Soviet arms control official said Monday the Kremlin would consider a U.S. proposal for monitoring nuclear tests and might permit the United States to explode its own bomb at a Soviet test range to check monitoring equipment.
Col. Gen. Nikolai Chervov, an official of the Soviet defense ministry, said that in such a case the Soviet Union would expect to be permitted to explode a Soviet nuclear device at the U.S. test site in Nevada.
The proposal, linked to negotiations for a new test ban agreement, appeared to catch U.S. officials by surprise.
Max Kampelman, the chief U.S. negotiator for arms reduction talks in Geneva, heard Chervov's remarks at a Capitol Hill luncheon, took notes on it and told reporters it was worth pursuing.
In Santa Barbara, Calif., an aide with vacationing President Reagan said there was no immediate official White House response to the announcement.
"As we have seen so many times in the past, they (the Soviets) say something and then subsequently attach conditions, and that may well be the case this time," said the official, speaking on condition he not be identified.
Chervoy, a member of the Soviet delegation to last week's conference on U.S.-Soviet relations held at Chautaqua, N.Y., said through an interpreter that "the Soviet Union is prepared to accept any type of verification" on a test-ban agreement.
The official said a formal response might wait until the Soviet proposal was formally presented at negotiations in Geneva.
"There is no problem on verification." Chervov said.
He also said he thought there was no barrier to prevent the early signing of an agreement eliminating medium-range nuclear missiles from Europe but that problems remained on negotiations for large reductions in strategic missiles.
Chervov said Soviet willingness to accommodate U.S. efforts to verify a test-ban treaty might include adoption of the U.S. bid to implant the Cortex monitoring system at Soviet nuclear test ranges.
The system involves placing a monitoring device in a hole bored near the site of an atomic explosion.
"If you want to deploy the Cortex system, we would be prepared to consider that proposal on a mutually acceptable basis." Cherov said.
"If you want to calibrate the instruments, feel free to come to our test ranges with a nuclear device of your own, and explode it there to make sure that everything is all right.
2
Tuesday, September 1, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
8 killed, 42 missing in mine crash as elevator cable fails in S. Africa
WELKOM, South Africa — A mine elevator cable failed yesterday, sending a metal cage full of miners crashing to the bottom of a 4,500-foot shaft, company officials said. At least eight men were reported killed and 42 were missing.
The accident occurred as hundreds of thousands of blacks returned to gold and coal mines after a three-week national strike. Five miners were pulled alive
from a small excavated platform 2,300 feet down where rescuers found them. Eight bodies were found nearby.
Israeli workers protest end of jet project
All five were hospitalized with burns. One miner was in serious condition.
"We certainly seem to be learning towards an explosion, but we can't say what caused it," mine manager Gregory Maude said in speculating on the cause of the accident.
JERUSALEM — Hundreds of angry aircraft workers blocked traffic with burning tires and shouted anti-American slogans yesterday to protest Israel's decision to scrap production of the Lavi jet fighter.
pressure to cancel the U.S. financed project because it was over budget.
The Cabinet halted the Lavi by a vote of 12-11 with one abstention Sunday following strong American
Israel had planned to produce more than 70 of the advanced combat aircraft in the 1990s with the United States providing about $500 million a year toward the project.
Surrogates warn against parenting for pay
WASHINGTON — Mary Beth Whitehead, who lost her "Baby M" in a bitter court fight, joined other surrogate mothers yesterday in announcing a campaign to warn women about the anguish of parenting for pay.
Whitehead and the others
decried surrogate-parenting contracts as a form of reproductive "slavery" and called for a federal ban on the practice.
The women spoke on behalf of a coalition created to provide moral and legal support for surrogate mothers.
Deputies set trap for furry marijuana thief
MINDEN, Nev. — Douglas County deputies have set a trap for a culprit who got into an evidence room and made off with some marijuana.
While nobody has seen the thief, it's believed that the culprit is about three inches long and furry. The trap that's been set is a mouse trap.
Iran may suffer arms embargo
Reagan administration consults with four UNSC members
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Reagan administration, while deploring Iraq's resumption of the "tanker war" in the Persian Gulf as a dangerous development, said yesterday it was consulting with other members of the United Nations Security Council on an arms embargo against Iran.
A State Department spokeswoman, Phyllis Oakley, acknowledged that getting an embargo resolution through the council would be more difficult than the cease-fire passed July 20 with the support of China and the Soviet Union.
the Soviet Union.
She declined to say when the United States would move for a worldwide embargo against Iran but said the Security Council should consider it very soon.
Mrs. Oakley said the renewal of Iraqi attacks on Iranian oil shipments last weekend after a 45-day
Reading:
In Santa Barbara, Calif., President Reagan's chief spokesman decried Iraq's bombing of Iranian oil facilities and insisted that the administration was pursuing an even-handed policy toward the warring Persian Gulf nations.
self-imposed cease-fire made the situation in the Gulf more dangerous.
Briefing reporters while the vacationing Reagan did ranch chores and went horseback riding, spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said "our policy in the gulf is one of neutrality. We don't ask one side to do one thing and not another."
"Clearly, this is a time for restraint on all sides," she said, reading from a prepared statement.
another. Fitzwater said the United States had been in contact with Iraqi officials to express concern in the wake of two consecutive days of air raids directed by Baghdad against Iranian
From The Associated Press.
offshore oil facilities.
U. S. warships are protecting oil shipments from Kuwait, an ally of Iraq, from Iranian attack. An Iranian mine in the Gulf damaged the Bridgeton, a U.S.-registered tanker, but otherwise Tehran has held its fire while U.S. maintained a moratorium.
However, Iran has vowed that if its gulf oil-exporting facilities or tankers came under Iraqi attack, Kuwaiti ships and the U.S. warships escorting them would be in danger of Iranian attack.
attack. China, which sold Silkworm antiship missiles to Iran, or the Soviet Union, whose allies in Eastern Europe provided other arms, can block a sanctions resolution with the veto available to the five permanent members of the Security Council. The three others are the United States, Britain and France.
83 thought dead in Thai jet crash
The Associated Press
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) — A AirThai airways jet plunged into the sea near Phuket Island yesterday and officials said they thought all 83 people aboard were killed.
A statement from Dragon Airlines Ltd. in Hong Kong said company officials spoke to the captain of its aircraft and were assured that the Dragonair aircraft was not involved. It gave no details, and the Dragonair jet's crew would not talk to reporters when the plane returned.
people abroad. Two Americans were said to be among the 37 foreigners on the Boeing 737 domestic flight.
"As of 10:30 p.m., Thai Airways believes there are no survivors," a statement from the airline said. An earlier report from Air Marshal Narong Dithipeng, managing director of the state-run airline, said many people were thought to have survived.
Narong told a news conference earlier yesterday that the plane was trying to evade a 737 of the Hong Kong-based line Dragonair when it crashed into the Andaman Sea eight miles from the resort island's airport.
Spokesmen said 17 bodies were recovered before search operations halted for the night because of high winds and poor visibility. Meteorologists said skies were clear when the crash occurred.
Pravyon Thavisang, manager of the Phuket airport, said the aircraft were following a landing procedure that caused no problems in the past. He told The Associated Press by telephone he doubted there were any survivors.
Law gives business new role
From California fruit farms to the textile mills of Tennessee, the United States' 7 million employers will take on the role of government immigration agents today under a sweeping new law that requires them to document the legal status of their employees.
Employers must sign the new forms, called the 1.9, after a review of supporting documents, such as passports, naturalization certificates or permanent residence cards, that prove all employees hired since last Nov. 6 are eligible to work in the United States.
A random nationwide check of businesses by The Associated Press indicated a high level of compliance with the Sept. 1 deadline for having new forms on file for review by the Immigration and Naturalization Service.
United States. The AP's survey also found no evidence of the widespread confusion and mass dismissals of employees that some critics had predicted after President Reagan signed the law.
President Reagan
But many company executives complained about the additional bureaucracy imposed upon them by the Immigration Reform and Control Act, which makes it a crime for employers knowingly to hire illegal aliens.
arrayn.
"It is a lot of extra paperwork we're not too pleased with, but it's something we're able to handle," said John Pennington, spokesman for Genesco Inc.
Kansas City Here We Come!
Take a bus to see the Royals in K.C. Price includes transportation, view level seat, a Royal's baseball cap, souvenir sticker, and ballpoint pen.
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sign up at the SUA office in the Main Kansas Union
- men with average scores of 175 and above
* women with average scores of 140 and above
* for more information call Michael Fine 864-3534
* tryouts start Sept. 12, 1987
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, September 1, 1987
Campus/Area
3
Local Briefs
Fire officials to give results of safety checks
The Lawrence Fire Department will announce findings from its fire safety inspections of KU fraternity and sorority houses at 9 a.m. Friday. The announcement will be at fire station number one, 746 Kentucky St.
Fire Chief Jim McSwain said in July that his department in the future would take "a more conservative view of problems that have been grandfathered in the past" at fraternities and sororites. In April he fainted the Sigma Phi Epsilon institution house, 1645 Tennessee St.
The fraternity will have an open house of its renovated house Sept. 9.
Senate committees taking applications
Student Senate will be taking Senate to students this week, said Stephanie Quincy, student body vice president.
Senators will be on Wescoe Beach from about 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. to hand out applications for various Senate committees. Any student can apply. Applications are due Friday in the Senate office, room 149 in the Burge Union.
Quincy said she wanted student senators to keep office hours on Wesco Beach all semester. If the weather is bad this week, the senators will be in the Strong Hall rotunda.
"We think it keeps student senators accountable," Quincy said.
Sanchez to speak in Landon series
Oscar Arias Sanchez, president of Costa Rica, will deliver a Land on Lecture at Kansas State University first stop of a U.S. speaking tour.
During the lecture at 10:30 a.m.
Sept. 21 at McCain Auditorium,
Arias is expected to discuss the
peace accords he reached with
four other Central American
countries this month in Guatemala.
Arias will speak to Congress on Sept. 22, address the opening session of the United Nations on Sept. 23 and receive an honorary degree from Harvard University on Sept. 24.
State Sen. Nancy Kassebaum will deliver a Landon Lecture at 10:30 a.m. Sept.9 at McCain Auditorium. Kassebaum is the daughter of former Kansas Gov. Alf M. Landon, for whom the lecture series is named.
Magazine awards journalism school
Prospective journalism graduate students with a liberal arts background but little or no journalism experience will benefit from a new award made to the school by the publishers of Reader's Digest magazine, said Rick Musser, associate professor of journalism and director of graduate studies.
The Readers' Digest Foundation has awarded the school $12,500 this year. The award is renewable. Mussler said the school would likely sponsor two fellowships a year for book筹集 200 and use the remainder for sending brochures and information to small, liberal arts colleges.
Correction
Because of a reporter's error, Stanley Koplik's name was misspelled in yesterday's Kansan. Koplik is the executive director of the Kansas Board of Regents.
Meal plan allowing flexibility
Bv VIRGINIA McGRATH
Staff writer
KU residence halls have a new meal plan this year that includes reciprocal eating privileges between all the halls and a computerized way of checking in.
The new reciprocity rule applies to all residence halls, including all-men and all-women halls.
"There has been a nice interaction between halls at meal time," said Rand Schneider, residence hall hall and Lewis Hall, all an women's hall.
Men are welcome at meals there as long as they are escorted, Schneider said. She said some residents from nearby halls ate at Lewis.
And residents said that generally the new reciprocal eating program wasn't causing long lunch lines at the balls closest to campus.
Mark Daubert, Otis sophomore, is a resident at Joseph R. Pearson Hall, one of the halls closest to campus. He said he hadn't noticed more residents from other halls than usual eating lunch at JRP, although some women now ate there.
Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said, "This new system will be a whole lot more flexible because students can eat in any residence hall cafeteria they want. It will also be more economical because we can better determine students' eating patterns."
Lenoir Ekdahl, director of food services, said the computerized system also would provide a more efficient way to booking people in and out of cafeterias.
When students go through the lines, they need their KUIDs, which now have a metallic strip on back the. The card is run through a computer which then reads the code on the strip and counts that student. Incoming freshmen living in residence halls received their I.D.s with the metallic strip on it. Students who already had I.D.s received new ones.
Stoner said that because the computer determined how many students usually eat at each residence hall at Piedmont College, he'd determine how much food to order.
Also, the system allows the housing
of it to operate cafeterias more
efficiently.
For example, some halls have more residents who go home on weekends than others, he said. When very few residents remain in the halls they can all be asked to eat in one cafeteria, he said.
KAYLOR DAVIS
Rob Loud, Concord, Calif., senior, leaps high in the air to perform a "clipper jump." Loud was practicing his hacky-sack skills Friday afternoon in front of Wescoe Hall.
Lisa Jones/KANSAN
Jump shot
Free cab service costly for Senate
By BRIAN BARESCH
Staff writer
Students wanting a free ride home from Secure Cab last spring may have found themselves calling the wrong number after the service switched cab companies.
To avoid possible confusion this spring, Secure Cab soon will have a permanent, on-campus 864 number.
The Student Senate service, nicknamed Tipsy Taxi because it frequently serves students who may not be fit to drive home from parties, is free with a valid KUID from midnight to 3 a.m. week nights and from 10 p.m. to 3 a.m. weeks.
The service's phone number is now 843-280-2881. Charles Bryant, director of the Senate Transportation Board, said he would be in effect in about a month.
Last January the phone number changed when Union Cab, 1045 New Jersey St., underbid City Cab Co., which originally had the contract. As a result, the number in the directory was incorrect spring semester.
Bryant said the new, 864 on-campus number would be transferred from the Burge Union to the cab company during Secure Cab's operation hours. The transfer cost, about $20 a month, will be paid for by the cab company, he said.
Student Senate finances the service by paying Union Cab Co. $2.50 for each ride the company gives to a student. The service was started in March 1866 to offer saferides home to students who has been drinking. It is also available to students who may not feel safe walking home late at night
The service provided about 300 free rides a week to students in March, last semester's busiest month.
according to Ward Thompson, president of Union Cabal, sister company
Bryant said he expected the same number of passengers this year once the new phone number was published and in effect.
In August, about 470 students took advantage of the service, the company said. A week-by-week breakdown was not available.
Bryant estimated that the Senate would pay about $20,000 for the rides that
That is up from the close to $2,800 the Senate paid the first year, said Stephanie Quincy, student body vice president.
"Secure Cab is extremely successful — so successful that it's exceeded our wildest expectation of how much it would cost," Quincy said.
Bryant said the transportation board was looking at ways to curb abuse, such as people who use the service regularly to get home from a late job. One possibility would be to limit rides or charge riders a fee, he said. The board now is working on a definition of abuse.
This winter's contract bidding process might not be competitive because City Cab Co, folded over the summer, Bryant said. He said the board was considering putting other options, including a special bus or van route, into the bidding process.
"Hopefully there'll be competition in the next bid," he said.
"We're hoping to get them calling us when they need a cab," he said. "Overall, I think it's a worthwhile program."
Thompson said that his company was breaking even with the service but that it needed to make students more familiar with Union Cab.
College Bowl to appear on television
By BRAD ADDINGTON Staff writer
Five-member KU team to be featured on Nov. 1 Disney Channel broadcast
Five KU students will appear on the Disney Channel in November but not as Mousekeeteers. They will be shown participating in the 1987 National College Quiz Bowl.
Last year's KU team, known as Onan's Angels, will be one of 16 teams appearing in "College Bowl
87", which will air at 5:30 p.m. sunday from Sept. 13 to Dec. 20. The
team will appear on the Nov. 1 broadcast
The team's members are Richard
Turk, Overland Park senior; James Mamalis, Prairie Village junior; Saku Gunasegaram, Sri Lanka senior; John Chappell, Overland Park senior; and Eric Matheis, Overland Park senior. Gunasegaram is an alternate for the team.
The team traveled in June to Disney World's Epcot Center in Orlando, Fla., for the five-day taping of the tournament.
"We usually got to the studio by 9:30." Turk said. "It usually took until four in the afternoon to get everything done."
Turk said he did not find the taping of the contest distracting.
"I don't really mind being filmed all that much. The production was fine. The tournament itself everybody had problems with." he said.
He said many contestants did not like the fact that teams were eliminated after a single defeat. He said he thought the host, Dick Cavett, was humorous but a little unfamiliar with the rules.
"The questions were just too easy for a national tournament," Turk said. He said he thought the questions
were simplified because the contest was geared toward a home audience
The KU team lost in its first round. But that meant more time to explore Center and the Magic Kingdom, both part of Disney World, members said.
Gunasegaram said, "That was kind of the nice thing about losing."
She said she also enjoyed learning about the different perspectives of college students from across the nation.
County to reappraise property in two student residence areas
Staff writer
By BEN JOHNSTON Staff writer
Douglas County began Monday to reappraise property values in a one-quarter-square-mile area north of Memorial Stadium, where many KU students live.
August Dettbarn, reappraisal field supervisor for the county, said it would take three data collectors about three weeks to reappraise all the houses and apartments in an area bounded by 11th Street on the north, Sixth Street on the south, Louisiana Street on the east and Emery Road on the west.
Dettbarn also said a 1-square mile area bounded by 15th Street on the north, Sixth Street on the south, Iowa Street on the east and Kasold Drive on the west would be appraised in about three weeks. He said the area, which also has a large student popul
lation, would be the last part of Lawrence to be reappraised.
Reappraisal is a process that determines the proper updated value of real estate. It is done by adding the value of any improvements made on a property to the original value before changes were made.
The updated value is then used to determine the amount of property tax paid.
"We ask the owners how many rooms they have, how many bedrooms they have, how many bathrooms they have and many other questions designed to determine the value," Dettbann said. "If there are no changes from the last reappraisal,
To determine the market value of a house or apartment, data collectors measure the foundation and ask the architects about the interior of the structure.
we don't change the value."
Appraisers will make their rounds between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. If owners are not home when they visit, the appraisers will leave information cards to be filled out. Appraisers may identify cards, Dettbarn said.
Dettbarn said the county appraised property every year, but in 1984, for the first time since 1964, the state decided to do a statewide appraisal.
"The counties report to the state, and apparently the state felt a lot of things weren't being reported," he said. "They wanted to have more equity. I guess there were cases where people put in an extra bathroom or kitchen, and there was no record of it, so the state said, 'Go out and find these people.'"
2 thieves green with envy snag plant from yogurt store in broad sunlight
Growing pains
By a Kansan reporter
Lawrence police are out beating the bushes to find two men who walked into a yogurt store about 1 p.m. Sunday and snatched a potted plant from a counter.
Cecilia Wood, manager of The Country's Best Yogurt, 711 W. 23rd St., said employees saw two young men walk out the door with the 3-foot high, green and yellow plant and its bamboo wicker pot, plant it in their car and drive off.
Apparently, the green-thumbed young men who took the plant also were green about disguising their appearances. Employees were
able to furnish police with enough informa for Wood to say she thought there was a good chance the alleged plantnappers would be caught.
Wood said she thought the plant was a member of the dieffenbachia family and was valued at $30. The plant had no name but had grown on employees during the year it had adorned the counter.
"We miss it," she said.
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Tuesday, September 1. 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A book can be an open door.
Read it and weep
But new and challenging ideas frighten some people. They say some information should be withheld from students. These people try to ban the intruding thoughts.
Some say such suppression of ideas is increasing.
Around the country, books such as "Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle's Magic," John Steinbeck's "The Grapes of Wrath" and Alice Walker's "The Color Purple" have been the subjects of controversy.
The most eloquent arguments against censorship come from writers themselves.
In 1625, Francis Bacon wrote, "Reading maketh a full man." And in 1904, Franz Kafka explained that it was appropriate for readers to be uncomfortable with what a book said:
But in Tennessee and Alabama textbook cases, courts recently decided against the censors. These are commendable decisions.
In 1891, Oscar Wilde wrote, "There is no such thing as a moral or an immoral book. Books are well-written, or badly written. That is all."
"We need the books that affect us like a disaster, that grieve us deeply, like the death of someone we loved more than ourselves, like being banished into forests far from everyone, like a suicide. A book must be the ax for the frozen sea inside us."
The fire-gutted house provides a graphic metaphor for the AIDS hysteria that is sweeping the country.
Let students learn about the world. All of it.
AIDS at school
Three children infected with the AIDS virus and their parents must find a new home after a suspicious fire destroyed their old one in Arcadia, Fla.
This family experienced AIDS hysteria in the classroom as well. And efforts to quell the hysteria must take place in the classroom.
related topic would be:
As for the controversy, say, if an AIDS-infected child were to attend a public school, KU's future teachers and administrators are taught to handle controversy in general.
Encouraging, however, is a new class, "Educational Conference on AIDS and other STDs (sexually transmitted diseases)," which began this semester.
classroom.
At KU, efforts to teach teachers how to address AIDS issues in the public schools have been general. One professor at the School of Education said AIDS issues were addressed in students' community health education class — just as any other health-related topic would be discussed.
which began this semester. AIDS education calms hysteria. And just maybe, AIDS education will stress prevention methods that will in time mean death for the killer virus.
Reward honesty
Psychologists coined the term positive reinforcement to describe the process of rewarding desirable acts. A dog that performs a trick correctly would be rewarded with a biscuit. A Scotch snack.
Let's hope President Reagan and the Senate are familiar with this basic theory of positive reinforcement.
Former national security adviser John M. Poindexter apparently wants to retire at the rank of vice admiral rather than at the rank of rear admiral, which he was reduced to upon leaving his post after the Iran-contra affair.
Poindexter's friend and trustee of his legal defense fund said Poindexter was concerned about the image of the U.S. Navy.
Simple application of the positive reinforcement theory to the military would mean that those who served their country witherve and honesty would be promoted.
serve and maintain the congressional hearings that he kept Reagan in the dark and destroyed documents authorizing the sale as a weapons-for-hostages transaction.
To reward dishonesty reinforces the acts of self-appointed military men with misguided missions.
Poindexter's request must first cross the president's desk From, there it requires Senate confirmation.
But a promotion for Poindexter would demote the image of the Navy, where he served for nearly 30 years, and a demotion of standards of conduct for our country's leaders.
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
News staff
Jennifer Benjamin ... Editor
Juli Wallen ... Managing editor
John Benner ... News editor
Beth Copeland ... Editorial editor
Sally Streff ... Campus editor
Brian Kabelline ... Sports editor
Dan Thurstmann ... Photo editor
Bill Skelter ... Graphics editor
Tom Ehlen ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Donnie J. Hardy...Business manager
Robert Hughes...Advertising manager
Kelly Scherer...Retail sales manager
Kurt Messersmith...Campus sales manager
Greg Knipp...Production manager
David Derfelt...National sales manager
Angelia Clarke...Classified manager
Ron Weems...Director of marketing
Jennie 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.
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can be made of Letters, guest shots and columns are the opinion of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University Daily Kansan. Editorials are the opinion of the Kansan editorial board.
The University Daily Kansan (UPSS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stairwater Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60405, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid Lawrence, Kan. 60404. Annual subscriptions are $3 and $50 outside the county. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the activity fee.
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JIM BERSHAM
CINEMA NUIT
ENQUÈRE
©1987
OUR NEAR-MISS PRESIDENT
Scandal scars Reagan's term
There are those among us who complain when Congress takes the month of August off to regroup and re-establish ties with its constituencies. I have nothing but the deepest gratitude for any alleged supreme being that may be responsible for this.
I certainly have had my fill of Washington for one summer. No doubt many think Congress is suffering from overexposure. But the main reason I say this summer recess is particularly timely is not so much for the break from debauchery but more to give the political sides a chance to gear up for the ensuing battles this fall.
President Reagan, as promised, got the ball rolling with his post-scandal assessment a couple of weeks ago. The administration's aim in putting him before the cameras seemed to be an attempt to show that he is still capable of establishing an agenda.
Cutesy proverbs and sentimental anecdotes have always been the president's forte. A quick and syrup tale about some disadvantaged but courageous youngster has always paid off for the president. Soothing yet meaningless phrases like "rest assured" and "make no mistake about it" riddled his speech with reckless abandon that night and are the same sort of mindless pap the American public has fed on the last seven years.
The administration was very wise to put the president back on this familiar ground. Nevertheless, it was taking a big risk to put him on TV at such a fragile political period.
Jim Farquhar Staff Columnist
strangey, the formula didn't work like it had so faithfully in the past. According to an NBC poll taken right after the speech, more than half the people in the country still believed the president had knowledge of the diversion.
Maybe it was that grizzly, red blotch on his nose that tarnished the president's plastic image — to the point where reason prevailed over emotion.
Or maybe this country has finally grown tired of a man who has so much facade and so little ability to run a country. Stranger things have happened.
arms reduction. I have nothing but giggies for his hypocritical balanced budget proposal. But when it comes to Central America and the Supreme Court nomination, the president's policies will get an argument from me and, more important, a good fight from Congress.
Agendawise, the president has narrowed the focus of the last leg of his term to four topics: arms reduction with the Soviets, his balanced budget proposal, the contrasts and the confirmation of his Supreme Court nominee, Robert Bork.
I have nothing but applause for his attempts at
Both conservatives and liberals are now rallying their resources for these two crucial
The American Freedom Coalition has taken the initiative for the far right. A mere $10 will help it "expose the soft-on-communism left wingers in Congress" and buy a commemorative framed photo of Lt. Col. Oliver North being sworn in at the hearings.
photo of my very own? Oh, if only I could get it done on black velvet. And where could I go to find out about the soft-in-the-head, right-wing reactionaries who think the only way to deal with a problem is through blooded?
President Reagan is right when he says that it's time to move on past the Iran-Contra scandal; there are many crucial issues for Washington to decide before he leaves.
A wrong move now could mean U.S. involvement in Central America long after he leaves, and a confirmation for Bork could leave his imprint on politics well into the next century. How history remembers Reagan could linger on these last 18 months.
Jim Farquhar is an Olathe junior majoring in journalism.
Rejected woman learns life after rush
I'm one of the "400 or so" who didn't get into a sorority.
On Saturday, Aug. 15, I busted myself down to the Holldome to register for the University of Kansas' first fall sorority rush. One week later, I found out that I didn't get in. I was devastated. I thought my life would end.
At first, I was envious and even jealous of the 810 girls who made it into one KU's 14 sororities. Although I've always wanted to be in a sorority, I stopped feeling sorry for myself and realized that even sororites can be worthwhile groups to be a part of, there is life after sorority! I changed my attitude and am now sincerely happy for the girls who did get into sororities.
As a native of Ames, Iowa, where sorority rush has been in the fall as long as I can remember, I was thrilled to change back to fall rush. I can't tell
Despite the pros and cons of being in a sorority, rush week, humorously termed "hell week" by some of the rushes, was a worthwhile experience. The most obvious fringe benefit of going through sorority rush — especially in the fall, was meeting some of KU's approximately 25,000 students.
Margaret Townsend Guest Shot
P. M. S.
you how comforting it is to walk across campus and see the familiar face of a sorority girl whom you met, a fellow rushew whom you befriended throughout the week, or a girl on your residence hall floor whom you got to know through rush meetings and parties.
In addition to the friends that I, other rushes and sorority girls alike made, rush week also served as a learning experience. We learned to make decisions on our own (for the most part). We learned to savor our successes, and we learned to deal with disappointments. And, believe me, almost every rusher had to deal with disappointments.
I'd heard rumors about how cut-throat sorority rush was at KU, but no description can fully explain the emotional teeter-totter that most of the rushes experienced during the week of Aug. 16 through 22. Busting off to 14, five, five, seven and three parties a day, making polite conversation with strangers, trying to gracefully eat cookies and drink punch while maintaining a conversation, and getting up at 6 a.m. to find out that you'd been cut by a house that you had felt so comfortable at wasn't all fun and games — especially when it occurred, for most, more than once in a five-day period.
Most of us shed our fair share of tears during that week. Approximately 810 of us pledged a sorority, and I think all of us are glad it's over. But whether you pledged a house, dropped out of rush or didn't get asked to pledge, pat yourself on the back! You spent a week going to parties, meeting new people, and you learned how to deal with disappointments.
Margaret Townsend is a Ames, Iowa, freshman majoring in journalism.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
by contact with international students who are attracted here both by KU's high-caliber programs and by the affordability of going to school and living in Lawrence.
Education first
In regard to Dan Houston's editorial "KU can dump the bargain table," I would like to suggest that perhaps Houston has forgotten that higher education is not simply a business venture. Also, he may be unaware of the fact that the quality of the education received by Kansans at this University is augmented considerably by the presence of non-resident citizens, and further,
Standards for admissions at KU should be strict. However, further hikes in tuition costs for non-resident citizens and international students would do absolutely nothing to improve the image of this University. On the contrary, such increases would indicate that KU considers prospective students an exploitable market and the education process a money-making mill. Education is a service; students should be charged a fair price for this service. If the costs of providing this service go up, then the price for a KU education should increase accordingly. This logical implication is only valid ui-direc-
tionally.
If KU raises prices in order to improve quality, the University will have entered the era of the modern rip-off hype.
The results of such a move could conceivably include a more smoothly running, more efficient educational factory-like system that would prepare students to occupy various career niches in the world. However, once the value of a KU education becomes only a matter of dollars and cents, the boundary between a liberal education and vocational-tech training will begin to fade and blur.
Robert Bruce Scott, Great Bend graduate student.
BLOOM COUNTY
DEAR MILO,
IT'S ME, YOUR FRIEND
OPUS. I AM SAFE
AND WORKING.
by Berke Breathed
DRAINED OF ALL
SELF-RESPECT. I'M
AFRAID THAT I HAVE
DRIFTED TO THE
UGLIER SIDE OF LIFE'S
GRAND STAGE...
NIGHTLY I CHEAPEN AND
EXPLOIT MY BODY BEFORE
OTHERS MORE MISERABLE
THAN ME...A TAWDRY WALTZ
OF LOST SOUL5. LONELY
ARE THE BRAVE,
MILO...
MADAM, I AM
"SHAKING MY
BOOTY."
YOU'RE
WADDLING.
THE
LADIE'S
PLAGE
AUGUSTA, ARIZONA
---
THE FAR SIDE
Bv GARY LARSON
9-1
© 1987 Universal Press Syndicate
5
"Let go, Morty! Let go, Morty! You're pulling me in!
... Let go, Morty! You're pulling me in!"
On the Record
A KU student was assaulted at about 11 p.m. Friday in front of his home in the 1400 block of Westbrooke Street, Lawrence police reported. The student and a friend allegedly were followed home by two men who pulled their car in front of the student's car in his driveway. They kicked the side of the car, causing $150 in damage, and punched the student in the mouth. The incident is under investigation, police said.
A color television, video cassette recorder, power amplifier, pre-am, compact disc player and 30 compact discs, valued together at $2,910, were taken between 1 a.m. and 1:30 a.m. Saturday from a student's apartment at Jayhawk Towers, KU police reported.
A radio-cassette player, a pair of speakers, a tape case and 15 tapes, valued together at $330, were taken between 9 p.m. Friday and 9 p.m.
Saturday from a car parked near Jayhawker Towers, KU police reported.
A chest of drawers valued at $350 was taken between May 1 and Aug. 10 from a KU residence hall, KU police reported.
- Two watches, valued together at $290, were taken between 6 a.m. and 7 a.m. Friday from a student's room at McCollum Hall, KU police reported.
- A hockey jersey and a leather watch, valued together at $300, were taken between 6 a.m. and 7 a.m. Thursday from a student's room at McCollum Hall, KU police reported.
■ The tires on a car parked near an apartment complex in the 900 block of Kentucky Street were deflated between 10:30 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. Saturday, causing $120 in damage, Lawrence police reported.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, September 1. 1987
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Colleen Siebens, a 1987 KU graduate and former staff member of the University Daily Kansan who was critically injured in a car accident this summer, has almost completely recovered. She says she is ready to come back to KU and get another degree.
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Staff writer
"I hate this place. I hate Texas. I can't wait to get back to KU." Siebs said last week from Dallas, where she is recuperating.
Siebes was injured June 7 when her car was struck by a man who was later charged with driving while intoxicated. Siebs graduated with a journalism degree May 17, just three weeks before her accident. She had been a wire editor for the Kansan in the spring.
GET INVOLVED NOW!
— Colleen Siebes 1987 KU graduate
The doctors say it's been almost a miraculous recovery. They had expected I wouldn't walk for about six months to a year, and I was walking only a month after the accident.'
MARIA POPELLA
According to the Dallas County police report, the driver, Mark Chapman, 29 of Dallas, failed to stop at a red light and struck Siebens' car in an intersection. Siebens suffered a head injury and a collapsed lung and had to have her spleen removed. She was in a full coma for five days and a partial coma for about another week.
Siebs said, "The doctors say it's been almost a miraculous recovery. They had expected I wouldn't walk for about six months to a year, and I was walking only a month after the accident."
Earl Bullock, Dallas County clerk,
said Chapman had been charged with
driving while intoxicated and had
been indicted by a grand jury on
charges of aggravated assault with
serious bodily injury. His case has
not yet gone to trial.
Dawn O'Malley, a 1987 KU graduate and friend of Siebes, said she thought Siebes felt sorry for Chapman.
6 T
Colleen Siebes
Siebs said, "At first I was really compassionate, but I hadn't really thought it through. As long as my family is here in Dallas, I don't want him on the streets."
"Colleen had a thing about drunk driving," she said. "That was something she felt very strongly about."
Pat Siebes, Colleen's mother, said it was ironic that her daughter was hit by a man who had been charged with drunk driving.
"I don't think journalism is really for me," she said. "I think I would be good at it (therapy) because I could understand their experiences firsthand."
Siebes said she hoped to complete the final stages of her therapy soon.
Siebes is now living in her parents' home in Dallas and is completing her treatment through a re-entry program at Baylor Rehabilitation Center in Dallas.
She said she planned to go back to school and study therapy or neuropsychiatry.
Siebes's mother said her daughter was almost completely recovered except for the most advanced motor skills.
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Names of Librarians 1987
Lawrence Book
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KU WATER SKI TEAM & CLUB MEETING
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Tuesday, September 1 6:30 p.m.
Kansas Room in Kansas Union
Any Questions,call Bruce Belcher at 749-5188
all
Tuesday, September 1, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Session
Continued from p. 1
paid for by Douglas County and the city of Lawrence.
But Winter said Hayden's plan was more important to other parts of the state than it was to the Lawrence area.
"We don't have the highway needs that other areas do," he said. "And I think we ask them for a lot — we will ask them for a lot. So we need to try very hard to be reasonable and think through this process of how we can be very flexible and helpful to them
when they need something."
After Hayden's speech, the Senate passed a resolution, 24-14, that limited the Legislature to acting on the highway proposal and related items during the special session. Senate President Robert Talkington, R-Iola, said the resolution was necessary to prevent a six-week or two-month session.
The Senate's actions followed an attempt in the House to adjourn the session on its first day. Rep. Gary
Blumenthal, D-Merriam, led the effort, but an adjournment resolution was defeated, 20-99.
"I think the point had to be made that a number of us were opposed to a calling of a special session," Blumental said.
The Associated Press supplied some information for this story.
Debate on Hayden's plan is scheduled to begin in committees of both houses at 9 a.m. today.
Jobs
Continued from p.1
She also said that on-campus employers had a tendency to work better with students because they understood student schedules,
But Denny Powers, personnel manager at Gibson's Discount Center, 2525 Iowa St., said his store would return to using a large number of student employees after two years of using mostly Lawrence residents who worked full time.
"We realized we needed to take advantage of a very viable work force," Powers said.
He said work schedules at Gibson's had been altered so more students would be able to work evenings.
From the KU Weather Service
Gibson's now will have a five-hour shift, from 4 to 9 p.m., Powers said.
"We find students to be very intelligent and highly motivated," he said.
Powers said he was not distressed by the fact that students frequently quit their jobs and had to be replaced by newer employees.
The job situation at Gibson's is tight right now because of a large number of applications, but all students are welcome to apply. Powers said.
"Turnover is a small, negative aspect " he said
pect, he said.
Todd Olson, president of Enter
tel, agreed. His firm is a local telemarketing service at 619 Massachusetts St.
Olson said that although the turnover rate at Entertel had been going down, it remained about 150 percent throughout the year.
percent through that. Provides students with an excellent opportunity to find jobs at the firm, he said.
"The opportunity for employment is very good and will remain that way throughout the year," Olson said. "We never reach a capacity situation."
he said his office employed more than 200 people, with 85 to 90 percent of them students.
WEATHER Lawrence Forecast
MOSCOW — The parents of West German teen-ager Matthias Rust, the pilot who flew into Red Square, met yesterday with their son's Soviet lawyer. The trial begins Wednesday.
Dederichs, Moscow correspondent for the West German magazine Stern.
"He left open whether they would be able to see him after the trial, but
The meeting with the lawyer, who will defend their son against accusations that he violated Soviet airspace, lasted about an hour, said Mario
The lawyer, Vsevoldo D. Yakovlev,
told Monika and Karl-Heinz Rust that it was unlikely they would be allowed to see their 19-year-old son before his trial began, Dedercich said.
TODAY Sunny skies HIGH: 83° LOW: 61°
Skies will remain mostly sunny today as temperatures rise into the low 80s. This evening, skies will remain clear as the temperature drops into the low 60s.
5-DAY WED Partly Cloudy 85/63 HIGH LOW THU Sunny 86/65 FRI Sunny 88/65 SAT Showers 80/64 SUN Fair 81/66
North Platte 85/55 Mostly Sunny Omaha 84/56 Partly Sunny
Goodland 85/59 Sunny Hays 87/60 Sunny Salina 85/60 Sunny Topeka 83/61 Sunny Kansas City 83/60 Sunny Columbia 82/60 Sunny St. Louis 80/62 Sunny
Dodge City 88/64 Sunny Wichita 86/65 Sunny Chanute 87/62 Sunny Springfield 85/61 Sunny
Forecast by Jamie Zahara. Temperatures are today's high and tonight's overnight low. Conditions are forecasted for this afternoon. Tulsa 90/65 Sunny
Parents of West German Rust meet with pilot's Soviet lawyer
DISCOUNT,
the chances then are much higher," Dederichs added.
STUDENT • GET A
GROUPS: •
and Iowa streets.
He said Stern was paying the couple's expenses during their stay in Moscow in exchange for special access to information about their visit.
The Rusts, who arrived Sunday night, said they did not want to talk about the trial until it was under way.
WHEN YOU ADVERTISE IN THE KANSAN!
On Campus
■ Tryouts and practice for the KU Men's Soccer Club are scheduled for 5 p.m. today at Shenk Complex, 23rd
- Le Cerule Francais will have its first meeting of the year at 3:30 p.m. today in Parlor A at the Kansas Union
and iwav staging for intramural softball managers is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. today at the north gymnasium of Robinson Center.
- "Listening and Notetaking, a program by the Student Assistance
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864-4388
Make the cash flow.
---
Want An Experience You'll Never Forget?
Consider applying for one of the following University Senate/Council Committees- Deadline Friday, September 11. (Applications in 105 Burge or Sen-Ex office):
Human Relations
Academic Computing
Transportation Board
Events
Parking Board Foreign Students Libraries Judicial Board Financial Aid
Calendar
(Graduate positions also)
STUDENT SPECIAL RENT A 19" Color TV
FREE DELIVERY
from
$1595 per month
30
No Hidden Extras
No Deposit
No Installation Fee
No Long Term Commitment
No Charges for parts or repairs
rentacolor VIDEOCENTER
10 West 36th Street
Kansas City, Mo. 64111
rentacolor VIDEOCENTER
CALL NOW!!
816-753-7222
KU Hockey 87-88 Season
Any student interested in playing for the KU hockey team please attend an informational meeting TONIGHT at 6:30 p.m. in Parlor C of the Kansas Union.
28
MCCLELLAN
12
For more info call 842-7581
Sub&Stuff
Sandwich Shop
5 p.m.-Midnight
We Deliver!
841-DELI
Video Player
Four Movies
Two Days
$9.95
(Higher Weekends)
Videoxpress
1447 W. 23rd
Open 9 a.m.-10 p.m. Daily
OPEN LATE
yello sub
We have another store!
Stop by 1814 West 23rd
for a sub you can't refuse!
841-ASUB
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, September 1, 1987
State/Local
7
State unemployment down rate was 4.4 percent in July
TOPEKA — Kansas' unemployment rate fell from 4.6 percent in June to 4.4 percent in July, the Department of Human Resources reported yesterday.
The July rate compared with 5.5 percent during the same month in 1986.
The Associated Press
However, Lawrence experienced an increase in its unemployment rate from 4 percent in June to 4.1 percent in July. The rise was blamed on temporary loss of public sector jobs, mostly in schools. In July 1986, the Lawrence jobless rate was 4.5 percent.
The number of employed Kansans was placed at 1,198,527 in July. The number of those without jobs was placed at 55,644. Comparable June figures were 1,218,423 with jobs and 59,308 without them.
Topeka also showed a slight increase in joblessness, up from 4.2 percent in June to 4.3 percent in July, with the increase also attributed mainly to seasonal school layoffs, but some manufacturing job losses were also reported. The Topeka rate a year earlier was 5.1 percent.
Dennis Taylor, secretary of human resources, said he could detect no
economic trend in the reduced joblessness but said the numbers suggested "good long-range news" because employment growth in the state was being sustained over the course of this year.
The modest decline in July resumed a downward trend in the state's jobless rate this year. The jobless rate was interrupted briefly in June when the number of school jobs declined and students entered the work force seeking summer employment. The students either found work or gave up trying and dropped out of the jobless category for statistical purposes in July.
"We found no surprises last month," Taylor said in releasing the monthly jobless figures. "As predicted, employment numbers tumbled from record numbers in June — the result of continued mid-summer temporary cutbacks in state and local schools.
The state's unemployment rate has dropped steadily since reaching 6.4 percent last January.
"Unemployment also declined as many of the younger job seekers, who entered the labor markets when school ended, ceased looking for work."
Taylor said the state's employment level had stabilized this year because of the recalling of workers to jobs and the reporting of gains in jobs in the services, retail trade and manufacturing sectors.
He said that the services industry showed the greatest growth, mainly computer and data processing services, personnel supply services, advertising, credit collection and building services.
The 1.198 million total for people working in July was down by 20,000 from June, but the number of jobless also declined by 8,700 because fewer people were seeking work.
Between June and July, the monthly report showed, temporary layoffs of school personnel was more than offset by employment gains in manufacturing, mining, construction, finance, insurance and real estate.
Wichita, the state's largest city, saw its unemployment rate drop between June and July from 4.7 percent to 4.5 percent. That compares with 6.2 percent in July 1986. Increases in manufacturing jobs led the way in the July improvement, but all industries reported employment gains for the year.
KU business students attempt to create new training program
By JORN E. KAALSTAD
Staff writer
A group of KU business students is trying to establish a local chapter of an international student exchange organization that would give students an opportunity to work as trainees in foreign countries.
John Jacob, El Dorado junior and spokesman for the group, said AIESEC, which is a French acronym for the International Association of Students in Economics and Commerce, also would provide opportunities for foreign students to come to Lawrence and work for local businesses.
Jacob said AISEC was a worldwide non-profit organization with 40,000 student members in 64 countries. "It is the largest non-political student organization in the world," he said.
nistered by students, offers under-graduates practical work experience in internships that last from two to 18 months.
AIESEC, which is entirely admi-
Some of KU's peer institutions, such as the universities of Colorado, North Carolina and Oklahoma, are members of AISEEC. In Kansas, only Wichita State University is affiliated with the organization
Financial support is still a problem for the group.
Jacob said the group requested $7,450 from the Student Senate this spring but was turned down. Stephanie Quincy, student body vice president, would the Senate Finance Committee would not give money to organizations aimed at providing students with job positions.
John Garland, associate professor of business and faculty adviser for the group, said the finance committee might have misunderstood the
AIESEC provides students with internships to enhance their professional development while they are still in school, he said.
purpose of AIESEC. It is not a job placement center, he said.
The KU group received a one-time federal grant this summer. "It was enough to get it started but only a portion of what we need to run the organization," Jacob said.
Jacob said the group must apply for extension status from the national chapter of AIESEC, which will decide whether KU has the proper environment for the organization. The proper environment would include a business unit, municipality and an active and interested student body, he said.
"We haven't taken a formal poll on campus, but all the students we've spoken with so far have been enthusiastic about AIESEC," Jacob said.
RECREATION SERVICES FALL SOFTBALL SEASON
TONIGHT: Softball managers mandatory meeting, 6:30 p.m. in the Robinson North Gym.
If you miss this meeting you may miss the softball season! Priority scheduling for instant scheduling will be given at this meeting. Instant scheduling will be Wednesday, September 2nd and Thursday, September 3rd. Sign your teams up and pay fees from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Entry fees are $5 for Rec A, Rec B and Co-Rec. Trophy Leagues are $10.00.
100
REMEMBER, WE ONLY PLAY SOFTBALL IN THE FALL... Get your teams organized now!
The University of Kansas University Theatre 1987-88 Season
The Marriage of Bette Boo
by Christopher Durang
Thursday, September 24, 1987
7:30 p.m.
Saturday, September 25-26, 1987
8:00 p.m.
Sunday, September 27, 1987
2:30 p.m.
Hamlet
by William Shakespeare
Thursday, November 12, 1987
7:30
Friday & Saturday, November 13-14, 1987
Friday & Saturday, November 20-21, 1987
8:00 p.m.
GETTING OUT
by Marsha Norman
Friday & Saturday, February 26-27, 1988
Friday & Saturday, March 4-5, 1988
8:00 p.m.
Thursday, March 3, 1988
7:30 p.m.
CAROUSEL
by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein
Friday & Saturday, April 8-9, 1988
Friday & Saturday, April 15-16, 1988
8:00 p.m.
Sunday, April 10, 1988
2:30 p.m.
Thursday, April 14, 1988
7:30 p.m.
Special Holiday Production
Amahl and the Night Visitors
by Gian Carlo Menotti
Friday & Saturday, December 18-19, 1987
& 20 p.m.
Sunday, December 20, 1987
2:30 p.m.
Season Tickets Now on Sale
Contact the Murphy Hall Box Office 864-3982
Priority Seating Other Seating
Public $23.00 $16.00
KU Student with ID 11.50 8.00
Senior Citizen 19.60 12.80
Other Student
Amahl and the Night Visitors
adults
i7 00
Children 12 and Under $3.00
V
(Amant and the Night Visitors) is not part of the season ticket package but season subscribers can retrieve tickets to this publication at www.amant.com.
ARTCARVED CLASS RINGS
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KU Bookstores KANSAS UNION
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KU
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Deposit Required
VISA
*MERCHANTS*
Winning.
KANSAS CREW
First Meeting SEPT. 1 4:30 KU Shellhouse 6th & New York
8
Tuesday, September 1, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Redefinition to expand AIDS count Officials say new wording recognizes many more cases
The Associated Press
ATLANTA — The nation's AIDS count, now at more than 40,000, will begin to increase noticeably today as federal health officials begin counting thousands of cases they have never before recognized.
The increase comes from a change in the official, medical definition of AIDS by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC)
Officials will not announce that thousands of Americans thought to have suffered from other diseases actually had AIDS. And the disease will not suddenly be found to be attacking groups not previously considered at risk.
Rather, the CDC will begin listing in its AIDS statistics patients whose physicians may have presumed they had the deadly disease but whose cases did not meet the agency's definition.
As those cases are added to the total, more Americans than ever before will be deemed AIDS patients. This is why now such number more than 23,000.
Federal health officials estimate that the case count could increase by 10 percent to 15 percent.
"I expect there will be a jump over the course of a month or two," said Dr. Tim Dondero, chief of the surveillance and evaluation branch for the CDC's AIDS program.
"We know that a number of states have a backlog of cases initially picked up and labeled 'suspect' cases, or 'AIDS-like disease,' that will now qualify as AIDS under the new definition. How long it takes to report them, we don't know," he said.
The goal is to give state and federal health officials a more accurate picture of how widespread AIDS is. Dondero said researchers have, since the disease was first reported in 1981, been careful not to be too quick to pronounce a case AIDS.
The new definition, approved by state epidemiologists earlier this year, adds a number of cases that previously were diagnosed only presumptively, without laboratory confirmation. Certain cases of AIDS-related emaciation, tuberculosis infection or dementia also will be added.
"What we worry about is being sufficiently specific — not calling things that are not AIDS AIDS." Dondero said.
The advent of the test that signals infection with the virus that causes AIDS has enabled doctors and researchers to better confirm cases of acquired immune deficiency syndrome. There is no known cure for the disease, which destroys the immune system.
W.
What we worry about is being sufficiently specific not calling things that are not AIDS AIDS.'
- Tim Dondero Center for Disease Control chief
"The bottom line," Dondero said, "is that there are a limited number of conditions that are so . . . clinically characteristic that, in combination with antibody evidence (the test) — that's AIDS."
Reporting AIDS cases to state and federal health officials takes time and paperwork. And in some states where the disease is most prevalent,
the new definition will mean more work for busy doctors and researchers.
"Some of our physicians are already pretty overwhelmed reporting AIDS cases that meet the current definition," said Dr. Deborah Holtzman, an AIDS program epidemiologist at Loreda Department of Health and Babylon.
Florida has reported 2,754 cases of AIDS. third-highest in the nation.
Florida will review a number of cases that "just haven't met the (old) definition," she said.
Texas, which has reported 2,738 AIDS cases, fourth-high, has on file information on at least "a couple of hundred" cases that were previously suspected to be AIDS and now mandated total removal. David Metcalfe, data manager for the Texas Office of Epidemiology's AIDS program.
"It will take a little time to get all the numbers entered, but we have (information on) most of those cases now," she said.
New York, with 11,656 cases, ranks first; California, at 9,419, is second. Those states probably will see the addition of hundreds of cases.
Jacksonmaniacs say 'Bad' is good
"Every other call seems to be, Is the Michael out yet?" said Foster Grimm, floor manager of a Sam Goody store in Manhattan.
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Record stores encountered a new wave of Michael Jackson mania yesterday as fans around the country flocked to buy "Bad," his first album in four years.
Grimm predicted he would sell all of his store's 400 records, 500 compact discs and 600 cassettes in the summer. They were outside, but business was brisk.
"The reviews were so positive they overcame my skepticism," said customer Victor Love, a New York actor.
"The price was right," said Tom Walker, 32, of Washington, D.C., who stopped to buy "Bad" while in town on business.
The records and cassettes, priced at $6.99, and compact discs, $12.99, were placed in prominent displays that were emptied twice in the first hour.
"It's been constant. It's been nuts. If they're not just buying Michael Jackson, then their order includes Jackson," Foster said. "I'll go home exhausted but not depressed. This ranks up there with 'Springteen Live' and the first Beatles CD."
Another record store chain, Record World, ran full-page advertisements after ordering 60,000 albums for its 68 stores in Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania and Virginia, said Steven Lerner, director of purchasing.
"We're anticipating a pretty huge turnout," Lerner said. "I think it's going to go out in four to six weeks. That would make it the biggest album of the year up to date. This should top the Whitney (Houston)."
About 15 people were in line when the Record World store at the Roosevelt Field mall on Long Island served up to a.m. manager Rob Waters said.
Boston immigrant kills relatives, self
Police say man feared "loss of face" if theft from family were reported to police
The Associated Press
BOSTON — Authorities investigating the worst murder-suicide in Boston history said a fear of lost honor may have motivated a Vietnamese immigrant to open fire on relatives who sponsored his entry into the United States.
Five people were killed Sunday afternoon, and two more were critically injured before 23-year-old Minh Huathee, a comrade with an Uzi automatic weapon.
All but one of the victims was related to Le.
Police spokesman John Gillespie said investigators determined the shooting followed a dispute over money.
"It was an issue of him using money from his aunt's account without that aunt's authority," Gillespie said. "He'd been confronted by the
1.
It was an issue of him using money from his aunt's account without that aunt's authority.'
Le, who had no criminal record, apparently feared the confrontation with his relatives and their threats to turn him in to police would result in a loss of honor, Gillespie said.
"In Vietnamese culture, they call it
the investigation is going to that direction."
A survivor of the attack, David Huynh, said Le allegedly stole $1,800 from Huynh's mother's bank account.
"We may never know exactly what happened." Gillespie said. "I'm sure I didn't think so."
*Français*
Le, who came to the United States from Vietnam about four years ago, had a special gun permit from the Massachusetts Department of Public Safety, said police spokesman Jack Kervin, who added that Le's purchase of the Israeli-made Ui was legal. A fully loaded 22-caliber rifle was also found near the scene of the shootings.
Hamilton Perkins, a Public Safety Department firearms specialist, said aliens could apply for special permits
DiWanna Salmons, 14, lives across the street from the three-story, six-apartment building where the shootings occurred. "He came running at me," Salmons said. "He chased me into my yard, but he slipped on a piece of board."
Le's victims were his 52-year-old uncle, Duc Huyhun; a 48-year-old aunt, Xuan Xue; two female cousins, Thau Huynh, 23, and Tru Vu, 26; and 24-year-old Mei Geir.
Police trying to learn more about Le wondered how he managed on his hotel maintenance worker's salary to travel in recent months from Boston to New York, Salt Lake City and Ottawa, Canada.
IMPROVE YOUR STUDY SKILLS!
Attend The
ACADEMIC SKILL ENHANCEMENT WORKSHOP
Covering: Time Management Study Reading Listening and Notetaking
Thursday. September 3
6:30 to 9:00 p.m. 200 Strong Hall
300 Strong Hall
Presented by the Student Assistance Center.
SAC
THE STROMS HILL
HILL 520-913-8700
YARNBARN
FALL CLASSES
Beginning Knitting
I. Monday, 8 wks. (7-9 p.m.)
Sept. 14-Nov. 2
class fee: $18.00
II. Tuesday, 8 wks. (7-9 p.m.)
Sept. 22-Nov. 10
10:00 - 11:00
III. Wednesday, 8 wks. (7-9 p.m.)
Sept. 30-Nov. 18
class fee: $18.00
Intermediate Knitting
IV. Thursday, 8 wks. (7-9 p.m.)
Oct. 1-Nov. 19
class fee: $18.00
V. Monday, 6 wk(s). (7-9 p.m.)
Nov. 16-Dec. 14
class fee: $15.00
Knitting Workshops
Intermediate Knitting
I. Multi-Color Knitting
Monday, 6 wks (7-9 p.m.)
Sept. 29 - Nov. 10
class fee $15.00
II. Sock Knitting
Thursday, 3 wks (7-9 p.m.)
Nov. 5 - 19
class fee $8.00
III. International Method Knitting
Tuesday, 8 wks (7-9 p.m.)
Sept. 15 - Nov. 3
class fee $18.00
IV. Sheetland Lace Knitting
Monday, 4 wks (7-9 p.m.)
Nov. 20
class fee $10.00
Pre-enrollment required
ENROLL EARLY AS CLASSES FILL QUICKLY
- weaving
- spinning
- bobbin lace
- basketry
- rug braiding
**Kitting Workshops**
(all you need to know is how to knit and put!)
I. Baby Clothes the Zimmerman Way
Saturday, Sept. 12 (10 a.m.-3 p.m.)
class fee $6.00
II. Woollen Face Collars
Saturday, Oct. 24 (10 a.m.-3 p.m.)
class fee $6.00
III. Sock Knitting
Saturday, Oct. 3 (10 a.m.-4 p.m.)
class fee $8.00
IV. Knitted Afghan Squares
Saturday, Sep. 26 (10 a.m.-noon)
class fee $4.00
V. Reversible Knitting & Pattern Stitches
Saturday, Nov. 7 (10 a.m.-2 p.m.)
class fee $6.00
VI. Boiled Mittens
Saturday, Nov. 21 (10 a.m.-2 p.m.)
class fee $6.00
VII. Finishing Touches
Saturday, Oct. 10 (10 a.m.-noon)
class fee $4.00
VIII. Pattern & Lace Stitches
Saturday, Oct. 10 (100 a.m.-noon)
class fee $4.00
Also Available
20% off class materials
Stop by for complete schedule
918 Mass. 842-4333
KU KARATE CLUB
7
FREE DEMONSTRATION
FREE DEMONSTRATION September 1, 1987 7:30 p.m. Robinson Room 130 Traditional Instruction in Okinawan Goju-ryu Open to All Students
For more information call Doug 749-0361 or Bruce 542-2268
K.U.
SAILING
CLUB
COME TO OUR INTRODUCTORY MEETING
Wed., Sept. 2nd 7:00 p.m. Parlor A in the Union
learn-to-sail classes club racing inter-collegiate racing parties
SHIPPING
KU
SAIJING-
CLUB
KU SAILING CLUB KU SAILING CLUB KU SAILING CLUB KU SAILING CLUB
KU
SAILING
CLUB
KU SAILING CLUB
Meetings every Wed., 7:30
Contact Professor of Naval Science: KU 2
Contact
Professor
of Naval
Science:
115 Military
Science Bldg.,
University
of Kansas
Telephone:
(913)864-3161
2 yr. & 4 yr.
Full
Scholarships
FOR QUALIFIED
MEN AND
WOMEN.
TUITION PLUS
MONTHLY LIVING
ALLOWANCE.
NROTC
EDUCATION FOR NAVY AND MARINE CORPS OFFICERS
Lawrence, Kansas September 1987
RIVER CITY REUNION
Labor Day Full Moon Kick-Off Party
Monday, Sept 7th, 9:00 p.m ($2.00; must be 21)
Robert Crealley, James McCraary, David Ohle, Wayne Propt
Tuesday, Sept 8th, 9:00 p.m ($2.00)
Beth Scalet & Robin Gilmore, Barry O'Brien & Helen Magruder
Wednesday, Sept 9th, 9:00 p.m ($4.00; must be 21)
The Bottleneck, 737. New Hampshire
Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts
Marianne Faithfull & Fernando Saunders, Michael McClure,
Danny Syserman Thursday, Sat. 10th, 9:00 p.m ($7.00)
Danny Snyder
Jim Carroll, Eld Dorn and Ed Sanders (with Steven Taylor) and
Kim Kibmilch, MG. McFarlane Sat 11th 9:00 am ($7.00)
George Kimball, M.C. Friday, Sept. 15
Timothy Leary on "The Emergence of the Cybernetic Person during the
Mid-Twentieth Century." Thurs., 12:00 p.m. ($50.00)
Bearing Twentieth April "Saturday, Sept 12th, 2:00 pm ($5.00)
Wearing Bauruours, Andrei Codresgui, Diane DiPrima,
Nancy Burrauours.
William Burroughs, Andrew Hines,
Allen Ginsberg, John Giorno, and Anne Waldman
Husker Du, with the Maboats Sunday, Sept. 13th, 9:00 pm ($9.00)
TICKETS ON SALE at SUA BUX OFFICE & LIBERTY HALL
Kansas Union, University of Kansas
Anne Waldman and Andrei Codrescu Tuesday, Sept 8th, 7:00 pm
Allen Ginsberg Wednesday, Sept. 9th, 7:00 pm
1
Lawrence Arts Center poetry readings Thurs. & Fr. Sept. 10th, 11th, 7:00 p.m
Pine & Wain Rooms, Kansas Union daily alumni readings 2:4-3:00 p.m
Oread Book Shop, Kansas Union 5 book signings, 6th, 12th, 12 noon
Kenneth Spencer Research Library "Right Here . . . in River City" exhibition
Kellas Gallery 7 East 7th St. Allen Ginsberg photographs
Club Babalo West (Hoch Auditorium) student readings 9:10 p.m, Sept. 8th, 11:14
Sports
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, September 1, 1987
9
Ladies' football clinic teaches game rules to rookies, veterans
By MIKE CONSIDINE Staff write
Staff writer
In a way, it was like a pre-season training camp.
The squad included some letterwriters, some returnees and a good crop of rookies. Even a wise guv . . . er gal.
But Kansas football coach Bob Valesente can only hope the 1987 KU season is as successful as last night's fifth annual Ladies Football Clinic.
lamae laranlikANSAN
Above, Kansas football coach Bob Valesente welcomes a group of women to the fifth annual Ladies Football Clinic. The class, offered last night in Parrotte Athletic Center, was meant to familiarize women with the rules and signals of football. Right, one of the students in the class studies a card displaying the various signals of the game. The clinic was sponsored by the KU Athletic Department.
The crowd of 73 touched all age groups from daughters to grand-mothers. Included was a handful of women who were making their fifth appearance and a couple who brought the 125-mile trail from Yates Center.
The only man in attendance, aside from members of the KU coaching staff, was Mr. Francis Dutton, whom Ail Woolard, an administrative assistant, introduced to the class. Dan T虏 accompanied his wife.
"It's a good time," said Woolard, who organizes the clinic and serves as master of ceremonies. "Everybody enjoys it, and nobody gets real serious.
The program started under former KU coach Mike Gottfried, and Valesente continued the tradition when he took over the job last year.
"I've never heard of (one) anywhere else," he said.
THE OPPORTUNITY OF TEACHERS TO PRESENT ONLY THE WORK FOR THE CHILDREN.
"In this community, there are quite a few people who are very interested in football," Valesente said. "And a large segment of our fans are ladies. It's a way of giving something back to the community."
Valesate and his staff, along with referee J.D. Cleavenager, gave a series of short talks explaining the basics of the game.
"The staff enjoys the opportunity to have a change of pace," Valesente said. "In the evening, they're eager to talk to people who want to learn the finer points of the game."
Ann Tice, Hiawatha resident, drove 75 miles with friends just to
participate for the fifth straight year.
"I came back to the fun of it, to the excitement of it all," said Tice, whose husband attended KU.
Tice said she was a friend of fifth-year senior tight end Mark Parks. Although Parks will graduate next year, Tice promised to return.
None of the women interviewed said they were under undue pressure from husbands or boyfriends to attend. And none said they were neophytes.
"I understand it, I just want to know all the little stuff," said Susan Potter, Lawrence resident.
"I've heard about it before," said Janet Deginger, Lawrence Brennan, a former Chicago football. I just wanted to hear what the coaches have to say."
In fact, some were there just to brush up.
"I came a couple of years ago when Coach Gottfred was running it," said Candy Wertzberger, Lawrence resident. "When I left I tried to on what they were talking about. There's a lot more to football than just watching the quarterback throw the ball."
She said she attended Jayhawk games "win or lose, even in the rain."
Her husband, Ken Wertzberger, is the team's physician and a former KU player.
A few wives of current team members were also in the audience, hoping to gain some new insights.
"I came because I wanted to learn something," said Mary Ann Long. "I learned a little bit about it." She started playing with a little bit of special teams.
She also played middle linebacker — just like her husband, Kansas City, Mo. junior Mike Long, Mrs. Long's ex-consistent coach of a calming defensive signals in a simulated buddle.
"I thought it was good that they did the thing on referee signals, because it gives us a better idea of
what to look for," said Karin Brehm, wife of punter-wide receiver John Brehm.
The players' wives aside, KU students were few.
"I assume there would be an interest." Valesente speculated. "I would like to see us do something in the future. We're going to look into that idea."
Before he does, Valesete might want to reconsider one aspect of the program; he may have created a monster. A little knowledge can be a dangerous thing.
During the presentation, one of the women joked that she heard Valesente had hired a Chinese coach called "Win Win Soon."
MORNING
Cross country coaches ask mainly for squad's progress
Staff writer
By MIKE CONSIDINE
With the start of cross country season less than two weeks away, progress is about all the coaches will ask of their young squads in the immediate future.
Men's coach Bob Timmons has just four juniors and no seniors among his 14 team members. Women's coach Cliff Rovelto has one senior, no juniors and just seven runners in all.
The men's team is hoping to finish in the league's first division.
"That's what we are shooting for," said Timmons, who is in his 23rd and final season as coach. "We know that Colorado, Nebraska and K-State are the teams to beat."
Iowa State should challenge the Jayhawks for the fourth spot, Tim
Junior Craig Watcke, who placed 20th in last year's conference meet, is the top returning letterman. Junior
Mike Spielman, junior Matt Bell and sophomore Steve Heffernan, who finished 24th at the Big Eight meet, also lettered.
Timmons recruited a promising group of freshmen that includes Donnie Anderson, who won the high school mile at last year's Kansas Relays, Matt Peterson, Sean Sheridan and Ty Thiel. Other freshmen are redshirt Stacey Smiedala and walk-on Sam Froese.
"It's a big change going from a two-mile or a five kilometer in high school." Timmons said. "It'll take time to see how they adjust."
Timmons said steady improvement from the freshmen and remaining injury free are the keys to the season.
The top seven will be chosen based on the results of a Sept. 4 intrasquad meet.
"We're not pushing that hard right now. You can't tell where we are."
Timmons said.
The first competition for the men will be a Sept. 1 dual meet against
The women's team opens the following day at the Cornhusker Invitational in Lincoln, Neb.
The only returning letter winners are senior Trisha Mangan and sophomores Kelly Coffey and Michelle McDonald. The sender are freshmen and sophomores.
Three of last year's best runners,
Lisa Kirwan, Jodie McDonald and
Melissa Satterfield, will skip the
season to concentrate on track.
"We don't really get after cross country very big," Rovelto explained. "Our better runners are really track runners."
Susan MacLean of Fergus, Ontario is the most promising freshman. Transfer Terri Gryzbowski, Tonya Toma Sausalberry are newcomers
Women's tennis team searches for another coach to ease burden and end Perelman's juggling act
By DARRIN STINEMAN
Staff writer
In Scott Perelman's five years at Kansas, he has been part tennis coach, part juggler.
As the coach of both the men's and women's tennis teams, Perelman has had to juggle his schedule in order to have time for both teams.
This season, however, he hopes things will be different. With the help of Associate Athletic Director Gary Hunter and Athletic Director Bob Frederick, Perelman is trying to bring in a full-time women's coach
"We're looking for a young person who really wants to get into coaching." Perelman said. "We have all the mechanisms available here to win."
He cited the tennis program's good rapport with the athletic department and an attractive campus for recruiting purposes as two such mechanisms. But winning ultimately breeds winning, and Perelman said a full 75 percent each could help get the cedar started.
"It's something I see as a step up for the women's program," he said. "The teams that are winning (both men's and women's) championships have separate coaches."
Having a separate woman's coach would also relieve Perleman of some of the stress of coaching two teams. He would be useful for two teams is difficult, he said.
"The traveling is just unbelievable," he said. "I can't be in two places at one time."
The players like the idea of a permanent women's coach. Susie Berglund, who is beginning her fourth season with the team, said she thought it would help to have a coach
who could be at all of their matches.
"I think that as long as Coach stays head (coach of both teams) and is involved with the women, it would be great to have a head women's coach," she said.
Senior Tracy Treps said she also thought it would help the team to have an individual women's coach.
"We need one," she said, "because coach Perelman can't divide himself equally between both teams. It's just too hard."
Treps agreed with Berglund that having a coach with them on the road would give the team a greater sense of security.
She said a coach specifically for the women would "give us real personal attention. In the past, we've had assistant coaches go with us, but nothing is like having your own coach."
White Sox top KC; Fisk knocks in five
The Associated Press
Jose DeLeon, 8-11, gained his third consecutive victory with 11 strikeouts in seven-plus innings, the most strikeouts by a White Sox pitcher since Britt Burns struck out the same number on July 23, 1985. DeLeon needed relief help in the eighth from Bobby Thigpen, who recorded his seventh save.
CHICAGO - Carlton Fisk went 3-for-2, including a three-run homer, and knocked in all five runs as the Chicago White Sox beat the Kansas City Royals 5-3 last night.
KU coach sees good, bad in draft decision
Fisk's 18th homer of the season and 29th of his career sailed over the left field fence, driving in Jerry Hairston, who had walked, and Ivan Calderon, who had singled. The runs put the White Sox up 3-0 in the first.
The Royals scored two runs in the fifth after Danny Tartabull and Frank White singled. Tartabull came home when Jamie Quirk's grounder went through the glove of White Sox first baseman Greg Walker, and White scored on Bill Pecota's double-play grounder.
The Royals added a run in the eighth on an RBI ground-out by George Brett.
score 4-2. Fisk also had a sacrifice fly in the seventh.
What Carter did gain, though, was a chance to enter the National Football League a year early through the league's supplemental draft. The draft is designed to give insignificance to the chance to play in the NFL immediately.
In the fifth, Fisk singled to center and Calderon, who had singled, kept running and beat the throw to the plate, making the
That in itself is a contradiction to
Danny Jackson, 7-16, took the loss.
When Ohio State wide receiver Cris Carter accepted money from a sports agent this summer, he became ineligible to play football for the Buckeyes. NCAA rules prohibit college athletes from receiving money from agents.
By CRAIG ANDERSON Staff writer
College football coaches around the nation have voiced almost a universal disdain for the supplemental draft. Coach Valente and Iowa State football coach Jim Walden are among them. Valesete said he was pleased, however, that the NFL and the NCAA had been talking to each other in efforts to reach a compromise on the issue.
what college football should be." Kansas football coach Bob Valesente said. "I'm totally opposed to the supplemental draft."
Thirteen of the 28 teams in the National Football League boycotted last week's draft. The NFL postponed drafting Carter so he could continue to try and get his collegiate eligibility restored. However, Ohio State decided yesterday not to appeal Carter's case to the NCAA because the school's athletic director, Rick Burke, such a decision would conflict with the school's athletics standards.
Valesente said he saw the postponement moves of the NFL as positive.
"I don't have a solution to the problem, they are moving them" or "they are moving right directly".
"It's no fun being an athlete and not having any money all the time," Walden said. "I understand the temptation the players might have to accept money when it's offered to them."
Valesent said he did the best he could to counsel players. He forbids agents to be anywhere near the players during the season.
Walden said the best solution to the problem was 'to counsel players
"I if ever saw an agent on campus, I would tell him to leave immediately," he said. "I'm not going to put up with that kind of stuff."
against signing with agents.
Walden said "Agents treat players like they're in a feed lot."
Sports Briefs
Bingham picks two walk-ons
Walk-on Kevin Everhart's hunch proved correct. Everhart, Salina freshman, thought baseball coach John McCarthy caught others from the walk-on try.
Bingham took two freshman pitchers; Derek Chatterton, Wilmette, Ill., and Curtis Shaw, Bartlesville, Okla.
Ex-Jayhawk waived
The Indianapolis Colts waived former KU wide receiver Richard Estell yesterday. Estell, who played for the Jayhawks from 1982-1985, was an All-Big Eight Conference selection his senior year. He was ranked eight nationally for receptions in 1985 with 70 complements for 1109 yards and four touchdowns in 12 games.
KU grad is trainer
Scoreboard
Steve Langdon, a former KU graduate student, has been named athletic trainer at Aquinas College in Grand Rapids, Mich., effective this fall.
Langdon received his master's degree and NAIA certification at Ohio University in Athens, Ohio. Last year, he was the trainer at Morgan County High School in McConnelsville, Ohio.
American League
Baseball
NEW YORK 7, CANTONA 4
Baltimore 4, Seattle 3
Cleveland 7, Detroit 2
California 8, Toronto 8
Chicago 5, Kansas City 3
National League
Pittsburgh 7, Atlanta 3
Chicago 4, Houston 3
St. Louis 4, Cincinnati 0
Football
St. Louis 20, Chicago 16
10
Tuesday, September 1, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Sports
TENNIS
Give it all you've got Fred Sadowski/KANSAN
Natalie Isaac, Lawrence resident, enjoys an afternoon of practicing tennis. Isaac was working on her serving skills yesterday at the tennis courts near Robinson Center.
White Sox top KC; Fisk knocks in five
CHICAGO — Carlton Fisk went 3-for-3, including a three-run homer, and knocked in all five runs as the Chicago White Sox beat the Kansas City Royals 5-3 last night.
The Associated Press
Jose DeLeon, 8-11, gained his third consecutive victory with 11 strikeouts in seven-plus innings, the most strikeouts by a White Sox pitcher since Britt Burts struck out the same number on three pitches after relief help in the eighth from Bobby Thigpen, who recorded his sevent save.
Danny Jackson, 7-16, took the loss. Fisk's 18th homer of the season and 299th of his career sailed over the left field fence, driving in Jerry Hairstone,
who had walked, and Ivan Calderon,
who had singled. The runs put the
White Sox up 3-0 in the first.
In the fifth, Fisk singled to center and Calderon, who had singled, kept running and beat the throw to the sixth, before Calderon had a sacrifice flv in the seventh.
The Royals scored two runs in the fifth after Danny Tartabull and Frank White singled. Tartabull came home when Jamie Quirk's grounder went through the glove of White Sox first baseman Greg Walker, and White scored on Bill Pecota's double-play grounder.
The Royals added a run in the eighth on an RBI ground-out by George Brett.
KU grad, Olympian dies of heart attack
By a Kansan reporter
Peter Mehringer, a 1934 KU graduate who won a gold medal in wrestling at the 1932 Summer Olympics, died Thursday of a heart attack. Mr. Mehringer, who was 77, died in Pullman, Washington.
While at the University of Kansas, Mr. Mhringer lettered in both football and wrestling. He was named a football All-American in 1833. He was also elected into the wrestling Hall of fame at Stullin High School, one of only two athletes to be elected into the University of Kansas Hall of Fame in two sports.
Mr. Mehringer won his gold medal in Los Angeles in the light heavyweight class. In 1984, 52 years later,
he was a member of the Olympic Spirit Team, a group that helped publicize the Olympics.
For seven years Mr. Mehringer played professional football for both the Chicago (now the St. Louis) Colts and the Los Angeles Bulldogs.
Mr. Mehringer worked as an inspector engineer for the City of Los Angeles for 28 years until his retirement in 1976.
Mr. Hehringer is survived by his wife Frances, of Pullman; son Peter, also of Pullman; a brother, Anthony, of Kingsland, Tex.; a sister, Julia Adams, of Banning, Calif.; and three grandchildren.
Cut players may play if NFL strikes
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — National Football League teams are offering free agent players released in this week's first major rounds of cuts a $1,000 bonus to agree to rejoin the teams in case of a strike this season, the owners chief negotiator confirmed yesterday.
NFL Management Council executive director Jack Donlan confirmed that he and his advisers drew up the "strike-option contracts" and distributed information about them to the 28 teams via a memo four months ago and a reminder last week.
The revelation came on the day the executive committee of the NPL Players Association set a strike deadline, the date of which was not released.
Ddonlan last night the parties agreed to meet later this week but would not reveal the date or the site. Concerning the bonuses Ddonlan
said: "What we're saying to the player is 'You're being cut now. If you can find your way to another team, God bless you. If you want to stay around, we'll pay you $1,000, and we'll honor the contract you originally signed with us."
Pittsburgh Steelers vice president Joe Gordon said seven of eight players his club released yesterday accepted a non-refundable $1,000 bonus and signed a contract saying
"The eight (player) is coming in Tuesday (today) to sign it." Gordon
they would return to play if the union strikes.
"For the player who gets cut, it's a great little deal." Gordon told The Atlanta Constitution. "He gets $1,000 immediately, and it's non-refundable, whether we implement the plan or not."
THE WHEEL
now has
MEXICAN
FOOD
and
The Usual Great Burgers
Grill open 11:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m.
every day
saturday: $1.25 Mexican Beer
tuesday: $1.00 margaritas
rursday: $1.50 beer and Schnapps shot
READING FOR COMPREHENSION AND SPEED
(Six hours of instructions.)
Wednesdays, September 2, 9 and 16
7:30 to 9:30 p.m.
STRENGTH HILL
SAC
INC. 560-428-7111
Register and pay $15 materials fee by 5:00 p.m. on September 2 at the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall.
STOP
Class size limited.
Fleet Images
STUDENT SPECIAL
Receive $50 Off
A Complete Paint Job
Acrylic Enamel Paint - $450
Polyurethane Paint - $500
FREE!
Good through September 30,1987
J. L.'s Hillcrest 9th & Iowa
All complete paint jobs include: minor body work,
rust repair. Tucks, vans, slightly higher.
WORLD
- Offer good Monday-Thursday
* Coupon must be presented
WE GUARANTEE CUSTOMER SATISFACTION
Present this ad with your KUID and receive $50 off above specials.
Good through September 30, 1987
BUY ONE GET ONE EQUAL VALUE VIDEO FREE!
fifty NAMES
Guide to Good Dining
• Finest personalized service
• Warm atmosphere
• Excellent service
• Reasonably priced
For parties of five or more please call
841-7226
People Make the Difference
Guide to Good Dining
Checker's 23rd & Louisiana
J. L.'s Westridge 6th & Kasold 10/17
HOURS M-F, B-10; s30; SAT, B-1; to Phone 242-691-3
Located at intersection of 135 and A68, Ottawa
at 727.905.899.373
For parties of five or more please call
841-7226
People Make the Difference
open:
dinner seven days a week 5-10 9th & Iowa
lunch M-F 11-2 Hillcrest Shopping Center
Expires 10/1/87
MOUNTAIN BIKE. 90 Day Sam
Finally a real mountain bike at a truly affordable price!
SPECIALIZED.
It's Specialized's new $49 bus lines, speed limits and tires. The StreetStormer comes ready to take on the byways and back roads of mountain bike that dizzes you up. It also gets the RV that helps you get to your budget but won't be dusty.
$339^{99}
Please make sure to by
Srmingly accrue the most
skills and growry gear
Latest design and the best
quality home materials add to
a right and fast bike
Take it along. Our quick
advance footwear will fit you in
the bike in your car
---
RICK'S BIKE SHOP
1033 VERMONT LAWRENCE, KS. 66044 (913) 841 6642
Make Student Representation Effective
"An education is more than classwork; A university is more than mere buildings"
Student Senate Committees
Get Involved In Making Both Better
Kansas Union, SUA 8:00-5:00 Burge Union 8:00-5:00
Give Something Back-
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE DELIVERY
842-1212
Mon - Thurs 11 a.m-2 a.m.
Fri - Sat 11 a.m-3 a.m
Sunday - 11 a.m-1 a.m
1601 W 23rd Southern Hills Mall
MENU WE FEATURE THE UNIVERSAL SIZE PIZZA TO 10 MICRO SIZES FEEDS ONE TO TWO PEOPLE Our Small Our Medium Our Large
STANDARD
CHEESE
A HAND FASHIONED CRUST WITH A GENEROUS
TURPING OF TOMATO SAUCE AND CHEESES THE
STARTING POINT FOR YOUR FAVORITE
COMBINATION.
s400 s700 s900
EACH ADDITIONAL PIZZA $2^{00}$
ALL TOPPINGS 50C PER TOPPING PER PIZZA
"NO COUPON SPECIALS"
Prime Time Special
3—Pizzas
1—Topping
4—Cokes
$10.00
Everyday
Two-Fers
2—Pizzas
2—Toppings
2—Cokes
$8.00
WE ACCEPT CHECKS (256 Service Charge)
Valuable Coupons
POZZA
SHUCKITON
DELIVERY
842-1212
Sunday
Super Special
2—Super Shuttles
2—Cokes
$10.00
$200 OFF
Any Three
Pizzas
NAME ___
ADDRESS ___
DATE ___
EXPIRES 12-31-87 *
PIZZA SPORTING
TAPENA DELIVERY
$ 1^{00} $ OFF
Any Pizza Ordered 11 a.m. - 4 p.m
PIZZA SHUTTLE
THE BLOODY
50c OFF Any Pizza
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPRES 12-3-187 EXPRES 12-3-189
WE DELIVER DURING LUNCH!
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, September 1, 1987
11
SAVE
YOUR MONEY,
CLIP A COUPON!
UNLEASH THE POWER OF YOUR IMAGINATION
ADVANCED DUNGEONS & DRAGONS
WEDNESDAYS AT THE TRAILROOM IN THE
KANSAS UNION
7:00 - 10:30
DUNGEON MASTER'S MEETING
6:30
WELCOME
TO ADVENTURE
ClassifiedAds
ANNOUNCEMENTS
ACADEMIC SKILL ENHANCEMENT
listening, reading, notetaking, reviewing,
Thursday, September 3, 6:30 p.m. 900, Strong.
Student Assistance Center, 121 Stroud
840-4644
"As God is my witness, I'll never be uninvolved again." Maybe there isn't always tomorrow. Join a Student Senate Committee. Kansas and Burge Unions. 864-3710.
Foreign Language Study Skills Program: help
foreign students with language skills
September 7. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Strong. Free
p. p.m. 300 Strong Free
Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong, 864-404-
Heading home for the holidays? FLY CHEAP.
Call us now. Carpenters Travel, 843-569-
so believe in Senate-oh. I do, I do believe in
Senate." Don't be afraid to get involved. Join a
Student Senate Committee. Kansas and Burge
Universities. 864-3710.
Just starting and you're already stressed out?
Get the kinks in at Lawrence Massage Therapy.
Gift certificates available too! (Tell your roommate!)
Student discount. Call Bruce and Mary.
שאל
Tuesday, Sept. 1
General Board Meeting
Open to all interested students
at 7 p.m.
Hillel House
940 Mississippi
Wednesday Lunch Sept. 2 with Tami Liston
Tamh Liston
Regional United Jewish
Appeal Representative
Sunset Alcove 11:30:1-30
Kansas Union level 2
Get involved in
the 1988 U.J.A.
KU student campaign
information call 749-4242
Watch the Kansan for more info, or call the SUA office at 864-3477
A Group Bash at the Royals Baseball Game Don't Miss the Fun on Thurs., Sept. 17
To help with his
Bob Dole Needs K.U. Students!
presidential campaign
*Organizational meeting at 7 p.m., Thursday, Sept. 3 in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union, or call Brett 864-7144 for more information.
Leaving Town?
Airline Tickets
Make your travel arrangements on campus
At airline counter prices no extra service charge
See Maupintour Travel Service for:
- The lowest fees. Complete
meetings.
* Eurasia and Japan Rail Passes
* Car rental—Hotel confirmations
* Student semester break holidays
- The lowest airfares—Complete travel arrangements
ON CAMPUS LOCATION in the Student Union and 900 Mass.
Volunteers needed. Headquarters Crisis Counseling Center Training provided Information meeting, Wednesday, September 11, 8:00 p.m., 419 Massachusetts, 527 Huntington.
ENTERTAINMENT
ULTIMATE ENTERTAINMENT
DJ System For All Occasions
Phat 64320000
DJ System for All Occasions
At your request in Lawrence's Bent and Most Aft
and Sound and Lighting for any Occasion.
841-160
LIBERTY HALL
A FILM BY ALEX COX
STRAIGHT TO HELL
JOE STRUMMER DICK RUDE
JOE STRUMMER DARK RULE
ELVIS COSTELLO DENNIS HOPPER
7.30 & 9.30 only $3
FOR RENT
Available immediately; 2/br apt. convenient to shopping & campus; 3/ft street parking,
BRAND NEW completely furnished 4 bedroom
apls available immediately. On the bus route and
in walking distance of KU. Call 749-4228 or
8 4 2 4 4 5 5 5
Edminson Real Estate is sublining a 2 bedroom,
1/2 bathroom, houselike, spacious apartment.
Available immediately, with no August rent
necessary to be paid. Call Mike Edminson at
(307) 659-2484.
Ever tried cooperative living? It's convenient and a lot of fun. Sunflower Student Cooperative.
Call or stop by: 1406 Tennessee at 749-0871, ask for Debbie.
Excelent location! Walk to campus. Newer 2bedroom house! Ask/Abrer/Driver hookups. lowr #141 941-2620
Female roommate needed - non-smoker, student, shorthair for 100.00 utilities Campus fee: $490.00 for 100-240-bathrooms
Female roommates wanted to share large house, very close to campus. $145-190, all utilities paid, wash/derr, full furnished. No pets. No smokers. #824-827 for information; ask for Carmen or Marina.
For Subset: STUDIO apartment at 14th and Ohio. Call 913-383-2154 after 5
Furnished room with shared kitchen and bath.
One block from University. On off-street park.
Furnished two bedroom apt one block from the University with off-street parking. No pets.
GUARANTEED SPACE at Naisimh Hall for '88
Semester. Semester only. No MC training.
May not be used for non-credit courses.
HOUSE FOR RENT RENT share large 5 bd/m² bath house CLOSE TO CAMPUS with LAUNDRY IN HOME USE. Residence has two kitchens and responsible arch, design students (guy) need 2-4 more people to share rent and bills at 14h and Kentucky. Contact Darryl at 877-630-9228 or www.darryl.com. 1275 T. Toekoa, Wichita, KS 67214
Room close to campus; available September 1st,
water & gas included $110./mo. 749-0811
Rooms for Rent: Suburban Hubhouse
$250 per room, mature, non-mature,
$225 per 1/ utilities. 814-031-9L. M556
Glenhaven Apartments
2½ blocks from Union 1135, Ohio 2 bedroom and large loft, 1½ bath. Exciting environment including microwaves, washer, dryer. Wired for cable.
841-5797
KI Staff would like to rent house in country. Call
Dobbie of 844-4378
Large furnished room in furnished house 3 locks from campus. Prefer male. Only $120.84-865.85. Liberal household needed, rent $105. One month deposit, your lease desired. Pets welcomed.
Need to sublease nice 2 bedroom apt at apen West. Water is included on monthly rate. With deposit and/1/2 rent of September paid! Available immediately. Call now at 749-0666.
NAISMITH PLACE
OUSDAHL & 28th Ct.
841-1618
BRAND NEW
Hillview Apartments 1733 W.24th 841-5797
NOW LEASING
One bedroom apartment, $241 low utilities plus deposit. Off-street parking. 841-3360.
1 & 2 bedroom units
One bedroom of a two bedroom apt $135.50/month plus 1/2 utilities. Pool, bus route. Call Martin at 841-0611.
- Water paid
* Fully equipped kitchen
* 1 bik. to K.U. bus route
* Satellite television
* Basketball court
* Basketball court
* Park-like setting
* On site management
* Rental furniture available
Sunrise over a valley with mountains and trees.
Starting at $250/mo
- laundry facility
- on bus route
- rental furniture available
- water paid
- 1 & 2 bedroom units
- laundry facilities
- off street parking
Sunrise Apartment
2 BEDROOM AP.
lacurzi in each apartment
from Thompson Crawley
LEASE NOW AND RECEIVE A TRIP
TO PADRE ISLAND DURING
SPRING BREAK OR $250 OFF THE
FIRST MONTH'S RENT OR
DEPOSIT
Offering luxurious townhomes
and apartment living.
Stop by to see our
show unit at
9th and Michigan
or call . .
841-1287
for an appointment
1-84- M-F
SUNRISE PLACE
--up, riding mower Call 842-4463 943-4431
1947 Suzuki T50 250 $350 Call 843-8348
12 speed tunnel bicycle, 23" men SR Semi-Pre-
condition ride, excellent skill. Excellent Pre-
don't walk, ride! $299
2019 Motorcycle Surisu. 1981 RS RES Collectors
2019 motorcycles for parts. 1971 Chevy pickup,
riding motorcycle.
1975 Honda 125 motors Diet bike Low
Road 248-850 after APR.
mileage. Only $250. Call 749-8583 after 5 o'p.m.
in Xuezhou 500 Fdirection, street new lea-
ture.
82 V. W. Rabbell Convertible, Sony stereo, A/C
82 V. W. Rabbell convertible condition 700 Joe. After
a few months condition 700 Joe. After
1979 Yamaha 500 Endura, streetlegal new! Call at 843-9822, recent tune up. Call Dave at 843-9822
AIRLINE TICKET FOR SALE. Round trip. Kansas City, Kansas. Labor Day Weekend, 4-8, 1987. $160. Must sell. Call 843-8160 or 843-8544
26 inch Cambridge ten-speed bicycle. Like new,
$95 or best offer. Call 833-411-81
IIc Apple plus 64K Word Processor, dink drive,
joystick, V modulator, $39 or best offer,
keyboard.
frand new color television for sale, great condi-
tion. Call 841-4945
Apple iMac Monitor/stand Plus power supply
home to office commute cost $75
USB cable
An Absolutely Awesome Array of Antiques, collectibles and new stuff we have: hardback and paper books, fine art prints in books, Playbies, Penthouse, etc., loads of antique, indian, and couture jewelry (gitter and good stuff; the right vintage, like antique dolls, doll house furniture, miniatures, fiesta, and the best selection of antique furniture in the area. Quinn's Flare Market, 811 New Hampshire, Open Sat, & Sun
Camera for sale - Olympus OM-1 with winder and mirror at 84110 or 84148 or 84768
Carpet for sale-dorm size, brown, foam-backed,
condition will deliver #45 Cali
841.9765
Electric guitar ESP red strat w/ Suec Runn
Humbaker and Scheuer Trem set $350
Trombone set $425
DORM REFREIGERATOR White, silent. Call Zarin at 842-7632.
Football table and 82 Yamaha 650 Maxim, must see Kurt at 843-6971.
For Sale 2-bedroom mobile home Great location
Great location $500 OBO. @ 834-104
For Sale 2-bedroom mobile home Great location
Great location $500 OBO. @ 834-104
Applications
Fisher Fisher CD player, great condition, $125.
@publisher, 824-604-9948.
For Sale: Takara 23" 12-speed men bike. Great
color. Blue. $100. B.O.B. 814-6855
GREAT BOOKS OF THE WESTERN WORLD. 32
books in bound set of 120. $99. Call
bookstore. New set is $1300, mime is $895.
Call bookstore.
and tub, fully equipped, pump heater, blower,
heat exchanger, coolant pump, large great new transmission, battery and more. Ask
Kapro 2000 ii. LtAP IBM compatible, 720 RD
3.5 disk, buffers or A/C power, $600 = 844.99
I overcook 5.1/4 and 3.1/2 Computer disks. Selling at
call. Cost 814.435 and ask for Paul.
R0000
72 Malluhi will P/O. Box springs. Speakers. Tom
141 709 8623
Do everything in 'em—Run, Climb, Hike, Raft—The Ultimate in Footwear
KORG. Digital drums, digital percussion units.
Professional sound, all accessories, only $100
Pentax Program Plus 35mm w/28-80 mm zoom,
70-90 mm zoom, Pentax AF-20T7 flash unit,
tripod, and tundra carriage. Retail $75. Askin
$45; Call 811-1497.
Light-Reed EX42 electronic typewriter, daisy
weights, extra ribbons $150. Drafting table $190.
imagewriter printer $400. Balans (kneeling)
chair $80. 843-262-360
CARS SELL for $135 (availere). Also jeeps, trucks, etc. Now available. 805-687-6000 Ext. S-9738 for details.
Tune up your import car. $35. Parts and labor included, satisfaction GUARANTEED. Call Aaron, 841-4629.
**** MOTHIBAL GOOF USED FURNITURE
MONTHLY ***** 7:00 - 5:00 p.m. on Sundays 10:24 p.m.
MOONDAY 7:42 a.m.
Athletic Sandals
Kitchen table w/2 chairs, metal desk, soft
loeweat in good condition and cheap.
Gran Sport
Shop
Now in Lawrence, *inexpensive* 4-track demos. DJ sound and light company, private guitar and drummer. Phone: (212) 359-3060.
Suzuki GS 400 E. Must sell for $750. OBO. Will negotiate.
841-776-7977
Racing Bicycle 22 pounds. $800 one year ago, sacrifice at $100. 914-9488
FUN SPORTS CAR-197 TR7, great condition,
$100.00. Call JG-604-694 (Jeneva).
*ollaple review course for all four parts of CPA exam for $300. (A new one is $500). Used once to pass the CPA exam on the first try. Call after 5 p.m. at 316-526-5694.
**83 Mazda GLC. Great condition, low mileage, new tires, A/C, front drive wheel, AM/FM radio, $275 or best offer. Call 848-3228-late calls are OK.** - $155 average Also, other
LOST—FOUND
+YPEWRITER Slimt-Corona manual, excellent
condition, #6; highstand; wear of Moldobene
7th & Arkansas 843-3328
AUTO SALES
1982 Mazda GLC new paint, new muffler, $235 or best offer. Call 841-306-906.
Lost cat-$100 reward. Yellow neutered male, thin with amber eyes. Appl 841:2266
74 VW Super Beetle new parts. Good condition.
$1500 or best offer. 81-8732
70 VW Beetle: excellent condition, no rust, heat-
radio: audio, white. N W Lawrence: $850
$130
HELP WANTED
Black, gray, brown dog found near KU campus Call Dan, 749-4835
Academic Computing Services. Student Programmer (Consultant). Half-time student monthly job from 8/9/77 at 5:00 p.m. Duties: provide microcomputer consulting support; assist in teaching microcomputer workshops; custom apply for advanced computer skills; develop and maintain expertise in applications packages; update and maintain workshop software; current enrollment at KU; exhibit qualifications; Current enrolment at KU; present DOS, WordSize or WordPerfect, Lolus 1.23, DASB, programming in either BASIC or Pascal; and good communication skills. To apply, submit resumes to the department's transcript and references to Penny Parker, Personnel, Computer Services, University of Kansas, Computer Center, Lawrence, KS 66445.
1970 VW Bug. Absolutely no rust. Cal. look lower rider. Dave 843-9509
ATTENTION: STUDENTS! National first preparing for college. All students are required, corporal martial arts are awarded, internships are possible, & you may earn 2, 3, 4 or 5 scholarships. Must apply. May use 18, 487-975 (1 9:26 36)
Bucky's Drive-in, a KU tradition for 26 years, has openings for the noon-hour shift, weekend shift, and night shift. Apply in person between to a 10- or 14-hour drive. Bucky'S DRIVE-In, 5th and 8th Iowa.
Lost: Teal green Jantzen sweater. Left in 400
room. Return to language lab, 6th floor Wetland
78 Celica. Manual standard features w/air
conditioner, heated seats, leather trim.
$2200 or best offer (42-4627)
Buffalo Bob's Smoketown and Mass Street Deli now hiring food service and table service employees. Food service startage wage $4.00 per hour. Payments for experience and some lunch time availability. Apply
a 117 Mass. above Buffalo Joe's smokhouse
Checkers Pizza has an immediate opening for 10 pizza delivery drivers. Drivers must be 18 or yrs old and have them visually identified and use tips to start a $360 per day after 2 weeks. Apply in person between 3:30 - 9 p.m. at Checkers Pizza 2214 Yale
Beekers Pizza has an immediate opening for 5 *sessions* of its regular willowing to work at a certain 3 shifts per week-one hour on Saturday night, $30/hour to start and $35/hour after 2 hours. Apply in person. Check Kiosk.
NEW CARS, NEW TRUCKS $250-$490
COST. DELIVERY D. THOMAS 812-8449
Computer Service Agency is looking for a part-time computer operator in job email ops admin. Job description includes support and support devices. Applicant must be experienced in the operation of the above equipment. Job duties include performing employment. Apply at Computer Service Agency, 2017 Louisiana, Lawrence KS, KS6043, 845-825-3927
Dependable, mature person to assist with per-
sonal care of 10-18 year old profession, professo-
r husband in exchange for rent in please.
living quarters, 10-18 hrs, a week expected OFF
living quarters. Must have a bachelor's degree.
Only students interested in, or experienced
with job opportunities.
Flashback Phone & JAM Favors is taking applications for part-time office help and photographers. Apply at our office in Westbridge Shopping Center, 6th & Kasoid, D-101.
GOVENMENT JOBS $10.40-$59.20/jr. Now
Call: 835-677-6000
GOVENMENT JOB $10.40-$59.20/jr. Now
Call: 835-677-6000
Kansas Union Catering Dept. needs caterers for
the need to have more hours open. Apply at the
Kansas Union Catering Dept.
Laboratory Services Hall Kimibrel Environmental Services currently has openings for students interested in working as a geology technician, mechanical technician, payroll, flexible work environment stimulating work environment with the possibility of full-time employment. Prefer Geology majors. Send resumes to Laboratory Services Hall Jeff Davidson, 749-2831 at 8 am and 5 pm.
Naisim Hall is accepting applications for part-time positions in the cafeteria. If interested, stop by the Naisim lobby front desk and fill out an application soon. Naisim Hall, 100 Naisim Hall
Need student to car to pick up (3:40 p.m. and care for kindergarten until 5 p.m. weekdays beginning Sep. 10. Call Rabel weekdays, 864-4350; 841-0232 eyes & weekends
Now hire part-time time / receptionist. Approx.
20 hours per week. Must have 3 years of
school year. Duties include typing, filing,
and some bookkeeping. Must have experience in
applied data analysis. Please provide
permission help. Apply at 719 Mass, above buf-
troom. Job ID 681255.
Now hire for part-time video route position.
Will maintain, repair, and collect video games.
Must have experience and credible references.
Starting wage $4.00 per hour. Apply at 719 Mass
Office.
PART-TIME JOBS. Sports are needed at
Recreation Services for intramural football.
No experience necessary. Attend the meeting
Wednesday night at 6:30 p.m. in Room 186, Roberts
Wanted: Enthusiastic, self-motivated people for the largest pizza delivery company in the Bay Area. Full time job and commission on mileage. You can average $5.00/h or more. Dump owner and/or APC. **APPLY ON太安** 4 W 23rd W 44th St
Now hiring experienced line cooks and prep
workers. Contact Chef Randy Mulligan.
Must have some daytime availability. Apply at
www.randymulligan.com or call 800-264-2311.
Secretary Word Processor. Secretary needed for environmental engineering firm; duties include typing, filing, and recordkeeping as an adjunct to the technical team that provides versatile individual able to adapt to rapid growth and change. Excellent tribute benefits. Send resume to Personal, P.O. Box 307.
Student wanted to clean, babysit me on day of school in ironing. M-W-F 10:30 at $4 per hour. Must have own transportation, experience, references. A6729, from 7 p.m.
Teacher's aides needed for childcare program, 12:30 to infant room and 11:30 to 3:00 for five year-olds. Classroom experience and or study in special education programs. Children Learning Center, 331 Main, weekdays
MISCELLANEOUS
$10 $450 Weekly U/p mailing circulars ($4.99)
$100 $650 Weekly U/p mailing circulars ($4.99)
address envelope CM/NA-CAQ PQLR 7730
address envelope CM/NA-CAQ PQLR 7730
"And sometimes, in my dreams, I remember Student Senate. but we don't talk about Manderly anymore. the university can always remember your lives. the university can supply now Kansas and Burge Urges. 684-3710."
SKY KEYSTONE for Thanksgiving, November
25-29. Low package prices, includes air hotel/ski
rental/transfers/lift tickets. Call 843-5698.
Package available without air
Get Something Going!
Free kittens: Bartles and James. House broken-perfect for apartment or house. Call 842-4471, please!
PERSONAL
Small established foreign car repair shop for sale in Lawrence, Invoices, 841-5496.
OXYMORON: This duck walks into a bar and the bartender says: 'Hey! you're just a duck!'
BUS. PERSONAL
And carry.
Cash.
Sub&stuff
Sandwich Shop
Attention!!
Asexual? Support network, letter forming
Headache BACKACHE. BACKACHE. MARPIN. LEG
PAIN? Student and most insurance accepted. For
complete quality chiropractic care call 1 brk Mark
Delivery!!
Now, accepting applications from energetic, hardworking, responsible individuals. Openings available on all shifts.
Now accepting applications for drivers,
20-40 hours, hourly wage plus CASH
PAID NIGHTLY. Please apply at
14 kt. Chain Repair
Kizer Cummings
jewelers
THE COMIC CORNER
NE Corner of 23rd & Iowa
841-4294
"Of all the Student Senate Committees in the world, she has to walk into mineface." Face up to your past-apply now, as time goes by-Kansas and Burge Unions. 864-3710
Role-playing & War Games
Bloom County F A side T-shirts
100% of new & old comics
800 Mass. 749-4333
SERVICES OFFERED
Sub & Stuff, 1618 W. 23rd.
"CRIMSON SUN PHOTO" is looking for young women interested in developing a modeling portfoli
Experienced rock drummer wanted to play in ionic rock band. Call Mike at 749-3564.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
FLASHBACK FIOTO fast and dependable party
picture service. Call 843-8770 to book your next
GRAF/ X Scientific and statistical illustration,
watercolor art, also watercolor acrylics. Phone 811-5241.
Have Dice-Will Travel Mobile Sound Service. Complete selection of dance music including Progressive set, 40 dance music. Ex-Display D.J. Quality, Affordable. Call Mark D. 749-4990
JAM FAVORS for all your party favor needs.
Hats, sirts, paddles, glasses. If you have a unique favor idea, call us and we'll find it for you.
843-9700
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES Efakhronteh
Museum of Photography
FASTPORT 560 Art & Design Building,
Museum of Photography
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $/hr, 843 9032
(R.P.).
Graystone Athletic Club
Special Student Membership
$150 per semester
2500 W. 6th Street
841-7230
L o w C w i t l E g h i l s h T b u r k i n g
K o w L w C w i t l E g h i l s h T b u r k i n g
T html please, quote Stabat as Stabat at 874# after
a new line.
MUSIC ************** MUSIC ************** MUSIC
Red House Audioble-Mobile Party Music, 8-track
studio, P.A. and Lights, Maximum Audio Wizardry.
Call Brad 749-1275.
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-2316.
HARPER
Warm, caring people who like children ages three to five are one of the best places to spend time. There are two hours per day, one day per week. Between 7:30 and 3:30 Monday thru Friday. Daycare services have been used from 12:30 to 5:30.
1101 Mass
Suite 201
749-0123
LAWYER
TYPING
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing. Judy. 842-7945 or Liza. 841-1915.
A1. reliable professional typing. Term papers, technical writing. Typing by IBM Elem Twierdze Twierdze, 710-852-4966.
WRITING LIFEHINE 841-3869
DRIVERS HIREES, TAXES, LAW
ENGINEERS IN AUSTRALIA but
in Australia.
ACT. NEW. POW. $1.50/pp. Resumes $1.5.
WRITING LIFELINE 814-3469
2 Smart Word Processing. Spelling Corrected.
Very Reasonable. Call Foster 749-2740.
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS,
MOMMY'S TYPING is back from Australia
Experienced typet 1025; dissertations, term paper 842-310 after 6:15 p.m. or F/M/Sal in 842-310 after 6:15 p.m.
Quality Typing includes excellent spelling, punctuation, grammar, editing, fast reliable application of formatting.
Term papers, Quality Typing and Word Processing,
Term papers, theses, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailings lists. Letter
printing, spelled correct. 842-2747.
quality typing or word processing for theses,
dissertations, resumes, term papers, applications.
Professional editing, composition available. Have M.S. Degree.
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing, manuscripts, resumes, theses, letter quality printing, etc. 843-5062
WANTED
Housemate needed to share very nice 2 story
2 bedroom home $10.25 plus 1/2 unit
$18.49
"Heathcliffe, you simp. Either join a Student Senate Committee or never bother to show your face here!” Strong women like involved apply now. Kansas and Burge Union 864-731-2650.
486-712-8215. Ask for Dave Sheah.
Make some money-sell your All Sports Ticket
Will pay you bucks. Stucca, 864-6896
Nonmasking female roommate wanted. 180 and
1/2 utilities. On bus route 8246, Suehn.
Non-smoking, male, consider roommate needed for very nice furnished house near shopping KU and w/ D./A/C $163/month and 1/4 utilities [low], Call Dan at 843-0091.
Pianist for Lawrence Weikyan Church. One hour Sunday morning, two hours during week for rehearsal with solosists. Compensation use of tools for personal rehearsal. 842-3641/718-736
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tutors. All subjects. $#/individuals. $#/group.
Tutoring classes and tutoring times. Supportive Ethics
classes and tutoring times. Supportive Ethics
Policy
Roommate wanted for large 4-bedroom house.
Acceptance: Quiz. Grad student prefer.
811-649-009
Wanted: roomate Sept 1st preferably
semester, excellent location. Next to Union
Wanted:
ALL SPORTS TICKET-will pay
generally KIM 864-2292
Classified Information Mail-In Form
Words set in Bold Face count as 3 words
Words set in CAPS SOLD FACE count as 5 words.
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.
Dial back to please add $4.00 service charge.
- Prepaid Order Form Ads
Tear sheets are NOT provided for classified advertisements. Found ads are free for three days, no more than 15 words.
Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Daily Kansan.
Deadline is on Monday at 4.00pm 2 days prior to publication.
Deadline is on Monday at 3.00pm 2 days prior to publication.
Words 1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 days 15 days 1 month
0-15 2.85 4.20 6.00 10.00 14.95 18.90
16-20 3.35 5.00 7.05 11.30 16.55 20.75
21-25 3.90 5.80 8.10 12.60 18.10 22.60
26-30 4.40 6.55 9.15 13.90 19.70 24.40
31-35 4.95 7.35 10.20 15.25 21.25 26.24
| Customer Information |
| :--- |
| 01 announcements | 300 for team |
| 100 entertainment | 110 auto sales |
| 100 entertainment | 700 personal |
| 100 entertainment | 900 tilting |
| 100 entertainment | 800 tilting |
Classified Mail Order Form
(phone number published only if included below)
let your word one word per box:
| | | | | |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| | | | | |
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ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOR
Date ad begins. ___ Make checks payable to:
Total days in paper. ___ University Daily Kansan
Amount paid. ___ 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Classification. ___ Kansas, KS 66045
---
1
12
Tuesday, September 1, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
STUDENT
GROUPS:
• SAVE 28% WHEN YOU ADVERTISE IN THE KANSAN
Independent LAUNDROMAT Clean & Spacious 2501 W. 20th (near Dairy Queen)
UNION MENU LINE
864-
4567
Find out the daily specials at the
Kansas and Burro (Unions
Downtown BARBER SHOP
824 Massachusetts
Phone 843-8000
Regular Haircuts $5.00
Jon Amyx Rex Porter
SUA Indoor Recreation Schedule of Games Clubs
CHAMPIONS: Thursday at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room
SUA
STUDENT URBAN ACTIVITIES
KU
CHESS: Organizational meeting
Thursday, Sept. 3, in Parlor C info: Ken Solomon. 841-1967
DUNGEONS & DRAGONS: Wednesday at 7 p.m.
Trail Room
STRAT-O-MATIC BASEBALL: Monday at 6:30
Paulo C
BRIDGE: Monday at 7 p.m.
Trail Room
Call 864-3477 for more info.
ATTENTION GRAD STUDENTS
Positions are open on the following Graduate Council and University Senate Committees:
(1) Graduate School Fellowships, Scholarships, and Student Affairs.
(2) Graduate Faculty Scholarly & Professional Activities.
(3) Periodic Program Review.
(4) Graduate Faculty Appointments and Authorizations.
(5) New Degrees and Degree Program Changes.
(6) Faculty Senate Research Committee.
This is your opportunity to become involved in University and Graduate School policy-making processes.
If interested, contact Michael Foubert, Graduate Student Council, Room 114, Burge Union, or call 864-4914. Please inquire by September 4th
Please inquire by September 4th.
JAYHAWKER
FLASH!
UNDERGRADUATES;
For the first time in K.U. history underclassman photographs will be allowed in the Jayhawker!! And what a great time to start a new tradition!! This is the Jayhawker's 100th edition. This year's theme "A step ahead- A glance back" emphasizes the type of book it will be.
We encourage you to join with us and help build a NEW JAYHAWKER TRADITION... A Yearbook photographer will be setting up at your location... All you need to do is smile! Below is the schedule, please place your date on your calendar. There will be a $1.00 sitting fee to have your picture in the Yearbook. (This fee will be waived if you have purchased a Yearbook.)
UNDERGRADUATES
YEARBOOK SCHEDULE
AUG. 30 - SEP. 2 CORBIN-G.S.P. HALL OCT. 4 - OCT. 5
SEPT. 8 - SEPT. 10 ELWISLORHALL OCT. 6 - OCT. 7
AUG. 30 - SEPT. 2 CORBIN-G.S.P. HALL OCT. 4 - OCT. 5
AUG. 30 - SEPT. 2 CORBIN-G.S.P. HALL
SEPT. 8 - SEPT. 10 ELLSWORTH HALL
SEPT. 14 - SEPT. 15 HASHINGER HALL
SEPT. 16 - SEPT. 17 LEWIS HALL
SEPT. 20 - SEPT. 23 MCCOLLUM HALL
SEPT. 28 - SEPT. 29 OLIVER HALL
SEPT. 30 J.R.P. HALL
OCT. 1 TEMPLIN HALL
OCT.13-OCT.14
NAISMITH HALL
BATTENFELD HALL *
PEARSON HALL *
STEPHENSON HALL *
GRACE PEARSON *
DOUTHART HALL **
MILLER HALL **
SELLARDS HALL **
WATKINS HALL **
TIME 4-7 p.m.
- Location of photographer will be at Stephenson Hall
** Location of photographer will be at Miller Hall
For more information contact the Jayhawker at 864-3728 or
University Photography at 843-5279.
1988 JAYHAWKER STAFF
1988 JAYHAWKER STAFF
UNIVERSITY PHOTOGRAPHY
- OFF CAMPUS UNDERGRADUATES GO TO MOST CONVENIENT LOCATION
All women interested in participating in OPEN RUSH should call the Panhellenic Office at 864-4643.
K.U. Students All Sports Ticket Distribution
Please note: You may pick up your All Sports Ticket only.
Dates: See schedule below
Where: East lobby Allen Field House
Time: 8:30-4:30
Bring: K.U.I.D. with Fall 1987, fee sticker
Spouse Ticket- Please bring proof of marriage.
SCHEDULE
If your last name begins with the letter:
A-E Monday, Aug. 31st 8:30-4:30
F-K Tuesday, Sept. 1st 8:30-4:30
L-R Wednesday, Sept. 2nd 8:30-4:30
S-Z Thursday, Sept. 3rd 8:30-4:30
S-Z Thursday, Sept. 3rd 8:30-4:30
If you miss your assigned date, you have from Sept. 4th until Oct. 1st to pick your ticket up at Allen Field House.
Clip and Save
1603 W. 15th SUITE 003 A LAWRENCE, KS. 66044 (913) 864-3728
1
KOOKIE
Dead heat
Details page 6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday September 2,1987 Vol.98,No.9
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
U.S. requesting U.N. sanctions against Iranians
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - The State Department called yesterday for the drafting of United Nations sanctions against Iran if Teheran did not agree by the end of the week to comply with a cease-fire ordered by the U.N. Security Council in its war with Iraq.
But a Soviet deputy foreign minister called for more time for U.N. Secretary-General Javier Perez Cuellar to pursue diplomatic overtures to Iran. The official, Vladimir Petrovsky, also urged the United States withdraw its Navy warships to reduce tensions in the Persian Gulf.
State Department spokeswoman Phyllis Oakley said Iran's failure to reply to the cease-fire resolution, which was adopted unanimously July 20 by the Security Council, was unacceptable.
"Iran has to give a response," she said.
The sanctions probably would include an arms embargo against Iran. Iraq has agreed to comply with the cease-fire order and to negotiate an end to the seven-year war, which has claimed an estimated 1 million casualties and threatened oil shipments from the region.
"In our view, the Iranian response to the secretary-general this week must be a definitive one," Oakley this is not an open-ended process.
"If the Iranian response is negative concerning their readiness to accept and comply with (resolution) 598, or if they continue to give no definitive response to the resolution, then we believe formal drafting of a second resolution calling for enforcement measures . . . should begin immediately thereafter — in other words, early next week."
Oakley said Iran had promised to give its reply by Friday and that Perez de Cuellar would report to the Security Council early next week.
Despite an apparent disagreement on when to apply sanctions, the United States and the Soviet Union agreed that the resumption of Iraqi oil exports in the Persian Gulf had heightened tensions.
Twice earlier, U.S. diplomats managed to persuade Iraq to hold its fire. But Saturday, a U.S. official said, Iraqi Ambassador Nizar Hamdoon turned down an appeal for further delay.
Apprehensive that the Iraqis were ready to strike, Assistant Secretary of State Richard W. Murphy called Hamdon to his office. But the official, who spoke on condition he not be identified, said the ambassador reiterated his public statements that the Iraqi moratorium worked to
PATRICK TOLLEY
See GULF, p. 6, col. 1
Kick off
Scott Meschke, Hutchinson freshman, practices soccer kicks while other members in his fraternity, Phi Gamma Delta, play football behind Robinson
AIDS cases scarce here, officials say
Staff writer
By BRIAN BARESCH
In the past 12 months, 42 AIDS cases were reported in Kansas, as many as had been reported in all previous years, the Center for Disease Control in Atlanta said yesterday.
But local health officials say few cases have been reported in Douglas County.
As of Monday, 84 cases of acquired immune deficiency syndrome had been confirmed in Kansas since 1982. In addition to the cases public affairs specialists at the center,
Individual totals were available only for counties with more than 10 residents.
The AIDS virus, which attacks the body's immune system, is spread by infected hypodermic needles or through exchange of body fluids, usually during sexual contact.
the kansas Department of Health and Environment in Topeka. Only Johnson, Wyandotte, Shawnee and others may have more or more confirmed cases, he said.
results.
Victims can carry the virus and infect others for years before the disease appears. There is no known cure: the disease is invariably fatal.
Anyone wanting to be tested anonymously can go to the Lawrence-Douglas County Law Enforcement Station. Test cost $28 and take about a week for
Anil Ahlor, a health department counselor who works with AIDS testing, said requests for confidential tests increased sharply in February and slightly slowed down again about June 1. About 160 tests have been done in February, she said. Before this year, about 11 tests were done a year.
Through June, she said, about 2 percent of this year's tests had been positive. Last year, 11.8 percent were positive. The changes, Ailor said, were due to more people in low-risk groups being concerned about the disease and being tested. Ailor did not know how many, if any, of the positive results were from KU students.
Watkins Hospital tests for AIDS, but requires that patients give their names, said chief of staff Charles Yockey. Watkins Hospital started testing in May because an AIDS test is required for entry into ROTC and the Peace Corps, he said.
Yockey said that no one had tested positive since testing started, but that the staff was being educated to recognize symptoms anyway.
"We probably won't have anybody die of AIDS at Watkins," he said. Watkins no longer keeps patients longer than 24 hours.
Testing is also done at the
See CASES, p. 6, col.1
Senate at dead end over highway plan
The Associated Press
TOPEKA - The Senate was unable yesterday to come up with an alternative to Gov. Mike Hayden's highway proposal that could garner enough votes to pass.
During 10 hours of debate, members heavily amended a plan put together by the Senate Transportation and Utilities Committee. However, they then rejected their work, 14-22, on an unrecorded vote, forcing the chamber to convene Wednesday for more debate.
Philip Huntsinger, associate professor of health, physical education and recreation, is writing the script for a film about how not to get AIDS.
C. D. WESTMARK
KU prof is writing AIDS video script
By JORN E. KAALSTAD
Staff writer
Phillip Huntingser, associate professor of health, physical education and recreation, the working title of the video, which is scheduled to be released in March, was "Precautionary behavior in the Avoidance of AIDS."
Huntsinger is writing the narrative script for the video for IBT, a Merriam film company. Huntsinger also teaches an AIDS education class at KU.
Preventing AIDS could become a subject of even greater attention at KU now that a KU professor is taking part in making a video on how not to contract the disease.
Ron Aupperple, sales and marketing manager at IBT, said the 20- to 25-minute video would be nationally recognized by health officials and the armed forces.
Huntingsaid he was asked to participate in the project while he was teaching an AIDS class at the Regents Center, in Overland Park, last summer.
The video will deal mainly with preventing AIDS because there are many videos on the market that deal with other aspects of the disease, such as rehabilitation, Huntsinger said.
He said that abstinence from sexual activity was the best way to avoid AIDS. But, he said, because abstinence is not a very realistic method today, the video will concentrate on preventive sexual behavior, such as having sex without avoidance of shared bodily fluids and the careful selection of sex partners.
"The video will be educational." Huntsinger said. "It will, for example, explicitly explain the use of the condom and how to put it on."
Students in the KU division of communications and theater, high school students and AIDS victims will perform in the video.
Hunsinger said he would leave out statistical information in the video. "Statistics on AIDS change every year, and we don't want the video to be outdated."
The Center for Disease Control in Atlanta predicts that the number of reported AIDS cases will continue to increase, he said. And he said that their predictions have been exceeded every year.
There have been 84 reported cases of AIDS in Kansas, but Huntsinger said there were probably many more unreported cases. "People could have died from pneumonia without knowing they had AIDS."
Special Session '87
Hayden's
Highway Plan
Several other proposals offered throughout the day were rejected, leaving the Senate without a plan that a majority would endorse.
"There are combinations that could go on into infinity," said Senate Minority Leader Michael Johnston, D-Parsons. "I think the situation is so fluid that it's difficult to determine where everyone is."
Senate President Robert Talkington, R-Iola, was more upbeat about the day's events, saying he thinks the Senate will try to some sort of an agreement today.
"I still think we will be able to get something out of here," Talkington said. "Who it will be and what it will be, I don't know."
The measure now before the Senate would increase the state's gasoline and diesel fuels taxes 2 cents starting Oct. 1 and 2 additional cents starting Jan. 1, 1988. In addition, vehicle registration fees would increase from $35 to $45 for cars and 100 percent for passenger cars. Overall, the increases would raise $282 million over the next nine years.
Of that money, $218 million would be used for new construction, and up to $150 million of those funds could be used for local traffic decongestion projects.
in new construction, and Hayden had proposed $1.71 billion.
Sen. Dave Kerr, R-Hutchinson, called the size of the proposal the Senate was left with "an embarrassment," and even proposed two amendments to reduce it, both of which were rejected.
Many senators were unhappy with the small size of the construction initiative. The committee originally had proposed financing $1.18 billion
"It has reached the level of the ridiculous," Kerr said.
"T
— Michael Johnston Senate minority leader
Here are combinations that could go on into infinity. I think the situation is so fluid that it's difficult to determine where everyone is.'
Under the plan, the state would have increased its 4 percent sales tax by a quarter-percent and its vehicle registration fees by between 35 percent and 100 percent, starting Jan. 1, 2018. The state would motor fuels taxes 3 cents on Oct. 1, another cent on Jan. 1, 1988 and another cent Jan. 1, 1989.
The Senate rejected, 29-9, a plan put together by Johnston and Sen. Fred Kerr, R-Pratt, chairman of the Senate Assessment and Taxation Committee. Fred Kerr called the amended Senate committee measure a "skimpy, do-nothing package."
In addition, the plan would have used a portion of the windfall in income tax revenues the state expects to receive from federal tax reforms in 1986, estimated at $145 per million of the windfall for July 1. The plan would use $140 million of the windfall four years.
In all, the plan would have raised $1.44 billion over eight years, the life of the proposed program, and financed $825 million in new construction.
Allergic reactions leave sufferers sneezing and blowing
By JAVAN OWENS
Staff writer
When James Hartman begins teaching his fall classes, he gets puffy-eyed, his nose begins to run and his voice begins to crack.
For Hartman, associate professor of English and linguistics, the tears that line his cheeks are not because he has become overwhelmed by the subject he teaches. Hartman is just one of many people who suffer from hay fever.
Hartman said that his hay fever had not kept him from the classroom, but had made it harder for him to teach effectively.
"Certainly, the effects of the allergies make concentration and good, smooth work imminent."
Hartman, an asthmatic, said that before this summer he would have classified himself as a mild sufferer. This August, however, his allergic reactions have been more of a hardship than ever.
"Normally, my allergies have been easy to control," Hartman said. "They never interfered with my everyday duties too much. This summer, particularly from early August on, it has been a real struggle."
Hartman is not alone in his suffering. Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Hospital, said yesterday that 80 percent of Americans suffered from hay fever. Twenty-five percent are classified as severe sufferers.
"The term has a interesting history medically." Yockey said. "Almost no one is allergic to hay, and such allergic reactions never bring on a fever. But we still use the
Mysteries still linger about what causes hay fever symptoms. The term hay fever, a misnomer for the allergic reactions of running nose, itchy eyes and throat, was coined by a German physician in the 1800s. The physician thought the symptoms were caused by hay.
The seasonal allergic reactions were renamed "allergic rhinitis" in the early 1900s. Rhinitis was from a Greek root that meant inflamed nose, the most common symptoms.
term today."
---
Many sufferers acquire the symptoms in spring when many flowers bloom. But others suffer the most in late summer and early fall because the ragged pollen is most prevalent in the air.
2
Wednesday, September 2, 1987 / University Dailv Kansan
Nation/World
South Korean students, police struggle on university campuses
SEOUL, South Korea - Universities reopened for the fall term yesterday and immediately became battlegrounds for police and anti-government students.
One campus fight with rocks, firebombs and tear gas lasted three hours.
As students demanded the ouster of President Chun Doo-hwan, leaders of the government party and the opposition worked on a timetable for a presidential election and peaceful transition when Chun's term ends in February.
Labor unrest that began in July continued to cripple the export-based economy, and hundreds of strikes for higher pay were in progress yesterday. Prime Minister Kim Chung-yul said that workers had been short-changed in South Korea's economic boom and that the government would seek greater benefits for them.
Jewish leaders call visit to Pope a success
CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy — Jewish leaders yesterday told Pope John Paul II of their anger over his audience with Kurt Waldheim, and the Vatican said it would issue a major document on anti-Semitism and the Holocaust. The Jewish representatives
termed their historic meeting with the pope a success, although the pontiff did not directly respond to their anger over his June 25 audience with Waldheim, the Austrian president, who was alleged to have been involved with deporting Jews during World War II.
Infamous garbage is finally being burned
NEW YORK — The first bales of the nation's best-known garbage were unloaded and burned yesterday after being barged 6,000 miles, rejected by six states and three nations, challenged in court and lampooned on television.
'Good riddance,' said City Sani
lation Commissioner Brendan Sexton at his agency's Southwest Brooklyn Incinerator.
Brocklyn incinerator.
Brooklyn broke up the bales and a half-dozen environmental workers in white suits and masks probed the debris with pitchforks before it was burned.
Soviets call for warhead withdrawal
WASHINGTON — The Soviet Union yesterday called on the United States to withdraw 72 Pershing 1-A warheads from West Germany to clear the way for an agreement banning medium-range nuclear missiles.
The Associated Press
But U.S. officials said the warheads were not subject to negotiations with the Soviets because the missiles that carry them belong to the West Germans.
"We have said consistently that third-country systems are not part of the negotiations." White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said in Santa Barbara, Calif., near President Reagan's ranch. "We stand by that position."
A State Department official, who demanded anonymity, said the warheads would be withdrawn from West Germany only after the missiles were dismantled.
West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl offered last Wednesday to scrap the missiles, which have a range of 465 miles, after a U.S.-Soviet treaty is ratified and put into effect.
Rather than the present Both the United States and the Soviet Union welcomed the offer as a step forward. But it is not clear whether Kohl's schedule was acceptable to Moscow.
At a news conference here yesterday, a Soviet deputy foreign minister, Vladimir F. Petrovsky, insisted on the removal of the warheads, which are under U.S. control.
"If the United States would agree to remove the 72 nuclear warheads, the last obstacles to the double-zero option would be removed," Petrovsky said.
The Soviet official referred to the dismantling of two categories of intermediate-range missiles in what would be Reagan's first nuclear arms control agreement with Moscow.
In all, the United States would withdraw 332 missiles from West Germany, Britain, Italy and Belgium, and the Soviets would scrap 442 rockets aimed at Western Europe and 121 missiles targeted on China and Japan.
"It is very necessary for the United States now to give a clear answer."
Petrovsky said. "Seventy-two nuclear warheads are part of double-zero."
on the matter.
He said the Soviets had submitted the proposal in talks with U.S. experts.
From The Associated Press.
Chervow, an adviser to the Soviet general staff, said "we are prepared now to enter large-scale negotiations on the matter."
On another arms control issue, Soviet Col. Gen. Nikolai Chervov offered to let the United States conduct a nuclear weapons test on Soviet territory to check U.S. verification accuracy.
State Department spokeswoman Phyllis Oakley said later that the two sides discussed a proposal for joint verification experiments in July.
Death toll rises at S. African gold mine
The Associated Press
WELKOM, South Africa — The 42 men missing after Monday's underground gold mine explosion must be presumed dead, officials at the mine said yesterday, bringing the death toll in the disaster to 50.
toll in the disaster to 50.
The explosion sent an elevator full of miners crashing to the bottom of a 4.521-foot shaft.
"There is no hope that any of the 40 persons still unaccounted for could be found alive," said St. Helena chairman Steve Ellis.
concrete at the bottom of the No. 10 shaft.
The General Union Mining Corp. owner of the St. Helena, said the elevator was almost certainly buried beneath 132 feet of mangled steel and
charmarmssevc
Rescuers located two more bodies yesterday, bringing to 10 the number of confirmed deaths from the disaster, about 140 miles southwest of Johannesburg.
stuck in the shaft and had not fallen into a side cavity above the pile of debris.
jonathensbjg. hell made his announcement after rescuers established "beyond doubt" that the missing elevator was not
Five injured miners and eight bodies were found late Monday at a pumping station platform about a half-mile down the shaft.
one survivor. Mlamil Mazi, 38,
described his rescue yesterday
to reporters from his bed in a mine
hospital, where he was being treated
for head injuries and slight burns.
lowed by fire, strong winds and complete darkness," he said.
"I lost consciousness. When I finally came to my senses, I saw bodies sprawled around me. I saw a torch light (flashlight) 12 hours later, and I shouted for help. I was then rescued. I thought I was going to die."
I thought
Rescuers placed the injured one by one in a metal chair and hauled them by rope 100 feet from the pumping station up to an elevator, which took them to the surface.
"I was at the pump station when I heard an explosion which was fol-
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1
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, September 2, 1987
Campus/Area
3
Local Briefs
Police report thefts of plants are increasing
The number of plant-nappings in the city has increased since the return of KU students, according to Lawrence police.
A fig tree, a palm tree and other plants valued at $250 were taken Sunday from the front porch of a house. Police officers on Street Lawrence police reported
On Monday afternoon, two men took a 3-foot-high green and yellow plant and its bamboo wicker pot from a counter at The Country's Best Yogurt, 711 W. 23rd St., Lawrence police reported.
Officer Eric Johnson said, "There is usually an increase in the number of plants stolen from businesses, hotels and homes when the students come back to KU."
Le Cercle Francais will have meeting
Le Cerule Francais will have its first meeting of the year at 3:30 p.m. today in Parlor A at the Kansas Union.
Mary Johnson, French instructor, said the meeting would be for any student interested in the year's activities will be discussed.
The meeting will include information about the club's first wine and cheese party, which will welcome new students from France to the University of Kansas. The party will be at 7:30 p.m. Sept. 10 at 2032 Massachusetts St., the home of Johnson and her husband, Ted Johnson, professor of French and Italian, Cost is $3, but new students from France will be admitted free of charge, she said.
Watson scheduled to address forum
Buford Watson, Lawrence city manager and president of the International City Management Association, will address the weekly luncheon forum at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave., at 11:40 a.m. today.
Watson, who has been city manager since 1970, will speak on "Lawrence and the Future."
All-sports tickets can be picked up
KU students have until Oct.1 to pick up their all-sports tickets.
Students can pick up the tickets from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. in the lobby of Allen Field House. Only students with last names beginning with L-R may pick up their tickets from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. in the lobby of Allen Field House. Only students with last names beginning with S-Z may pick up their tickets tomorrow.
Students picking up tickets must present a KUID.
Corrections
Because of a copy editor's error, Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan. was incorrectly identified in yesterday's Kansas. Kassebaum is a U.S. senator.
Because of a reporter's error, Charles Bryan's name was misspelled in yesterday's Kansan. Bryan is director of the Student Senate transportation board.
Kansas' super collider plans submitted
From staff and wire reports.
By MARK TILFORD
Staff writer
It absolutely, positively had to be there by 2 p.m. today.
Since it got to Washington, D.C., on Monday afternoon and beat the deadline, Kansas is now in the running for the state's top major scientific and economic boon.
It is an eight-volume, spiral-bound proposal to have Kansas become the site of the nation's proposed Super-conducting Super Collider, a $2.8 billion project that would be the largest in the world and would cost $4.4 billion.
"It was delivered yesterday afternoon at the Department of Energy," said Terry Smith, of the Kansas Department of Commerce.
And, according to Smith and others who worked on the proposal, Kansas met or exceeded all Department of Energy requirements on its plan.
The department will now turn all states' proposals over to a review board made up of members of the National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Engineering.
"We squarely answered every question the D.O.E. asked," Smith said. "I don't see how it is they will throw us out."
A best-qualified list of the top five or six sites should be available by the end of December. Smith said.
A comparison of collider sites
A "near perfect" site is one of the promotional keys Kansas is using in its bid to become the site of the nation's Superconducting Super Collider, a $4.4 billion project. Officials, including state Secretary of Commerce Harland Priddle, said they were amazed at the similarity between Kansas' site selection and the United States Department of Energy's idealized site requirements. The similarity is pure coincidence, officials said.
Department of Energy requirements called for prospective sites to be located near major universities or research facilities, a major international airport and a major metropolitan area.
TOPEKA (town)
LAWRENCE (state university)
Kansas River (Water supply)
KANSAS CITY (Metro center)
Electric supply
Superconducting Super Collider
Pomona Reservoir (Water supply)
56 (State highway)
35 (U.S. interstate highway)
10 miles
Site road
Water supply
Map of ideal site
State highway
Electric supply
Natural gas supply
State university
Metro center
N
Source: Kansas Geological Survey
The official announcement of the
state chosen for the site is expected in January 1989.
Kansas has spent about $250,000 on the project, said Frank Wilson, senior scientist at the Kansas Geological Survey at the University of Kansas.
That is small compared to Illinois, which has spent $4.5 million, and California, which has spent $4 million. Illinois and Texas are considered the front-runners to receive the site.
Kansas spent less because Gov.
Mike Hayden decided to use state research groups, including the Geological Survey, the Kansas Biological Survey at KU and the Kansas State University College of Architecture and Design.
Kansas' eight volumes have purple
covers highlighted by shiny copper-
ing and the explosion called
"Explosion of Creation."
But creation would not be the only explosive growth the selected state will see.
Wilson said the accelerator and adjacent 6,000-acre research campus could be visited by as many as 500 international physicists at one time.
The economic boon would include 4,500 temporary jobs during construction and 3,000 high-salaried skilled jobs after completion, with a $250 million annual federal payroll, said Wilson.
John Ralston, KU assistant professor of physics and astronomy, compared the importance of the super collider to physics with the importance of the electron microscope to biology.
"The super collider has one purpose, which is basic research to find new ways of building materials."
The super collider would have 20 largest accelerator in the world today.
It would consist of a buried tunnel, 52.8 miles in circumference. Under Kansas' proposal, it would be buried at an average depth of 200 feet.
Disaster response ability tested
Two narrow particle beam pipes, one on top of the other, would be inside the oval-shaped tunnel, which would be 10 feet in diameter.
Some 10,000 magnets would be strung along the pipes.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission to give Wolf Creek a checkup today
By VALOREE ARMSTRONG Staff writer
BURLINGTON — No radiation is spilling from the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant today — but officials are testing for a disaster anyway.
The plant, just north of Burlington, is scheduled to be tested today by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and the Federal Emergency Management Administration on its ability to respond to a nuclear accident. Controllers are programming problems into the plant's computer, and the staff must follow emergency procedures to the letter.
"The overall purpose of the plan is to assure public health and safety," he said. "The supervisor at the plant, said yesterday, 'Everything that is done goes"
back to that one purpose."
About 300 people are involved in the scenario, which took eight full-time and many part-time Wolf Creek employees six months to plan. The test is scheduled to start early this morning and last all day. Federal evaluators will look on as employees of Wolf Creek, Coffey County and the state work together to solve the problems and relay information to the media.
The test includes more than Wolf Creek, though, just as a real nuclear accident would involve people and places beyond the plant's borders. Officials will evacuate two area schools to buses. They also will evaluate an area reception center on its ability to receive evacuees and check them for radiation exposure,
said Kevin Moles, manager of emergency planning at Wolf Creek
In Topeka, officials will hold a simulated news conference at the Nickell Memorial Armory. Smith said that during a disaster, the media would play an important role.
"They are the main source of injury and death after an accident," he said.
Plant officials will evaluate participants at a public meeting at 5 p.m. tomorrow in the Coffee County courthouse basement. Then in several months, plant officials will receive an evaluation from both the nuclear commission which critiques the federal emergency administration, which critiques off-site responses such as those of the state
During the last test, Smith said, "We did a good job with it. We demonstrated an ability to protect public health and safety."
and county.
Moles said that some of the federal government's criticisms the last time, such as a need for stickers with different numbers, were nicky. But that is good, he said.
"After you do something for four or five years, you get pretty good at it," he said. "So now they look at the fine points — how to make it even better."
The procedures are rigid, Smith said. "There's no room for devia-
Wolf Creek Nuclear Plant operators run through training exercises in the simulated control room. Testing of emergency procedures takes place today.
Scott Carpenter/KANSAN
The NRC designated levels of emergency, each with its own criteria and response, to be followed by the entire industry. The first level, called unusual event, is minor. At this level a radioactive leak isn't likely. Wolf Creek has had four operations since the last operation on Sept. 7, 1985. Smith said examples of an unusual accident were a fire or a trespasser on the grounds. Wolf Creek has never had a more serious accident.
Smith said he thought past tests had helped calm public fears about the plant's safety. He said that now people accept nuclear power.
"There have been so many changes since Three Mile Island — this whole emergency concept," he said. "There's no comparison now to what there was then.
"And there hasn't been a serious nuclear accident in this country since."
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Smith said that since the 1979 accident at the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant in Pennsylvania, nuclear plants planned became much more detailed.
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Then at about 2 a.m., KU police dispatch received a call from residents at Jayhawker Towers Apartments, 1603 W. 15th St., who said several people with guns were in the parking lot. Before police arrived the armed people had left in a light-colored or yellow Cadillac and a red or maroon Chrysler Park Avenue, residents told police.
At about 1:20 a.m., two police officers who were escorting people from the party reported they heard shots fired from the 1200 block of Oread Avenue, Longaker said. She said officers investigated the area but found nothing except a small dog. The dog was sitting in a parking lot across from the Union. It apparently had been there for some time and had not been fired recently.
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Longaker said that about 15 people were fighting inside the Union and about 30 were fighting in front of the Union. She said police were still investigating what caused the fight and who was involved.
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Smith said that 250 to 300 people attended the party and that the fight started when fraternity members tried to escort some people out.
Jim Long, director of unions, estimated that the damage to the Union was $250. He said that if police could not determine who broke the windows, Alpha Phi Alpha would be responsible for the damages.
KU police investigate Union fight
Staff writer
The fight broke out about 12:30 a.m. Saturday during a dance at the Union sponsored by the Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity, 1014 Mississippi St., said Keith Smith, Alpha Phi Alpha Broken and a fraternity member suffered a cut on his hand that required 20 stitches.
By NOEL GERDES Staff writer
KU police continue to investigate incidents connected with a fight at the Kansas Union early Saturday morning, Lt. Jeanne Longaker, KU police spokesman, said yesterday.
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4
Wednesday, September 2, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Two scoops
If we were to play follow the leader, the United States could be headed for trouble.
No one should follow the rules more closely than leaders. Leading is setting an example. But following President Reagan's latest example would not only irk the National Taxpayers Union but also could be unconstitutional.
but also could be unconstitutional.
Over the last seven years, the sides of Reagan's wallet must have ballooned substantially to accommodate his yearly salary of $200,000. But that has not satisfied him.
He has received and accepted $178,000 in California pension payments, over the last seven years. Reagan's example of
He has received and accepted $178,000 in California pension payments over the last seven years. Reagan's example of "double dipping" — simultaneously collecting money from two governments, in this case one federal and one state — once again shows his poor judgment and disregard for playing by the rules of the Constitution.
While the National Taxpayers Union tries to crack down on "double dipping," the president sends a conflicting message to the people. The Taxpayers Union estimates that Reagan is one of 150,000 "double dipers".
Instead of asserting that "double dipping" is constitutional, Reagan should apologize for accepting his pension, taking advantage of the system and setting a bad example.
Then, he should return the $178,000 and stop accepting pension checks until his term ends and he retires, for good.
No secrets
It's good news tainted with bad news
It's good news tainted with bad news. Six airlines have agreed to adjust schedules in an attempt to reduce delays at airports in Chicago, Atlanta, Boston and Dallas-Fort Worth.
That's the good news.
The bad news is that the airline executives and the Transportation Department officials met secretly to reach these agreements.
Department investigators found "deceptive and unrealistic" scheduling practices that violated the Federal Aviation Act, according to a spokesman.
according to a spokesman.
But the agreement does not require the airlines to admit that the schedules were deceptive. Instead of offering the specific results, it obscures them.
Investigations recently have started at four other airports: Newark, La Guardia, San Francisco and Stapleton in Denver.
Newark, La Guardia, San Francisco and Oakland Perhaps the results of those investigations will be open to public scrutiny, as they should be.
No armed doves
The air in Washington is blowing hotter than usual this month as the president, his backers and would-be successors try to build the case for Reagan's peace plan, including renewed aid to the contras.
But all the rhetoric, no matter how it is couched in ambiguity or sugar-coated with cliched slogans about peace and democracy, boils down to this: Reagan wants the Sandistas out.
Contra leaders have proposed that the United States appropriate military aid now but hold the money in escrow until Nicaraguan reforms can be assessed. Reagan administration spokesman Marlin Fitzwater says the President supports this plan, calling it "constructive."
If the contrasts are assured of U.S. military aid in the event that peace efforts fail, the rebels will have no incentive to seek compromise. Why make earnest efforts at negotiation when only chaos and conflict will open the floodgate of money from Washington?
Presidential hopeful Jack Kemp, an advocate of Reagan's policy, considers himself a dove — "a heavily armed dove." But the philosophy of "peace through strength" is riddled with contradictions. Peace cannot be attained when one side benefits from continued fighting.
from continued fighting.
Teddy Roosevelt coined the phrase "speak softly and carry a big stick." President Reagan is using a modified version of this policy.
Speak out of both sides of your mouth. Then use the stick
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
News staff
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Jennifer Benjamin ... Editor
Ball Warren ... Managing editor
John Benner ... News editor
Beth Copeland ... Electronic editor
Sally Streff ... Campus editor
Brian Kabertine ... Sports editor
Dan Rueltimann ... Photo editor
Bill Skelton ... Graphics editor
Tom Eblen ... General manager, news advisor
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Ron Weimann...Director of marketing
Jeanne Hines...Sales and marketing adviser
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The University of Kansas is taking measures to educate people about the causes and effects of acquired immune deficiency syndrome by offering a new class, "Educational Conference in AIDS and Other STDs," through the department of education.
or education. Now, I suggest that the University go one step further and provide some form of dispensing condoms in University housing.
condoms in University hospitals. This is not a new idea. Although the Board of Regents has not taken an official stand on the matter, Fort Hays State University has been providing condoms to its housing residents for at least three years.
Jim Long, director of Weist Hall, a men's residence hall at Fort Hays State, said the service was started before AIDS was a familiar term. But now, with the number of AIDS victims in Kansas rising, the service is more necessary than ever.
Jane Zachman Staff Columnist
Through the Fort Hays State health office, the university's residence halls are supplied with condoms that are available to students who ask
for them at the hall's front desk. For those residents who are embarrassed or who would rather not request condoms in person, resident assistants also provide condoms or will go to the desk and get them for residents.
desk and get at them. The system at Fort Hays State is simple and started as a logical service to college students. Long said that Weist Hall had heard few complaints about the service. Those complaints stemmed mostly from religious beliefs, Long said, because the Hays community is primarily Roman Catholic.
front decks of residence halls is the use of condom vending machines. Similar to tampon machines in women's restrooms, the dispensers are discreet.
An alternative to distributing condoms at the
Sixty-eight Kansans have been infected with the AIDS virus since June 1981, with most cases being reported in eastern Kansas, including the Topeka and Kansas City areas. That may not sound like a significant number, but by the time the next report on AIDS is issued, that number can, and most likely will, increase
can, although, remain apathetic on the prevention of AIDS today is inexcessable. As we have heard time and again, AIDS is no longer a problem only for drug users and homosexuals.
A well-defined
Along with education and safe sexual practices,
providing condoms for University housing
residents is a logical and responsible action to be taken.
Jane Zachman is a Russell senior majoring in journalism.
Nazi's cell depicts hollow vengeance
You don't have to be crazy to be a Nazi, but it helps. See the career of Richard Rudolf Hess, whose rise in the National Socialist German Workers' Party was almost as meteoric as his fall, which occurred when he took it into his muddled head to make a separate peace with the British. And I mean a separate peace:
The deputy fuehrer, reich minister without portfolio, member of the Ministerial Council for the Reich and the Secret Cabinet Council, leader of the Nazi party, and second in succession to Hermann Goering, slipped into the cockpit of a flight plane at Augsburg on May 10, 1941. Eight hundred miles later he was parachuting into enemy territory, namely the estate of the Duke of Hamilton, the Lord Steward, near Dungavel in Scotland.
Scotland.
When Winston Churchill was told who had chanced in, he thought his caller was playing a joke (his majesty's chief minister was watching a Marx brothers' movie at the time.) The distinguished visitor brought generous peace terms, for a Nazi, but after he had delivered the three-hour monologue to his interrogator, it became clear that Rudolf Hess didn't represent his government, his Fuehrer, or anyone but his own befuddled self.
Churchill, who had a way of summing things up, decided the flight was a "frantic deed of lunatic benevolence." Herr Hess was taken away quietly and would spend the remaining 46 years of his life under lock and key, until he was reported a suicide in August.
During the prisoner's lucid intervals — when he wasn't blanking out, losing his memory or maybe just pretending to, chatting with his fellow war criminals, attempting suicide, malingering, oroarding other prisoners' socks — he would repeat Nazi propaganda, if you could call that lucid. The experts disagree about his mental state, as experts will, but it didn't require a board-certified psychiatrist to suspect that the deputy fueher was more than a few bricks shy of a full load. If Rudolf Hess was crazy before he entered Spandau, 40 years therein was not the
Throughout those years, he never showed any greater hold on reality than he did on that curious night in 1941. "I am glad not to be responsible for the way in which Hess has been and is being treated," Sir Winston was as long ago as 1950. "He was a medical and not a criminal case."
st
Paul Greenburg Syndicated Columnist
sort of experience to encourage sanity.
One by one the other Nazi leaders sent to Spandau checked out, dead or alive. After Albert Speer and Baldur von Schirach left at the end of their 20-year terms in 1967, only one guest was left in the 134-cell prison. The occupant of Cell No. 7 was the sole reason for rotating 100-man guard details from France, Great Britain, the Soviet Union and the United States. The search lights and towers, the 15-foot brick wall and barbed-wire fence, the gates and cellblocks, the whole bizarre routine of the 19th-century fortress-prison was maintained for one 93-year-old man, who had been its lone inmate since he was 74. For 20 years, Spandau has been a single-occupancy prison. The debate continues over whether Rudolf Hess was mad, but it would be difficult to argue that the circumstances of his imprisonment weren't.
circumstances of the Nuremberg tribunal, scarcely even The Nuremberg tribunal, scarcely a disinterested body, acquitted Rudolf Hess of crimes against humanity; he had left Germany before the Nazi atrocities reached their vast and, alas, no longer unimaginable scale.
The Allied powers represented on the tribunal gave Rudolf Hess a life sentence for the ex-post-facto crime of "planning (or) waging aggressive war" — while Albert Speer got 20 years. It was Speer who lent the Nazi regime competence and respectability, who should have known better and did, and who would never have done anything so crazy as to go flying off to Scotland to make peace. Or compare Rudolf Hess's treatment with that given to Kurt Waldheim, who, after his real record was finally revealed, was sentenced to the presidency of Austria.
The sight of the co-signatories to the Nazi-Soviet Pact sitting in judgment at Nuremberg on Rudolf Hess for planning aggressive war should of itself have been sufficient to unsettle the soundest mind. Yet few seemed to notice the spectacle, and even fewer spoke out.
In this country, only Robert A. Taft戴ed to tell a shocked audience at Kenyon College that the "Trial of the vanquished by the victors cannot be impartial no matter how it is hedged about with forms of justice" — and was promptly pilored from coast to coast for pointing out the obvious. It was the Soviets, those heroes of the Katyn massacre, who baked when the other Allies suggested releasing the prisoner of Spandau in his last, demented decade — and so were able to make a loony martyr out of an old Nazi.
make a loony martyr that you those who insisted that Rudolf Hess needed to be locked up for a year, and ever would have been closer to the mark if they had cited revenge rather than fear as their reason. But the kind of betment met out to the creature that Hess became was sour 20 years before. As George Orwell wrote in what may be the best essay on the subject ever penned, "Revenge is an act which you want to commit when you are powerless and because you are powerless: as soon as the sense of impotence is removed, the desire evaporates also." Or it should.
also. Or it should be.
To even link for a few moments on all the years of Hollow Hess at Spandau is to wonder who was mutilated, the captive or his captors, and who should be judged guilty of a crime against humanity. One of the survivors of Auschwitz, or perhaps it was one of the other death camps, remembered that, when liberation came and the SS men cowered in their barracks, the gray mass of skeletons that were the liberated could have burned their tormentors alive, and with some justice. "Instead, we have handed them over to the proper authorities," he said. "That was the difference between them and us." The treatment of Rudolf Hess blurs that line between Them and Us — the line between vengeance and law, rage and mercy, nihilism and civilization.
and mercy, ninthishness. Perhaps in death Rudolf Hess can teach the world something he never could in his tortured, wasted, unrepentant and mercilessly long life; the pointlessness of revenge. As Flannery O'Connor once pointed out, the proper study of freaks has as its aim to notice not how different they are, but how much the rest of us resemble them.
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IT'S A NOTE FROM OPUS.
YEAH?! WHAT'S HE DOING?
EXOTIC DANCING FOR A WOMEN-ONLY CLUB IN ARIZONA.
HE'S A STRIPPER?
by Berke Breathed
OUR POOR OPUS ?
DEGRADED ON STAGE ?
PAMPERING TO THE TWISTED
FANTASIES OF LONELY
WOMEN ?...
THUMPA
THUMPA
THUMPA
STIGH
YOW!
NEXT:
PHUL DONAHUE
GETS TO
THE BARE
FACTO
LADIES' PLACE
.
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, September 2, 1987
5.
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
©1987 Universal Press Syndicate
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By KIRK ADAMS
Commissioners Rundle, Constance oppose resolution in 3-2 vote
Staff writer
There was conflict at the Lawrence City Commission meeting last night before the 3-2 approval of a resolution that sets guidelines for the proposed South Lawrence Trafficway.
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The resolution is a joint agreement between the city of Lawrence and Douglas County to undertake planning and to continue to seek state financing for the trafficway. The county commission recently approved the same resolution.
City approves trafficway guidelines
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Commissioners Sandra Praeger, Bob Schumm and Mike Amyx voted for the resolution. Commissioners Dennis Constance and Mike Rundle voted against the resolution.
The trafficway would be south of the city, running from Highway 10 on the city's east side to Interstate 70 on the city's west side. The eastern bypass would relocate U.S. Highway 59 on the city's northern border to
Constance said the eastern bypass proposal, which has also been considered as a remedy for Lawrence's traffic problems, would be a better solution than the trafficway.
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In other action, the commission:
■ Voted 5-0 to draft a resolution to install sidewalks on the east side of Rose Drive from Harvard Road to 18th Street.
ON STATE CONTRACT
■ Approved a resolution to order the construction of a sidewalk along 15th Street near Lawrence Avenue.
After listening to Constance, Rundle said that he too thought that there were still questions concerning the proposed roadway that needed to be answered.
Dickinson Plaza Shopping Center and Theatre, in north Lawrence, to grant an exception to the sign code so that they could make their signs larger than the city now allows.
Constance said that according to Kansas Highway Patrol data, the trafficwould not solve the problem of traffic congestion on 23rd Street it went on to say the trafficwould not solve the business sites as the eastern bypass.
Steve Lopes, president of the Old West Lawrence Association, then said that he attended the first task force meeting and that some members were not concerned about historic preservation.
Mike DuPree, 1340 Westbrooke St., said that he had spoken to 50 or 60 Lawrence residents who were against the proposed trafficway. DuPree asked the commissioners for
Praeger said, "You don't want the really large signs adjacent to the street — it spoils the streetscape." Heard the chairman of the Historical Preservation Ordnance Task Force, Ron Schneider, Route 3, ask for a clarification of the purpose of the task force.
The commission reaffirmed that the mission of the task force was to draft an ordinance to preserve historic parts of Lawrence.
Constance referred to an Environmental Protection Agency report completed in May concerning the trafficway that concluded that the construction might not be cost-effective to the city because it might not significantly decrease the traffic flow on 23rd Street.
The eastern bypass proposal, which has also been consid ered as a remedy for Lawrence's traffic problems, would be a better solution than the trafficway, Constance said.
The report said that there had not been enough consideration of alternative roadways that might also meet the city's goals.
attempt to ease traffic congestion.
The other commissioners had no comments. Praeger called for a vote, and the motion passed 3-2.
a city-wide vote so that citizens could have their say on the proposal.
Lopes, 704 Ohio St., asked the commission to set a deadline for the task force to draft an ordinance. The commission didn't set a deadline but encouraged the task force to draft an ordinance within four to six months.
- Rejected a request by the new
On the Record
A blue 1968 Chevrolet pickup truck and a Kawasaki four-wheeler valued at $3,000 were taken Monday or yesterday from the 3700 block of W.
Sixth Street, Lawrence police reported. The keys had been left in the truck, which carried the four-wheeler in the back.
A 1981 Toyota received an estimated $200 damage Sunday or Monday while parked in the 1200 block of Tennessee Street, Lawrence police
reported. The window on the passenger side of the car was broken.
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"Checkers is a nice clean store with really low prices...and you find low prices on all brands, not just lesser quality brands. That's what we like, the low prices on the top quality national brands. We are switching from a local warehouse store to Checkers." Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ellis Baldwin
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6
Wednesday, September 2, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Gulf
Continued from p. 1
Iran's advantage and could not be extended any longer.
Oakley yesterday read a statement criticizing Iraq. "Baghdad obviously did not share our concerns that the Iraqi attacks make it more difficult to bring the war to a negotiated end," it said.
In Santa Barbara, Calif., presiden
sato.
However, he said, "we have said that there's some understanding of their position as well."
The State Department yesterday afternoon issued a statement denying that the U.S. government was providing intelligence information to help Iraq find Iranian targets.
Earlier, Petrovsky told a Washington news conference that "Soviet-American cooperation is not only possible, it is necessary these days."
Cases
tial spokesman Marlin Fitzwater was tailed whether the United States was telling the Iraqi it wanted them to stop the aerial attacks. "That's the reason for our protest, of course," he said.
Continued from p. 1
Lawrence Clinical Laboratory, a private testing lab at 404 Maine St. The lab only tests patients referred by a physician, said lab manager Sue Harkness.
Harkness said about 35 percent more patients were being tested than a year ago. But of the 250 so far this year, less than 1 percent had tested
positive Tests at the lab are conducted
every Wednesday and cost $25.
Results are available that afternoon,
and positive results must be confirmed by a second test.
Lawrence Memorial at the discretion of the patient's physician, said executive director Robert Ohlen.
Lawrence Memorial Hospital also tests for AIDS, but the hospital does not release test figures. But some positive results have been recorded there, said Judith Hefley, director of community relations.
The University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., also treats AIDS patients. About 50 Kansas cases have been treated this year, according to chief of staff Charles Hartman.
AIDS patients are treated at
AIDS-exposed boys, family seek a more tolerant county
The Associated Press
*ARCADIA, Fla. — The Ray family said yesterday they are looking for a new home in Florida where people understand that their three AIDS-exposed hemophiliac sons are not dangerous — unlike Arcadia, where they were shunned and their house burned.
"We've had a few offers, but nothing's come through yet. We're just going to wait and see were it leads to from there." Clifford Ray said yesterday on NBC-TV's "Today Show."
snow.
Ray, his wife, Louise, and attorney Bill Earl did not specify where the family might move, following the suspicious fire that gutted their house Friday. But Earl said Dade and Sarasota counties had "enlightened" school systems.
Wherever they go, the Rays said they are not sure they can escape the fear and threats that drove them into seclusion and out of Arcadia.
seclusion and outreach.
Louise Ray said she could tolerate the threats the family received when her children returned to DeSoto County public school under a federal court order, but she could not take the chance a member of her family might be hurt.
"It's not worth going back to a town where you're not wanted."
time we might be.
After the first week of school brought death threats at home, bomb threats at school, a school boycott and the fire, the Rays left town with only their clothes.
Louise Ray said on ABC-TV's "Nightline" yesterday. "The next time we might be not so lucky."
only their Goods.
"They have absolutely nothing," Earl said on ABC-TV's "Good Morning America."
mgAmar George Smith, who pulled his own children from the public school when the Rays were allowed to attend, was asked today whether he wanted the family to stay in his town.
"I don't know what their future would be here, what their job opportunities are, and that's something they'll just have to decide for themselves," he said on "Good Morning America." "I don't feel it would be to their good or ours if they did stay. I get that this is the general feeling in the town."
Fire and police officials Monday were still investigating the cause of the Friday night blaze that destroyed the Ray's wood-frame house. The family was not at home at the time. Smith said yesterday that the fire marshal's report should be ready today.
oay Ricky, 10, Robert, 9 and Randy. 8
remained in seclusion Monday along with their 6-year-old sister, Candy
U. S. Surgeon General C. Everett Koop said that the way the family was treated was tragic. "There is absolutely no reason to fear those children being in school," he said.
"The family is going on a day-to-day basis and assessing their options. Their primary concern is finding a community where there are enlightened elected officials and school officials so the boys can go to school." Earl said.
The Rays also got support from Jeanne White, mother of Indiana AIDS victim Ryan White. White said she spoke to the family after hearing that they were fighting to get their boys in school. Ryan also had to go to court to get into school in Kokomo, Ind., but was welcomed Monday as he started classes at a new high school, in Arcedia, Ind.
From the KU Weather Service
Louise Ray called Jeanne White shortly after the fire.
"I told her not to give up," Jeanne White said. "I said, 'You know you're right. You can't let people get to you because they're uneducated.'"
because they offered Offers of help from strangers as far away as Australia jammed the switchboard at the Sarasota law offices of the Rays attorneys, who started a relief fund.
WEATHER
TODAY
Sunny
HIGH: 83°
LOW: 58°
Great weather continues today with partly cloudy skies. The high will reach the lower-80s, and the overnight low will be in the upper-50s.
5-DAY
THU
Partly Sunny
83/60
HIGH LOW
FRI
Mostly Sunny
85/62
SAT
Partly Sunny
P.M. Showers
85/60
SUN
A.M. Showers
P.M. Sunny
80/55
MON
Partly Sunny
81/57
North Platte
88/57
Mostly Sunny
Omaha
80/58
Mostly Sunny
Rain T-Storms Snow Flurries Ice
Goodland
88/63
Mostly Sunny
Hays
88/63
Partly Sunny
Salina
86/62
Partly Sunny
Topeka
84/58
Partly Sunny
Dodge City
91/64
Partly Sunny
Wichita
90/65
Partly Sunny
Chanute
87/62
Partly Sunny
Kansas City
84/60
Partly Sunny
Columbia
80/55
Partly Sunny
St. Louis
80/54
Partly Sunny
Springfield
85/60
Mostly Sunny
Forecast by John Dolusic.
Temperatures are today's high and tonight's overnight low.
Conditions are forecasted for this afternoon.
Tulsa
90/66
Partly Sunny
On Campus
- "Introduction to WordPerfect," a microcomputer workshop, is scheduled for 9 a.m. today at the Computer Center.
- "The Art of Yogyushi," an art film, is scheduled for 2:30 p.m. today at the Spencer Museum of Art auditorium.
- "Lawrence and the Future," a University Forum presented by Lawrence City Manager Buford Watson, is scheduled for 11:40 a.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oren Ave.
An intramural softball officials meeting is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. today at 156 Robinson Center.
■ "Colonel Redl," an SUA film, is scheduled for 7 p.m. today at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
Admission is $2.
■ "Reading for Comprehension and Speed," a workshop by the Student Assistance Center, begins at 7:30 p.m. today Registration and a $15 fee
The first meeting of the Public Relations Student Society of America is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. today at the Pine Room of the Kansas Union.
Misprinted stamp sale investigated
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - Misprinted stamps worth thousands of dollars apiece were discovered by CIA employees who took 86 from the agency's supplies and sold them to a dealer, according to published reports.
REPORT. The CIA is investigating the nine employees for using their government positions for private profit, The Washington Post reported in today's edition.
One sheet of 400 stamps was produced when it was inadvertently reversed during printing. On the misprints, a candlestick is upside down.
The Post and The New York Times said 95 of the stamps were purchased from a McLean, Va., post office for CIA use on March 27, 1986.
The CIA employees who spotted the misprint sold 86 of them to a New York store.
Jersey dealer and evidently kept the remaining nine, the Post said. The Times said the nine were used on CIA mail before the mistake was discovered.
CIA spokeswoman Sharon Foster confirmed yesterday evening that the Bureau of Printing and Engraving was investigating the case. She declined to discuss details or possible involvement by CIA employees, but said the agency "takes seriously any allegations of misconduct."
Bill Bergstrom, office manager of Jacques C. Shiff Jr. Inc.of Ridgefell Park, N.J., the dealer that obtained the stamps, told the Post that one was recently resold for $17,600.
Bergstrom said the misprints' value ultimately could be as high as $115,000 apiece, or more than $10 million for the group of 95.
extremely valuable. In May, for example, a 1918 stamp in which the image of a Curtiss-Jenny biplane was inverted sold for $143,000 at an auction in New York City. Only 100 of the inverted biplane stamps were produced.
Major mistakes in a few copies of a single stamp make the misprints
The U.S. Postal Service is investigating three other recent cases in which secret, nearly invisible markings were added to stamp designs by engravers at the Bureau of Printing and Engraving. However, postal officials say those stamps will not be nearly as valuable because all stamps in each of the three series are identical.
The Post said a bureau report obtained under the Freedom of Information Act deleted the names of the CIA employees allegedly involved in the inverted candlestick case.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, September 2, 1987
7
Nation/World
Victim of AIDS on trial
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — An AIDS victim charged with attempted murder for allegedly selling sex and tainted blood sat silently in court yesterday as witnesses discussed precautions against spreading the disease through blood products.
Joseph Markowski, who was arrested in June after screaming, "Kill me! Kill me! I have AIDS!" in a Hollywood bank, is believed to be the first person in the nation to face such charges for allegedly selling blood and sex while knowing he had AIDS.
Municipal Court Judge Alban Niles is hearing evidence to decide whether Markowski should be ordered to stand trial on four counts of attempted murder, two counts of assault with great bodily injury and two counts of attempted poisoning for alleged acts of prostitution.
Among those scheduled as witnesses is a man who contends he contracted AIDS from sex with Markowski.
Paris Shaerrell, 45, is named as an attempted murder victim in the charges against Markowski.
Shaerrell is being held in the county jail on charges of robbing a government employee of $30 in a park restroom. Superior Court Judge Robert Altman, noting that Shaerrell is a carrier of AIDS and has a history of mental illness, refused to release him from jail last month and ordered his guilty plea withdrawn. He set a trial on the robbery charge for Sept. 11.
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18 PK.
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Requires $15.00 single minimum purchase, excluding purchase of alcoholic beverages, tobacco, and fluid milk products, taxes or coupon items.
JU'S
BONUS COUPON
NO.4
T.V. REG. OR PINK LEMONADE
FREE!
12 OZ, can-3 cans free!
Requires $15.00 single minimum purchase, excluding purchase of alcoholic beverages, tobacco, and fluid milk products, taxes or coupon items.
Limit one with coupon and purchase requirement.
Effective Sept. 2-8, 1987
Without Coupon and Purchase 3/$1.00
Redeemable only at JL's Westridge or Hillcrest.
Present this coupon along with any one Manifest; a tenuous check off coupon and get the savings. Not to include retailer, free coupons, coupon values of the item, Coupons 25 and over will be limited to one coupon per manufacturer's coupon Limit one coupon per family $2 coupons per family products
Intl.
BONUS COUPON
JL'S JL'S JL'S TRIPLE COUPONS
Present this coupon along with any other Manage Instructions. Purchase the coupon and save the savings from 10.5%.
To not include, retain free coupon coupons you receive, retain fourteen cents (4) or exceed the coupon coupons 25 and over will be redeemed for the value of one manufacturer's limit. Limit one coupon per manufacturer's coupon.
Limit one coupon per manufacturer's coupon and limit 4 coupons per family.
Examine the tobacco and fluid milk products.
8
Wednesday, September 2, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Alaska, Northeast offer biggest wages
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Workers in New England, New York and New Jersey got the largest raises last year, averaging well above 5 percent, but Alaskans continue to enjoy the biggest paychecks despite a slight decline in their average earnings, the government said yesterday.
The average annual pay of workers covered by state and federal unemployment insurance programs was $19,996 in 1986, a $777 or 4 percent increase over 1985 and well ahead of an inflation rate of just 1.1 percent last year, the Labor Department said.
Massachusetts and New Hampshire, with unemployment rates running well below 3 percent, led the nation in pay increases last year, with workers there reaping average raises of 6.6 percent and 6.4 percent
Workers in Connecticut followed with annual pay increases averaging 6.1 percent. Other states where pay raises averaged more than 5 percent were New York, Maine, New Jersey, Vermont and Rhode Island.
respectively.
The smallest pay increases were concentrated in Appalachia, the Oil Belt and the West, excluding California and Arizona.
Yearly wage gains averaged less than 3 percent in Ohio, Indiana, West Virginia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, North Dakota, Montana, Wyoming, Utah, Idaho and Oregon.
Alaskans actually took a pay cut of about 1 percent. But they still led the country with the highest annual wages, averaging $28,424 in 1986.
You Make Some Of Your Best Friends In College At Computerark
10
You must find no other familiar way to help you write papers, supragentive symptoms and then correct your spelling errors - except capitals in the KAPRIF PC is to avoid this process. You will need to use the KAPRIF PC twice to process the
FREE PRINTER
With Purchase Of System
At Discount Price
Limited Time Only
9.
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23rd & Iowa
KAYPRO
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Mon.-Thur. 10-7
Fri.-Sat. 10-5
SERVICE*KNOWLEDGE*EDUCATION
The Etc. Shop
- poodle skirts
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costume hats
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WORLD
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READING FOR COMPREHENSION AND SPEED
(for six hours of instruction)
Wednesdays, September 2, 9 and 16
7:30 to 9:30 p.m.
Register and pay $15 materials fee by
TH STRENGTH HALL
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Rm. $400-JOYA
SAVE
5:00 p.m. on September 2 at the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall.
Class size limited.
Covering: Time Management Study Reading Listening and Notetaking
IMPROVE YOUR STUDY SKILLS! Attend The
ACADEMIC SKILL ENHANCEMENT WORKSHOP
Thursday, September 3
945 Mass., Lawrence
331 Poyntz, Manhattan
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When the sun fades Your tan won't!
- Walk-ins welcome
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- Hot tub rentals
- Weight room available
Keep your dark, summer tan looking great all year long at European Suntanning! Even when the sun's not out, you can still look and feel great by tanning in one of our eight tanning beds. Don't let your tan fade with the sun! We guarantee the fastest tan, lowest prices and the best service.
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Expires September 11, 1907
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PLEASE READ THE BACK OF THIS PHOTO. IT IS NOT TO BE USED FOR ANY PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
Rio, Jag, & Calvin Thursday $10^{06}
only
-plus an entire store full of specials-
fashion watches only $24.99
reg. up to $30
Union Bay reg.up to $30
Coordinates Thursday only $10^06
Maybe it's your calculator.
It's certainly not ours.
©1987 Hewlett-Packard Company PG 12703
We know that a cheap calculator can cost you blood, sweat and time.
Investing in a Hewlett-Packard calculator, on the other hand, can save you time and again.
HP calculators not only have better functions. They function better. Without sticking keys and bad connections.
Through October 31, you can get the cream of the calculators at a non-fat price.
We're cutting $10 off the HP12C. That buys you more built-in functions than anyone else's financial calculator.
And we're giving away a free Advantage Module, a $49 value, with every HP-41 Advanced Scientific calculator you buy.
This 12K-byte plugin, menu-driven ROM was designed specially for students.
So drop by your campus bookstore and compare HP calculators with the rest. By midterm, you'll see what a deal this is.
FREE $49 HP-41
ADVANTAGE MODULE
with purchase HP-41. Purchase must be made between August 15, 1867, and October 31, 1867. See your local HP dealer for details and official reprint优惠。 Rebate or free Medi OR $10 OFF AN HP-12C OR $10 OFF AN HP-12C
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Nation/World
ACLU claims police are violating rights with fingerprinting
The Associated Press
HOMESTEAD, Pa. — A series of rapes of elderly women in this old steel town has forced some women behind locked doors and led at least one to buy a gun. Police are asking most black men in town to be fingerprinted to prove their innocence.
The American Civil Liberties Union has called the fingerprint tactic "astound."
Police Chief Chris Kelly, claiming support from residents, has ordered officers door-to-door in this Pittsburgh suburb of about 5,000 to interview people for clues and ask for fingerprints.
"We just can't sit back now," Kelly said. "How do you tell an 80-year-old victim's family that I was thinking of doing this, but I was worried about the flak I'd get? They don't want to hear about flak."
Kelly says very few men have refused to be fingerprinted when asked. He said police have accumulated about 115 fingerprint sets so far.
Six women living alone, all between 64 and 85 years of age, have been raped since 1983, including four this year. One 76-year-old woman, the rapist's only black victim, was attacked in her home April 24 and raped in her home Aug. 25, Kelly said.
The women live within a five-minute walk of each other in this
town once notorious as the place where seven steelworkers were shot to death during a strike against steel magnate Andrew Carnegie in 1892.
Police are looking for a muscular black man between the ages of 16 and 60. Kelly said police have fingered him. Policeíve denied lying the attacks on one man.
The rapist has covered his victims' heads with bedsets so descriptions of him have been sketched, but the women agree he is black, Kelly said.
"We think he may be somebody respectable, somebody who is very emotionally disturbed but responsible for his action," Kelly said outside and able to function within the community," Kelv said Monday.
Kelly said the door-to-door operation has covered about half the town from April to October.
Nathaniel Richardson, 20, who is black, said he has known one of the victims for most of his life and would not mind giving his fingerprints.
"I don't think it's right, but why give police a hassle?" he said.
The ACLU said the mass finger-
ing violates constitutional
rights.
"They've got it a little backward. In this country, you are presumed innocent. You do not have to prove your innocence. The government has never had an official conviction Damick, associate director of the Greater Pittsburgh ACU chapter.
Take a bus to see the Royals in K.C. Price includes transportation, view level seat, a Royal's baseball cap, souvenir sticker, and ballpoint pen.
Kansas City Here We Come!
Space is limited so sign up SOON!
when: Sept. 17
price: $15.00
sign up at the SUA office
in the Main Kansas Union
SAN JUAN DE GILBERT
BORDER BANDIDO
ALL YOU CAN EAT $3.79
5-9 p.m.
WEDNESDAY SPECIAL
All you can eat from our wide selection:
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• tacos
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• chili
• tostada
- enchiladas
- refried beans
- Spanish rice
1528 W. 23rd Across from Post Office 842-8861
- chili conqueso
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, September 2, 1987
Patronize Kansan Advertisers.
GAINYD
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10
Wednesday, September 2, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
State/Local
AT&T told to refund Kansans
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — The Kansas Corporation Commission announced yesterday it was ordering AT&T to reduce its in-state long distance telephone rates by $1.37 million, or 1.9 percent, and to initiate a one-time refund of $955,000 to its Kansas customers this fall.
The action stems from A&T&T's
reduced federal income tax expenses under the 1086 federal tax reform act, the reform's effect on Southwestern Bell Telephone Co., and AT&T's overall cost savings, a KCC statement said.
The $1.37 million reduction, effective today, applies to long distance calls that originate and end in Kansas and utilize AT&T lines. It applies
to AT&T long distance service, AT&T WATS and toll-free 800 calls.
The KCC said AT&T realized $746,000 in tax reductions and $624,000 in operating cost reductions.
The $955,000 refund, the comm-
mission statement said, will result in
a total cost of $178,000 to AT&T's Kansas customers make in
October, November and December.
STUDENT SAVE 28% WHEN YOU ADVERTISE IN THE KANSAN GROUPS:
a new yello sub has surfaced,
tearing the town apart!
Our new store at 1814 W.23rd not only makes it easier for you sub lovers on the South side of town to enjoy our lovely subs, it also helps us deliver to your home more quickly Please use these guidelines when you call in your deliveries to get your meal as quickly as sub-humanly possible.
If your address is NORTH of 15th Street call Yello Sub Campus at 841-3268 624 West 12th
If your address is SOUTH of 15th Street, call Yello Sub 23rd at 841-ASUB 1814 West 23rd
10:00 am - midnight Sunday - Thursday 10:00 am -1:00 am Friday and Saturday
K.U. Students All Sports Ticket Distribution
Please note: You may pick up your All Sports Ticket only.
Where: East lobby Allen Field House
Dates: See schedule below
Time: 8:30-4:30
Bring: K.U.I.D. with Fall 1987, fee sticker
Spouse Ticket- Please bring proof of marriage.
SCHEDULE
If your last name begins with the letter:
A-E Monday, Aug.31st 8:30-4:30
F-K Tuesday, Sept.1st 8:30-4:30
L-R Wednesday, Sept.2nd 8:30-4:30
S-Z Thursday, Sept.3rd 8:30-4:30
If you miss your assigned date, you have from Sept. 4th until Oct. 1st to pick your ticket up at Allen Field House.
Clip and Save
Fall '87 in clothing from Mister Guy...KU's only complete specialty shop for MEN and WOMEN.
CHEVROLET
Hours:
M-T-W-F-Sat.
9:30-6:00
Th. 9:30-8:30
Sun. 12:50
MISTER GUY
MENS & WOMENS TRADITIONAL CLOTHIERS
842-2700
920 Mass.
Lawrence, Kansas
All women interested in participating in OPEN RUSH should call the Panhellenic Office at 864-4643.
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, September 2, 1987
11
Nation/World
Book about ex-Fed director explores private, public life
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Paul A. Volcker Jr. was the world's most powerful banker, but in his personal life he pinched pennies ruthlessly, railing at high restaurant prices and carting his laundry to his daughter's house in a suitcase, according to a new book about the retired Federal Reserve Board chairman.
Volcker is also a passionate Monopoly player who delights in winning, showing no mercy on family members, writes journalist William R. Neikirk in a biography of Volcker due to be published later this month.
"You'd think your father would let you win one in a while," the book quotes Volcker's daughter, Jiance as she recalls.
The volume. "Volcker: Portrait of the Money Man," is the first to appear on the widely respected Fed chairman James F. Buchanan.
Volker has read the book and does not plan to comment on it, said Joseph R. Coyne, a spokesman for the Federal Reserve and longtime assistant to Volker.
Neikirk, an economics writer for the Chicago Tribune, interviewed Volcker and his family members, and his successor at the Fed, Alan Greenspan, for the biography *The Fed: A Life*, who became known as the nation's No. 1 Unflation fighter.
But Volcker, who served as Fed chairman for eight years, in a discussion with the author downplayed his own role in breaking the inflation that had soared to 13.3 percent in 1979 when he was appointed by then President Jimmy Carter.
Instead, he credited President Reagan's refusal to back down during the air controller's strike in 1981 asaving an almost equally important psychological
impact as the Fed's tight monetary policies, which sent interest rates soaring but also helped bring inflation down to under 4 percent by 1982.
Reagan's decision to fire the controllers rather than accept their salary demands "definitely helped to hold down wages. That had as much to do with braking inflationary expectations as his tight money, the Fed chief said." Neikirk wrote.
for reversing the initiation of the 1903-04 Volcker, a nominal Democrat, was first appointed by Carter and then reappointed to a second four-year term as Fed chief by Reagan in 1983.
other said, Neneki Greenspan, the current Fed chairman, gave Volcker broad credit to a substantial extent in the book for reversing the inflation of the 1970s.
But Volcker was by no means Carter's first choice, the book contends.
In fact, when Volker, then president of the New York Federal Reserve Bank and well-known in banking circles, was first mentioned to Carter, the president's response reportedly was, "Who's Paul Volker?"
Carter's first two choices for the Fed job were David Rockefeller, then president of Chase Manhattan Bank, and A.W. Clausen, president of Bank of America, both of whom turned it down, the book says.
The book depicts Volcker in near-continual battle with Donald T. Regan, the former Treasury secretary and later Reagan's chief of staff.
later Reagan's cute son, Stuart And, in the final days of his chairmanship, Volcker would have agreed to accept another four-year term if Reagan had personally sought to dissuade him from retiring, the book contends. But no such direct appeal was made.
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2501 W. 20th (near Dairy Queen)
--i tuesday, Sept. 6th 12 noon: booksigning by André Cordess
Wednesday, Sept. 7th 12 noon: booksigning by Anne Wal-
dens
Reflections Reflections
842-1253
1031 Vermont
Downtown Lawrence
- Shampoo, Haircut, Blow Dry or
$5 OFF
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841-5999
2323 Ridge Court
IMPROVE YOUR STUDY SKILLS!
- Ear Piercing
- Perm
Saturday, Sept. 12th, 2 pm; Timothy Leary speaks and takes questions on "The Emergence of the Cybernetic Person during the Roaring Twentieth Century" ($5.00)
ACADEMIC SKILL ENHANCEMENT WORKSHOP
Listening and Notetaking
Covering: Time Management
Study Reading
Friday, Sept. 11th, 9 pm; Jim Carroll, Ed Dorn and Ed Sanders
with Steven Tawler provision. George Kibell, M.C. ($7.00)
Thursday, September 3 6:30 to 9:00 p.m.
Saturday, Sept. 12th, 8 p.m; William Burroughs, André Codescu,
Diane DIPrima, Allen Ginsberg, John Giorno, and Anne Waldman
read from their works ($12.00)
300 Strong Hall
THE STRONG HILL
SAC
413-876-6062
TICKETS are ON SALE at THE LIBERTY HALL BOX-OFF AND THE SUA BOX-OFF AT THE KANSAUS UNION
Thursday, Sept. 10th, 9 pm: Mariane Faithful with Fernando Sauners, Michael McClure and Danny Sugerman (author of "No One Here Gets Out Alive") ($7.00)
FREE! Presented by the Student Assistance Center.
RIVER CITY REUNION
Saturday, Sept. 12th, 4 pm; Conrad Rooks film "Chappaqua" ($5.50)
EVENTS PRESENTED BY RIVER CITY PRODUCTIONS:
Sunday, Sept. 13th, 9 pm: Husker Du, with the Mahoots ($9.00)
PERFORMANCES:
Friday, Sept. 11th, 4 pm: Robert Frank film "Me and My Brother" ($35)
Monday, Sept. 7th, 9 pm; Labor Day Full Moon Kick-Off Party ($2.00; must be 21)
The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire;
Thursday, Sept. 10th, 4 pm. filmmaker Gene Bernofsky with his films "Group," "Dropcity," "Glamour," "Lawrence of America," and "Postmatter" ($4.00)
Friday, Sept. 11th, 2 pm: filmmaker Stan Brakage with his films "Faustifum: An Opera" by Rick Corigan and Stan Brakage, and "The Dante Quartet" by Stan Brakage ($5.00)
Tuesday, Sept. 8, 9th p.m. Poetry reading by Robert Creeley,
James McCrary, David Ohle, Wayne Propst and Leonard
Magnuder (from the works of Gary Youre, in memorial) ($4.00)
Wednesday, Sept. 9th, 9 pm: Beth Scallet with Bob Glirone, Bary O'Connor, Magnus Magderman and other musical performances
Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts:
FILM SERIES:
Thursday, Sept. 10th, 2 pm: Conrad Rooks film "Chappaqua" ($3.50)
Tuesday, Sept. 8, 2nd and 4 pm: Robert Frank films "Pull My Daisy" and "This Song for Jack," and Antony Bach film "Towers Open Fire" ($3.50) Wednesday, Sept. 9, 2nd; p: Robert Frank film "Me and My Brother" ($3.50)
Wednesday, Sept. 9th, 4 pm: Bruce Conner films "Cosmic Ray," "Permian Strata," "Mongoloid," "A Movie," "Take the 5:10 to Dreamland," "Valse Triste," and "Crossroads" ($3.50)
UNIVERSITY-SPONSORED EVENTS; ON-CAMPUS;
KANSAS JUNION.
KANSAS UNION:
Union Ballroom:
Tuesday, Sept. 8th, 7 pm: Anne Waldman and Andrei Cortesu read
Wednesday, Sept. 7th, 7 pm; Allen Ginsberg reads, with accompaniment by Steven Taylor
Oread Book Shop:
Thursday, Sept. 10th, 12 noon: booksigning by Allen Gins
will Harrum Burrells and Frankie Keriocu Parker
Friday, Sept. 11th, 4:30 p.m., booksigning by James Gunn, Johr Kessel, Brad Denton
Friday, Sept. 17th, 12 noon: bookings by Michael McClure
Danny Sugerman, Sanders
Saturday, Sept. 17th, 12 noon: booksigning by Ed Dorn, John
Gimo, Jim Carroll, Tim Leary
Browsing Room, 4th Level:
Tues.-Fri. Sept 8th-11th, 1 pm: poetry videotapes by William Knief
Tues.-Wed. , Sept. 8th-9th, 2-10 pm; student art exhibition,
including works by S. Clay Wilson
Tuesday, Sept. 8th, 2 p.m; readings by Frankie Ekerouca
Parker, Vance Crummett, David Stewart, Paul Caioopo
Wednesday, Sept. 9th, 2 p.m; readings by Dave Till, James
Morgan, Sarah Pink, and Donald Bird
Union Gallery:
Thursday, Sept. 10th, 2 pm; readings by Robert Day and guests Gary Brown, Duncan Dubin Brown and Philip Wedge, featureday of their long work "I Look Out for Ed Wolfe"
Thursday, Sept. 10th, 1 p.m; talk by John Moritz of Tansy Press about poetry published in Lawrence in the 1960s-1970s
Tuesday, Sept. 8th, 2 pm; readings by Andrew Brown, Carolyn
Dovim, Jill Carothers
Pine Room:
Wednesday, Sept. 9th, 2 pm; readings by Tom Averill, B.H. "Pete/Fairchild, Bruce Bond, Mike Salnell, Michael Johnson Thursday, Sept. 10th, 2 pm; readings by Jim Thomas, Tom Tromp, Kevin Keith, Kevin Dehmin, Bolt Holm, John Remziker
Friday, September 17th, p: 25; readings by Philip Miler, Michael Amani, Denise Low, Repha Buckman, Kylar Kilapier Wolfe
Friday, Sept. 11th, 2 pm; readings by James Gunn and guests Brad Denton, John Kessel
Friday, Sept. 11th, 11 am; filmmaker Stan Brakhage speaks
COURTNEY DAVIS
For updated schedule information, please call the KU Info Center at 864-3506.
Woodruff Auditorium:
Walnut Room:
All week, "Right Here in River City," an exhibit of regional poetry published in the 1960s
Wescoe Hall:
Kenneth Spencer Research Library:
Wednesday, Sept. 9th, 3 pm: Andriet Codrescu speaks to the English Department and guests
"Club Babaton Wash" (rear entrance, Hoch Auditrium):
Tuesday, Fep. 8th-11th, t 9 am; 1 pm to am: make-mike readings and performances by students and guests; organized by students Maker Mader, Alison Dishinger, Bill Haog, Volmitt
STUDENT • SAVE 28% WHEN YOU ADVERTISE IN THE KANSAN GROUPS:
Lawrence ARts Center, 9th & Vermont
ST'IDENT HEALTH SERVICES
Thursday, Sept. 10th 7 p.m.; readings by Ken Ibryn, John Moritz,
Gloria Vandrea, Judy Rav and Victor Contoski
Friday, Sept. 11th, 7 pm; readings by Philip Kimball, Patricia Traxler, Paul Michael Novak, and performance of Keith Dennison's "Jazz Moods" by the Quivia Company
Kellas Galier, 7 East 7th St.:
WATKINS
JUST ASK
"YOU, COLLEGE AND DIABETES"
Contraception, eating disorders, stress management, first aid, women's health issues, men's health issues, healthy relationships, AIDS, alcohol use, drug abuse. If these health concerns are of interest to you, call us at Student Health Services. A health educator will come to your living group to discuss how you can take responsibility for your health.
APPOINTMENT TIPS:
Diabetes Management Seminar September 2, 1987 6:30-8:30 p.m.
Sexuality and
Diabetic Student Training for the Diabetic Care Student
Exercise and Diabetes
Fitness and Diabetes
New ways of using
Insulin
Dietary
This program is designed for all interested diabetics, students, faculty staff and members of the Lawrence Community.
The appointment clerk is on duty 8-4.
Mon.-Fri. Here are some tips to make our new computerized appointment system work for you:
Have your class schedule handy as well as your KJ ID#.
your habit.
Plan ahead for followup or routine visits.
Make your own ap-
make your own appointments.
pointings:
Your conversation with the appointment clerk is confidential, so be specific about your needs so we can schedule you for the proper clinic.
-Plan to arrive 15 minutes prior to your scheduled appointment time.
SMOKING CESSATION
SEMINARS
There are three reasons why you may need help when you decide to stop smoking. They are: Habit Addiction Addiction
TESTING YOUR WINGS
Psychological Dependence "Freshstart" smoking cessation seminars are offered to all KJ students, faculty and staff during session seminar begins September 8. 1987 at 3:00 p.m.
C
ACQUAINTANCE RAPE
Most of us, at one time or another, have missed home the familiar, predictable atmosphere spent the first eighteen years of our lives. Adjustments of learning how to take on a commitment take time to develop.
Don't be afraid to let other people know that you're having a hard time of it. Call 864-9570 for more tips on how to cope. Watch for more information in the October issue of Beak Healthy.
. d To Women
Acquaintance rape is forced sexual intercourse by a friend or acquaintance; a woman is coerced into having sex through threats, intimidation, physical abuse, or restraint. Studies show that acquaintance rape is high among college students, possibly affecting one in every four women. Know your desires. Communicate your desire to answer of 'no' as meaning no; and a single question of 'yes' as meaning yes. Acquaintance rape is a violent, aggressive act. If you are a victim of it, seek professional help.
Word To Men
Call for more information or to register! WATKINS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
♂
864-9570
THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH EDUCATION
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12
Wednesday, September 2, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Making some pleasure from pain
Friends joke with ex-Senate leader while his broken left wrist heals
Downtown BARBER SHOP
By BEN JOHNSTON Staff writer
NIO
Staff writer
For Kelly Milligan, last year's student body vice president, living with a metal brace that he says looks like a television antenna is no excuse to slow down.
824 Massachusetts
Phone 843-8000
Regular Haircuts $5.00
The brace has become the object of some good-natured humor. Milligan
"The guys in the house say I am a better basketball player now than before the injury," said Milligan, Topeka senior. "I was always a hunt-and-peck typer, so my typing wasn't hurt."
"Everyone in the house complains that I screw up their television reception when I come in the room. I have also been referred to as "the road
"I like to do normal stuff," said Milligan, who has a broken left wrist. "I don't want to sit around and be a wallflower. If I need help I will ask."
Milligan, who is now vice president of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity, 1301 W. Campus Park, broke two bones in his left wrist Aug. 26 when the jeep he and three friends were in went off a narrow road to avoid an uncoming car west of Overland Park. No one else was seriously injured.
The brace, called an external fixator, was attached to his wrist to hold the bones in place so they would heal better. It is not painful and does not interfere with most activities, Milligan said.
"He teases me," Clow said. "He just tries to put it in my face to bother me."
Milligan said the brace would come off in about six weeks. And with the help of physical therapy classes, which he attends every day, he expects to regain full use of his hand.
Lisa Jones/KANSAN
Independent LAUNDROMAT Open 24 hours 9th & Mississippi
Right now he has two-thirds to three-fourths use of the fingers on his left hand, he said.
warrior," probably about 3,000 times. Spike is another nickname, and that will probably stick.
Former student body vice president Kelly Milligan, Topeka senior, is cheerful despite the car accident that left him with a compound wrist fracture. Milligan must wear an external fixator to help the bones heal.
"One time I was standing by the wall, and a guy who was all dressed with a suit and tie on came in. I was leaning against the wall, and he took this tie of and put it on it." Milligan said pointing to the brace. "It does look like a tie rack."
Mark Pusateri, Topeka senior and a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, said that immediately after the accident he was worried about Milligan, but now he and the rest of the fraternity feel free to make jokes on him.
Allison Clow, Mendham, N.J., senior and Milligan's girlfriend, said she could not stand to look at the brace.
PETER WILLIAMS
"It's probably helped him," Pusateri said. "He likes the attention."
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It's a Prize-Winning Opportunity to Have Fun Help the Arts . . . Meet Performers and Win Free Gifts
The University of Kansas Performing Arts announces the 1987-88
USHER CORPS PERFOR A R
MING
TS
Students selected for the Usher Corps will usher at various Performing Arts events including performances for the Concert Series, Chamber Music Series, New Directions Series and University Theatre.
At the end of the 1987-88 performance season, corps members will be eligible to win special prizes including:
While compiling ushering hours, student ushers will also have the opportunity to meet artists, attend special receptions and support the arts.
*Free weekends for two at Kansas City and Lawrence hotels
*Dinners for two at local restaurants
*Kansas City Royals tickets
*and much more
Get involved in the arts
Join the Performing Arts Usher Corps
Applications are being taken in the Murphy Hall Box Office
An informational meeting and interviews will be held in early September.
Diabetes Seminar
Wednesday, September 2, 1987 6:30-8:30 p.m.
Eagle
This seminar is designed for the KU student with diabetes mellitus and for any interested members of the University and Lawrence communities.
You, College and Diabetes
WHERE: Watkins Memorial Hospital
Watkins Memorial Hospital Student Health Services
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Lawrence, Ruth
Second Floor Conference Room
Lawrence, Kansas
COST: There is no charge.
TO REGISTER: Call 864-9500
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, September 2, 1987
Sports
13
WARNING
Mongo Allen, freshman linebacker, says he plans to start "Mongo Mania" at KU. Allen was practicing yesterday at the Shenk Complex, 23rd and Iowa streets.
Freshman linebacker sets spectacular goals
By CRAIG ANDERSON Staff writer
Staff writer
With his faith in God and a strong education, freshman linebacker Mongo Allen said he expected to fulfill the goals he set for himself.
Allen said he set spectacular limits on how much he wanted to achieve playing football.
"I don't just want to go for All-American," Allen said. "I want to be All-Universe before I leave here."
While he is moving to achieve these goals, Allen said he wanted to set a new trend: "Mongo Mania." He said that when he finally reached his peak, he would turn the world upside down.
But a chance to prove himself in front of the fans may still be a year away. With veterans Rick Bredesen and Rick Clayton, Kansas seems to have both depth and experience built up at linebacker. But Allen said the thought of a redshirt year didn't bother him.
"If I redshirt, I'll come back big,
stronger, faster and meaner."
Allen, who said Mongo was indeed his real name — he said he wouldn't reveal the story behind the name until he had made it big — may have to wait to make All-Universe, but he has already earned one title for his play. He was named Most Valuable Player in the Oil Bowl, a high school all-star game between Oklahoma and Texas.
The Del City, Okla., native said his transition from high school to college had been a great step in both academics and athletics. He said he enjoyed challenging himself at the higher levels.
Allen said. "Learning the right way to play will be easy with all these veterans around me."
KU linebacker coach Scott Conley said Allen had good athletic potential. He said a redshirt year would help Allen put more muscle on his 6-foot, 215-pound body.
Allen said that when he got to play on varsity, he would be able to live up to his high school nickname of "Omega Supreme."
when discussing the arrival of "Mongo Mania," Allen said, "I want all eager young lads to ask if there are any young Mongo maniacs."
Allen said that while growing up in Oklahoma, he was a big Sooner fan. He visited the University of Oklahoma, but coach Barry Switzer never offered him a scholarship. Allen said Switzer would eventually regret his decision not to sign him.
"some day when we're playing OU, I'm going to show coach Switzer what's up." Allen said.
He said Coach Bob Valesente was the main reason he decided to play at Kansas. Allen said Valesente cared for his players a great deal, and that outweighed the losing seasons the team has had the past few years.
Allen said he had no worries about what he would do when his football career ended. He said that during high school he placed second in a national fashion design talent search.
"Coach is going to keep the program strong with players like me and the rest of the freshmen," he said.
"I know the fashion design business will always be there for me to ascend on it," Allen said. "I'm just ready to play some ball right now."
Crew finds boatloads of recruits
If nothing else, the KU Crew will not lack depth this year.
By DARRIN STINEMAN
About 200 KU students, the largest number in recent years, turned out for the crew's introductory meeting yesterday afternoon at their boat house near Seventh Avenue and New York 80 returning rowers, the most varity members to return in the history of the organization.
Staff writer
Since the crew doesn't cut anyone who becomes a member, Coach Cliff Elliott and his team were treated. Elliott said he was encouraged by the large turnout.
"I think we're off to a tremendous start," he said. "We can accommodate a lot of people and we can race a lot of people. We're building one of the best crews in the nation if not the largest."
Fortunately for Elliott, he said he would have more help coaching the team this year. He said he expected the group membership to stabilize at about 350 compared with last year's membership of 225.
Ex-basketball player rides bench as coach
"Last year, it was my wife and myself coaching the team," he said.
"This year we have some assistant coaches and a good nucleus of varsity players to help out."
Because of the larger staff, the crew will compete in three to four races this fall, which it hasn't done the last two years. The fall season is
Now Burnett, 29), has become the first former KU women's basketball player to land a coaching job in women's basketball at an NCAA Division I school — Southwest Missouri State.
Burnett was named to the job Aug. 17, about two weeks after former
By ROBERT WHITMAN Staff writer
Burnett chose Kansas, where she was awarded the first full scholarship given to a female athlete and where she was an integral part of the success of Kansas women's basketball for four years.
When Cheryl Burnett finished her basketball career at Centralia, Mo., high school in 1976, she was recruited by Kansas and nearly every four-year college in Missouri except Southwest Missouri State.
coach Valerie Goodwin-Colbert resigned to become the women's basketball coach at Oklahoma.
See CREW, p. 14, col. 1
"I thought that was cutting it a little," Burnett said. "I've been going full-tilt ever since."
And full-tilt is just the way Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington said Burnett played in her four years at the University.
Washington's belief in her former player's ability led her to put in a
"I if were to describe her, I'd say first, she was a fierce competitor." Washington said. "She was certainly a fine shooter. I felt Cheryl was always one to try to do what you asked of her.
good word for Burke.
"I don't know if Cheryl knows this
"She'll do a very good job for them."
or not, but I called an assistant athletic director on my daughter's wedding day because I didn't want to fail to make that contact before the decision was made," Washington said.
"I was very impressed by both of them," Burnett said. "As soon as I got on campus, I knew it was for me. It was gorgous."
Burnett said her decision to choose Kansas, instead of the other schools that recruited her to play, was not a hard one.
Burnett said her first contact with KU came while she was still in high school and attended Washington's basketball camp. Sheila Moorman, then an assistant women's basketball coach for Kansas, was the first to bring Burnett to Washington's attention.
"I don't want to put Marian on our schedule unitl we can beat her," Burnett said.
In four years at Kansas, Burnett, a 5-foot-8 guard, averaged 7.1 points a game, 2.2 assists, and 3.0 rebounds in 127 games as a shooting guard. In her final three years, she played with Lynette Woodard, Kansas' all-time leading scorer. In her senior year, Woodard were corrapaints of the team.
But Burnett isn't quite ready to take on her old coach yet. Kansas and Southwest Missouri State won't meet this year, unless it is in the NCAA tournament.
"Are you kidding?" Burnett said jokingly, when asked what position she played. "I passed the ball to Lynette."
Robinson staff ready to deal with injuries
By a Kansan reporter
When an injury occurs at Robinson Center, help is usually available or can be contacted within two to three minutes, according to Allan Heinze, facility director.
First aid can be administered by Robinson staff, service center staff, lifeguards or building security. Heinze said. Additionally, secretaries and court supervisors are aware of what steps to take to get aid.
In the case of more serious injuries Emergency Medical Technicians (EMTs) or KU Police are tested ambulance would then be used.
"The real fortune thing is living Watkins Hospital real close by,"
Heinze said. "And we've had real good response from KU Police and the EMTs. The ambulance generally comes here right away."
Heinze said that injuries occur about three to four times a week. Most happen during the building's peak use time — between 5:30 p.m. and 9 p.m. — when as many as 1,700 people may use the facilities.
Higuera throws one-hitter as Brewers defeat Royals
The most frequent accidents are sprained ankles. Normally a court supervisor, liaquef or someone at the service center of the problem.
The Associated Press
"I just wanted to win the game tonight, that's all," Higuera said after Rob Deer and Ernest Riles hit ninth-inning RBI singles, giving the
KANSAS CITY. Mo — Milwaukee's Ted Higuera, fighting a headache and chills, held the Kansas City Royals hitted Tuesday night until Ross Jones joined with two out in the eighth inning. He finished with a one-hitter, which was enough to outduel Bret SABahrenh.
Crutches can be loaned for temporary use. Injured persons are required to fill out an accident report and are advised to visit Watkins Hospital.
Brewers a 2-0 victory over the Royals.
"I was not feeling very good today. Had a headache and fever," the Mexican-born Higuera said through his interpreter, teammate Juan Nieves.
Higuera retired the first 15 batters and had little trouble until Jones broke his bat on an inside fastball that he drove into left field, eluding the grasp of Deer.
Trade of union official stalls NFL negotiations
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The NFL contract talks hit a new smug yesterday when the New England Patriots traded union vice president Brian Holloway to the Los Angeles Raiders after telling Holloway that he could either retire or be traded.
Despite the Holloway issue, talks were set to resume today or tomorrow between the two sides, which have not met since Aug. 14. John Jones, a spokesman for the NPL Management Council, said only a few people from each side would be involved in the talks, the location of which was not disclosed.
secret sword.
Yesterday the Patriots told Holloway, the three-time Pro Bowler at offensive guard, that his services were no longer needed. Coach Raymond Berry, denying the union claims, said the move was made because "I was convinced we needed to make a change at left tackle."
Holloway, who was traded for an undisclosed draft choice next year, had appeared on national television Monday night to state the union's side of the issue hours after the NFLA executive committee set a secret strike deadline.
Gene Upshaw, executive director of the NFL Players Association, called the move "an obvious attempt to break up the union."
One of the topics could well be the union's request for protection for its player representatives, a major concern of the NFLAPA long before Holloway was given the ultimatum by the Patriots.
Holloway, a 28 year-old, seven-year veteran who has said this might be his last year, had been New England's starting left tackle throughout the preseason.
"If this isn't an obvious attempt to break up the union, what is?" Upshaw said. "It's one of the most arrogant acts I've ever seen."
Upshaw, however, said the Patriots' action "had nothing to do with Brian's talent" and claimed the action was "just a legal action to protect Holloway's rights."
"I think it necessary, because of the timing, to make a clear point. This decision has absolutely nothing to do with his union activities."
NFL player representatives will vote Tuesday on whether to approve a new stadium.
But Berry, in a statement released by the Patriots, said he had decided to make the change for football reasons alone. He said he met with Holloway yesterday morning and gave him the option of retiring.
"He said he wanted to play, so we will arrange a trade," Berry said and added:
Bruno
Tony张克, Hutchinson sophomore, chops two boards in half as Hussein Aziz, Bahdad, Iraq, graduate student, and Brian Marcuccio, Omaha junior,
Karate Club gains crowd, loses bricks
By ROBERT WHITMAN
Staff writer
As a member of the KU Karate Club, Peggy Konen has learned techniques that have enabled her to split a two-inch thick brick with her hand.
But her boyfriend has learned something too. He has learned to be careful, especially during moments of playful wrestling.
"Whenever we wrestle, or whatever, he told me to be careful when I hit him," Konen, Overland Park senior, said.
Konen split the brick during a demonstration by the club last night in the Robinson Center. The demonstration was conducted by 16 Karate Club members, all dressed in white, loose-fitting gI, the traditional practice uniform.
About 60 people watched the demonstration of one of the oldest forms of self-defense.
The Karate Club gives members traditional instruction in the Okinawan goju-yu style, which loosely translated means hard-soft school.
"We are traditional Japanese karate," said Doug Sikora, club president and first-degree black belt. "It's very old. In fact, nobody knows how old — more than a thousand years. It was originally developed as a self-defense technique for Okinawan peasants, who were not allowed to have weapons. It served as the basis for other forms of karate.
"The first formal recognition of our style was in the early 1900s. Until then, nobody ever gave it a name." Sikora said.
said.
“Our kicks are to the solar plexus and lower. It’s practical, especially if (your opponent is) wearing blue jeans and boots,” Sikora said.
The style uses both hands and feet an equal amount of time, but hands are emphasized, Sikora said.
A brief skiff began the demonstration and showed the potential for personal self-defense. Also shown were kata, where two members showed various moves against imagined opponents, and bunkai
where two members did pre-arranged sparring.
Members also did some extemporaneous sparing and broke as many as four two-inch thick plates.
The climax of the demonstration was the breaking of the bricks, first by Konen with her hand, then by a man who broke one with his head.
"The only time we ever break bricks and boards is in demonstrations," Konen said. "We learn to focus our power. It shows how we can focus our concentration. If we can break bricks, we can break bones."
That Konen was breaking bricks at all during the demonstration was a bit unusual, Sikara said.
"She's the lowest-ranking student we've ever left break bricks. She asked to do it and she felt she was
The demonstration was designed to attract members to the club, which has 30 to 40 members, Sikora said.
---
14
Wednesdav. September 2, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Sports
Crew
Continued from p. 13
regarded as a warm-up period for the more competitive spring season.
The equal opportunity to compete and the camaraderie of the group are two major things that attract people from the group, said David Brandt, Prairie Village senior. Brandt is beginning his fourth year as a crew member.
"I'd been real active in high school and I was just about too small for me to sing," he said. "It's not a sport where you play, but I'm a big at all, and I've done well at it."
Arlen Carr, captain of the men's team, said his three years with the crew have been valuable to him.
"It's competitive; it keeps me in shape," he said. "There are a lot of good people out here, and I've made a lot of friends."
Dues for the group are $50 a
two-week work-trial membership for $15.
The varsity will begin the season Sept. 26 at the Head of the Des Moines Regatta.
Lendl and Navratilova win first round at Open
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Defending champions Ivan Lendl and Martina Navratilova breezed past their opening-round opponents at the U.S. Open yesterday, with Lendl scoring the first three-set shutout in Open his
Lendl overpowered South African Barry Moir 6-0, 6-0, 6-0, and Navratilova beat Kate Gompert of Rancho Mirage. Calif. 6-1, 6-1.
In another opening-day match, four-time Open winner John McEnroe defeated Matt Anger of Pleasanton, Calif., 6-3, 6-2, 6-2. McEnroe lost to Paul Annacone in the first round of last year's Open.
Lendl's shutout on the hardcours of the National Tennis Center was the first in men's singles since the Open moved there in 1978 and the second since the Open era began in 1968. The other whitewash occurred in 1977,
when lise Nastie beat Frew McMillan 6-0, 6-0 on clay in the round at Forest Hills. In those days, early-round matches were best-of-three sets.
Lendl dominated Moir from the opening game, when he broke the South African's serve. The top seed hit 21 winners to Moir's six, led in aces 5-0 and wom 79 of the 108 points in the match.
Moir, ranked 122nd in the world, won only 29 percent of the points when he got his first serve in.
“He just doesn't have any power,” said Lendl, who is seeking his third straight Open title. “His best shot is his return of serve, but I don't come in and I did not hurt me. He plays well, and she sane as me as, but I hit a lot harder.”
Lendl said he wasn't bothered by the lack of competition.
The Associated Press
NEW YORK - Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Kevin Gross, who was caught with sandpaper glued to his glove during a game, lost his appeal yesterday of a 10-day suspension and began serving the penalty.
National League President Bart Giammati "has denied the appeal... and upheld the original 10-day suspension after a thorough review of the facts with the parties addressed," the league said in a statement.
Philies President Bill Giles said the club would withhold Gross' $23,000 salary for the 10-day period and donate it to ALS (Lou Gehrig's disease), for which wives of Philadelphia players have raised funds the four last seasons.
"I thought it probably would be upheld," Gross said last night in Los Angeles, where the Philies played the Dodgers. "But I didn't know that they would suspend me for 10 days without pay. I didn't believe that was
Gross suspended without pay
going to happen.
"I disagree, because that's not the way the rules are stated for the thing that I did. It's not worth what I'm getting penalized and punished for. I don't agree with it, and I can't believe that my own club is penalizing me for something that I didn't do by taking my pay.
"Giamatti suspended me for 10 days. The club has the option (to not pay him). That's the second penalty."
Giamatti didn't state that in his suspension. That's entirely up to my team."
Gross said that other players had been suspended in the past, but that none of them had ever had their pay suspended. "It's never happened in the history of the game," he said.
Gross was allowed to pitch pending appeal, and he had a four-hour hearing before Giamatti on Thursday.
Scoreboard
Baseball
American League
Milwaukee 2, Kansas City 0
Oakland 8, New York 3
Seattle 5, Baltimore 0
Detroit 6, Cleveland 5 (1)
Toronto 4, California 3 (10)
Texas 6, Chicago 4
Boston 9, Minnesota 0
National League
Atlanta 4, Pittsburgh 0
Chicago 3, Houston 2
Cincinnati 7, St. Louis 4
New York 9, San Diego 1
Philadelphia 7, Los Angeles 5
San Francisco 1, Montreal 4
AUDITION
for
University DANCE Company
Wednesday, September 2,1987
6:00 P.M.
242 Robinson
no solo material required
for more info., call 4-4264
AUDITION for University DANCE Company
Wednesday, September 2,1987
6:00 P.M.
242 Robinson
no solo material required
for more info., call 4-4264
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$799
Puma JACK BANANA REPUBLIC Men's 3-Button Henley Shirt If perf. $20.00 - Now $9.99 ESPRIT SPORT adidas MEN'S - LADIES' Leather Basketball - Tennis - Running - Aerobic - Track Kangaroos LA.GEAR NIKE SHOES Hi Tops & Lo Tops Now $1999 PUMA. PONY.
VISA
MasterCard
Patronize Kansan Advertisers.
BEFORE YOU BUY, Check the KANSAN. Our advertisers might save you money.
Just a Playhouse
Rock and Roll
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
TOP 40 ODIES
LIVE BANDS
Every Thursday, Friday & Saturday night!
Back To School
MALE BURLESQUE
Thursday, Sept. 3 8:00-10:30
Must Be 21 Memberships Available
PLAYHOUSE
ENTERTAINMENT
HOTLINE
843-2000
806 W. 24th St.
Fall Fling Sale'87
T-necks . . . . . . . . 2 for 9** Overdyed, Stone Washed Shirts . . . . 19**-24** Stone Washed Twill Skirts & Pants 24**-29** Roll Neck Sweaters . . . . . . . . 29** Dresses Rayon & Madras . . . . . . . . 25% off Selected Fall Accessories . . . . . . . . 25% off Acid Washed Skirts (selected styles) 20% off Guess Jeans (selected styles) . . . . . . . . 20% off Selected Fall Merchandise . . . . . . . . 50% off
Not all items available in all stores.
711 W. 23rd
Hours:
Monday-Saturday 10-6
Thursday 10-8:30
Sunday 1-5
carousel
ClassifiedAds
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Be a H.E.R.O.
"As God is my witness. I’ll never be uninvolved again." Maybe there isn’t always tomorrow.
Join a Student Senate Committee. Kansas and Burge Unions. 664-3710.
"I do believe in Senate-oh, I do. I do believe in Senate." Don't be afraid to get involved. Join a Student Senate Committee. Kansas and Burge Unions. 864-3710.
Just starting and you're already stressed out? Get the knits out at Lawrence Massage Therapy.戒证书es available too! 'Tell your roomate!) Student discount! Bruce and Rowan will be on to you!
Heading home for the holidays? **FLY CHEAP**
Call in us. Carpenters Travel. 843-5608
Attention! Travis McGee Fans! Join the fan of your favorite stud sleuth! 841-723-9781 or 841-582-9602
Hillel
הלו
Wednesday Lunch with Tami Liston Regional United Jewish Appeal Representative Sunset Alcove 11:30-1:30 Kansas Union level 2 Get involved in the 1988 U.J.A. KU student campaign
For rides and more information call 749-4242
---
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, September 2, 1987
15
WOMEN'S SUPPORT GROUP
Wednesday, Sept. 9, 1987
7:00-9:00 p.m.
International Room
Kansas Union
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center Invites You To Join Other KU Women To Discuss Topics Of Personal Interest To You!
Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center. For further information contact Pam Lathrop at 864-3552
Jumping
Volunteers needed. Headquarters Crisis Counseling Center. Training provided. Information meeting; Wednesday, September 9, or Sunday, September 13, 8-9 p.m., 4119 Massachusetts
A Group Bash at the Royals Baseball Game Don't Miss the Fun on Thurs., Sept. 17 Watch the Kansan for more info, or call the SUA office at 864-3477
ENTERTAINMENT
At your request is Lawrence's Best and Most AF
fordable D.J. Sound and Lighting for Any Occasion.
841-1465
LIBERTY HALL
A FILM BY ALEX COX
STRAIGHT TO HELL
JOE STRUMMER DCK RUDE
ELVIS CUSTELLO DENIS HOPPER
only $3
metropolis
1 DJ Service in Lawrence
Experienced Club & Radio DJ's
Music for all Occasions
Social Theatre and Dance
DJ Rav Velasquez - 8417083
ULTIMATE ENTERTAINMENT
Ultimate JD System For All Occasions
423089042308904
FOR RENT
Available immediately: 2/hr apt. convenient to
shopping & campus, 10635 street parking,
1611-6780 1611-6780
BRAND NEW completely furnished 4 bedroom
apples available immediately. On the bus route and
in walking distance of KU. Call 749-4258 or
6 4 2 4 4 5 5
Ever useful cooperative living? It's convenient and a lot of fun! Sunflower Student Cooperative. Call or stop by: 1406 Tennessee at 749-0871, ask for Debbie.
- female roommate needs 1 non-smoker, 1/4th housemate, Campus Place. Call 409-749-8256
Excelcel location? Walk to campus. Newer
Excelcel location? Dijkstra dhook. Lookup.
Call 841-266.
Female roommate wanted to share large house, very close to amputus. $145-190, all utilities paid, washer dryer, fully furnished. No pets. No smoking. Fully information for卡蒙 Marine
Furnished two bedroom apt. one block from the University with off-street parking. No pets.
For Subset: STUDIO apartment at 14th and Ohio.
Address: 431,938-3821 after 5.
Farmed kitchen with shared kitchen and bath on the first floor off street park. No pet, please. 841-5000.
Village square
call by 9/4/87
Spacious 2 bedroom Waterbed fine
Waterbed fine Swimming pool
9th & Avalon 842-3040
NAISMITH PLACE
OUSDAHL & 28th Ct.
841-1815
2 bdr., jacuzzi
water pd.
GUARANTEED SPACE at Naimuth Hall for 84
Spring Semester. Male only. NO WAITING
LIST! Call Matt. 942-5203 for large 5'/2m bath.
HOUSE FOR FAMILY TO CAMPUS with LAUNDRY IN
BASEMENT and 6th bdrm or study, living and responsible as students (suitable to share rent and at 14th and Kentucky. Contact Darryl at
316-264-8123 or 316-265-8025. 日12:37
Topkis. 13'x20'. Large furnished room in furnished house 3 blocks.
Winter Preferred. Price only $120. 842-865-958.
Glenhaven Apartments walk to class
2/3 bedrooms from Union 1135 Ohio, 21/2 bedroom and large loft, ban. Exciting energy system. All appliance including microwave, dryer. Wired for cable.
841-5797
Hillview Apartments
1733 W. 24th
841-5797
- 1 & 2 bedroom units
- NOW LEASING Starting at $250/mo.
- laundry room
- on bus route
- laundry facilities
- on bus route water aid
- off street parking
- off street parking
- rental furniture available from Thompson Crawley
Need to sublease nice 2 bedroom room apt at Aspen
Need to rent 2 bedroom room at Aspen (will take
wife if available) in September paid! Available
deposit paid! Call now at 249-806.
Call Martin at 841-6611.
One bedroom of a two bedroom apt $15.50/month plus 12 utilities. Pool, bus route.
Call Martin at 841-6611.
NAISMITH PLACE
OUSDAHL & 25th Ct.
841-1815
2 BEDROOM APTS.
- Jacuzzi in each apartment
* Water paid
- Water paid
* Fully equipped kitchen
* 1 bik. to K.U. bus route
* Satellite television
* Private balconies
* Basketball court
* Park-like setting
* On site management
* Rental furniture available
LEASE NOW AND RECEIVE A
TO PADRE ISLAND DURI
SPRING BREAK OR $250 OFF
FIRST MONTH'S RENT
DEPOSIT
Room close to campus, avail on September 1st.
792-8011. 792-8011.
Room close to campus, available September 1st,
water & gas included. $110/mo. 749-8911.
Rooms for Rent: Suburban House, Private RM
bath, DW FF, Desk Trees, Bedroom, pnsc-
smoke hatch, Kitchen LDK. V1. M56
sitting rooms + bldm apts, close to campus.
Water & Winter lease. No Pets. 842-8971.
THE TIME IS RISING
SUNRISE PLACE 9th & Michigan
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.
FOR SALE
12 speed touring bicycle, 23" men SR Semi-Pro Touring front and rear rack. Excellent condition
1974 Suzuki TS 250 $350. Call 843-8304
1975 Honda 125 motorcycle Dirt bike. Low mileage. Only $250. Call 749-3891 after 5 o'clock.
mileage. Only $250. Call 749-3853 after 5 o'p.m.
1997 Yamaha 500 Endura, street legal, new battery,
new wheels, recent tune-up. Call Dave at 843-9822.
1985 Honda Elite 150 Deluxe Excellent condition 2600 miles. Scooter cover and helmet included.
1930 Moped sale - Honda Spree, Great condition.
9240 Call 843-7341.
28 inch Cambridge ten-speed bicycle. Like new.
$69 or best offer. Mail 844-411-81
V.W. RAB Convertible, Sony stereo, A/C/
22,000 miles excellent condition, $750. Joe,
after 18 months.
79 Honda Accord-partrs for sale or entire car.
Call 749-2388--keeptry.
ARLING TICKET FOR SALE: Round trip. Kira to City Los Angeles. Labor Day Weekend, September 4, 1987, $160. Must sell. Call 843-8160 or 845-5554
1 overcaught 5/1 and 3/1 & 2 Computer Disks. Selling
call: Call 841-4354 and ask for Paul.
An Absolutely Awesome Array of Antiques, collectibles and neat stuff—we have: hardback and 1/2 price paper backpacks, full line linen fabrics, toilets, Indian and costume jewelry, loads of antique, indian, and costume jewelry (giltter and good stuff), the right vintage clothes for any occasion, antique toys, fine art glass, doll house¹²
KOHB Digital drums, digital percussion units.
Professional sound, all accessories; only $100
good, high-quality, unique toy, fine art glass, built-to-house furniture, miniatures, fiesta, and the best selection of antique furniture in the area. Quinnifile Rites Market, 11 New Hampshire, Open Saln & Sun.
Apple Ic Monitor/stand. Plus power supply.
Makes home to office commute easy. $75.
841-6805.
3000 120 B, Laptop IBM Computer
3.5 disks, battery or A/C powered. 800, 344-3994
King size WATERED Batteries 66. Speakers P/U runs.
Kingsize Malu will P/O. Box springs. Tom
*** MOTHIBAL GOOD USED FURNITURE
*** Furniture: 10:50 a.m. Saturday, 12:00 a.m.
Friday
MAX'S COMICS. Comic Books, Playbets, Pnthouse, etc. 811 New Hampshire
**lens for sale - Olympus GM1 with 10mm**
**camera for sale - Olympus GM1 with 8mm**
**digital camera by 8411 at 10144 or 8416**
Call us at 8411 at 10144 or 8416
DORM REFREGERATOR White, silent. Call Zarin at 842-7632.
For Sale 2-bedroom mobile home Great sale
at appointment $500 0100 849-1949
anytime at bk1 or bk4 or bk14*
carpet for sale down size shown, foam-backed,
fitted carpet Will deliver 45* Call
fun on Ml. Oread, $225, 1-633-2128.
Mountain bike. Stumped Stuntsmper Sport.
For Sale. Remo-Roto Toms 6" - 8" good condition, $110. Call 843-2443, ask for Joe.
Enlarger for sale: Omega D2V, 45x, w/variable card. Also Nikon FM2 and KRHS-KS. Some flash equipment. Leave message at 841-7968. For Sale 2 bedroom mobile home. Great shape.
Apple II plus the Word Processor, disk drive,
iPod touch, $85 or best offer,
Call Allen
610-734-2911
- on-tub, fully equipped, pump, heater, blower,
some assembly required. 1973 Chrysler, runs
great, new transmission, battery and more. Ask for
Kurt, 749-0862
condition Blue $100 O.B.O. 841-6400
For Sale: SFLPJ111 programmable CD
Sale price $1,750
flash equipment. Leave message at 841-5986
For flaite 2 bedroom
For flaite 3 bedroom
0909 OBO 0800 OBD - 0814-094
For Sale: Takara 25" 12-speed mens bike. Great
price!
GREAT BOOKS OF THE WESTERN WORLD 52
bookset is $19.99, mine is $9.99. Call
bookset's net is $13.00, mine is $9.99. Call
Pentax Progam Plus 35mm w/92/80 mm zoom,
Pentax Program Plus 35mm w/92/80 mm zoom,
Pentax AF 30F-AP7 flash unit,
tripod, and tundra carring case. Retail $750. Asking
$450. Call 814-1497.
Multi-family garage sale September 4, 9 a.m.; September 5, 9 a.m.; September 5, 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. 1839 B. 27th Term 2. Moped3, stereo, TV, antique机 machine, electric stove furniture, clothing, toy truck.
**SHAPR** Black and white men 12 speed bicycle.
Excellent condition. $125. Bright red 1985 Honda Spree Scooter. Very low mileage. $300. Call 841-1497.
Bicycle Bicycling 22 pounds $800 one year ago,
sacrifice at $100. 841-948-786
Totalage review course for all four parts of CPA exam for $200. (A new one is $54). Used once to pass the CPA exam on the first try. Call after 5 p.m. at 316-589-5694
Surakki GS 400 E. Must sell for $750. OBO. Will
negotiate. Call 814-7767
Silver-Reed EX8X electronic typewriter, daisy wheels, extra ribbons $150. Drafting table $100. Imagewriter cards $400. Balans (kneeling) $690.
p.m.
WATERBED 4 SALE Super single headboard,
shelves, and sheets, and filter kit included.
Like new. Only used 2 weeks. Will deliver.
Call 749-870 or 749-875. $125 or best offer.
AUTO SALES
best
1st Firmazza 4 door, 4 speed, A/C, cruise,
twin amph. EFI motor, $2800, 942-6976.
1982 Mada GLC new paint, new muffler, $235 or best call. Cali 841-306-9.
70 VW Beetle, excellent condition, no rust, heat works, radio, white. N W Lawrence 8500
74 VW Super Beetle new items Good condition
$150 or best offer B1-847-8523
NEW CARS, NEW TRUCKS $250-450 over
CONT. DELBERT D. THOMAS 810-849
*
$1500 or best offer 841-723-4791
'79 Celica Manual standard features w/air
conditioning, rear seat adjustment,
conditioned, new condition,'nw
FUN SPORTS CAR=1916 TR, great condition,
$150.00, Call 184-6974 (Lenoxa).
or lena. Manual standard features wa-
rship. 2500 or best offer. 842-8077.
**2500 or best offer** 842-8077.
CARS SEL (for $15 (average)) Also jeeps,
car accessories. Now available 060-867-0001
www.carssel.com
LOST-FOUND
In It True You Can Buy Jeep for $44 through the U. government or the fact that 'Call U. government' is the fact that 'Call U. government'.
Tune up your import car. $35. Parts and labor in-
scue assistance GUARANTEED. Call Arn.
802-8295
Last-cat $40 reward. Yellow metered male, thin with amber eyes. Call (812) 2268
ben. no, royau blue stone, Date 1982, initials on inside BGE. If found, PLEASE return to McColumb Hall, room 522 or call 864-6178 and ask for JACK, ASAP
LOST-Men's class ring St. Johns High School.
Lott: Teal green Janten sweet
Loft: Teal green Janten sweet
Lott: to owner to owner
Loft: to read Language Lab, 4th Floor Wescoe.
HELP WANTED
810-609 Weekly up mail circulating! Rush self-
addressed stamped envelope: Opportunity; 9016
Wilshire Blvd, Box 226, Dept. Q, Beverly Hills, CA
@9211
ATTENTION: STUDENTS! Natl firm preparing for Fall/Winter works. #77.5 to be filled in internships are possible, & you may earn 2.3, 4 credits/qr or semester. Must apply now!
Buckey's Drive-in, a KU tradition for 20 years, has opened for the noon hour shift, weekend shift, and night shift. In person between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. THANK YOU KU DRIVE IN
SUBSST
Sandwich Shop
Attention!!
Now accepting applications from energetic, hardworking, responsible individuals. Openings available on all shifts.
Now accepting applications for drivers,
20-40 hours, hourly wage plus CASH
PAID NIGHTLY. Please apply at
Delivery!!
Checkers Pizza has an immediate opening for 5 pizza order takers. Must be born on Friday or Saturday, pay $4/hr to start and $3/50 hr after 2 weeks. Apply in person. Checkers Pizza
Cheekers Pizza has an immediate opening for 10 pizza delivery drivers. Drivers must be 18 yrs or older and are required to have a $50/hr plus commission & tip to start. $36/hr after 2 weeks. Apply in person between 3:30 – 9:00am on Friday.
Bob Dole Needs K.U. Students! To help with his
Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse and Mass. Street Deli now hiring food service and table service employees. Food service startage wage $4.00 per hour, table service wage $3.50 per hour. On-site lunchunch time availability. Apply at 719 Mass above Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse. Checkers Cupcake has an immediate opening for
presidential campaign
*Organizational meeting at
7 p.m., Thursday, Sept. 3
in the Walnut Room at the
Kansas (Union, or call Brett
864-7114 for more information.
dependable, mature person to assist with personal care for my dismayed former partner (former wife) during our divorcing quarters. 10-15 hrs a week expected (90 hrs), with no overnight absences. Only students interstituted in, or experienced
presidential campaign
Computer Service Agency is looking for a part-time computer operator. This job entails operation of computer equipment, support and support devices. Applicant must be experienced in the operation of the above equipment. Employer should have an experience in employment. Apply at Computer Service Agency, 2017 Louisiana, LAWRENCE KS 843-862-8428.
Kansas and Burge Union Food Service Departments need part-time help: time room workers 11 a.m.-2 p.m. or, or 1 p.m.-4:30 p.m. line workers 11 m.-1 a.p.m. dishwashing or cleaning 11 m.-1 a.p.m. food preparation $3/45; hr. in person, Kansas Union Personnel Office, Fifth Level Main Union Building, EOE.
Female for assistance with my care. Mornings or evenings. Call 749-4395.
GOVERNMENT JOWS. $10.00-$45.00/297-yr. *For*
government federal list. Ex. R. 7987 for current
federal list.
Faculty couple needs help with kids, M.F. F-15-6-15:
Duties: driving, meal preparation, light housekeeping $3.25/hour. 842-2768 for interview.
Experience preferred.
Kansas University Catering needs caterers for fall semester. $4.5/hour. Varied hours per week. Need to have nouns open hours. Apply at the Kansas University Personal Office, 8th Level, EOE.
Nasimh Hall is accepting applications for part-time work in the cafeteria. If interested, stop by the Nasimh lobby front desk and fill out an application soon. Nasimh Hall 1000 Nasimh
owiring for part-time video route position. Will maintain, repair and collect video games. Must have experience and creditable references. Please email resume to 719 Mass above Bob Bob's Smokegator.com.
Now hire part-time work / receptionist. Approximate to 35 hrs per week for use in filing, filing and, some bookkeeping. Must have experience in computer based assistance. Apply at 719 Mass, above Buford.
Now hire experienced lice cooks and prep cooks. Wage commensurate with experience. Must have some daytime availability. Apply at 179 Mass, above Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse.
STUDENT MONTHLY POSITION AVAILABLE
12-10 HOURS/WEEK) Duties include: processing student appointment for the College of Nursing, preparing a computer assist with general office duties, working on special administrative and budgetary projects as well as participating in good mathematical skills, some familiarity with
Part-time help needed in a woman's bookstore.
Apply only Wednesday, September 2 between 1-6
p.m. at Spinner's Books and Webbery, 801 1/2
Massachusetts.
PART TIME JOBS. Sports officials are needed at Recreation Services for intramural softball. No experience necessary. Attend the meeting at 6:15 p.m. in room 136, Robert Center.
Preferred Qualifications: knowledge of University payroll and accounting procedures and knowledge of microcomputer database management. Salary Range: $15,000 - $20,000. September 6, 1987. Apply in person in Rm 210 Strong Hall. Tentative start date: Sept. 8, 1987.
Student wanted to clean, babyset one child, do two, and be a housekeeper. Must have own transportation, experience.
Teacher's aides needed for childcare program, 12:30 to infant room and 11:30 to 3:00 for five year-olds; children experience and or study in children education, require classroom Learning Center, 331 Maine, weekdays. Wanted: Enthusiastic, self-motivated people for the largest pizza delivery company in the world. Reqs: Master's degree or equivalent mileage. You can average $8.90 or more. Must own car and insurance. APPLY NOW at www.kidspassport.com.
RUNZA
SINCE 1997
RESTAURANT
Runza needs part-time morning help 9 a.m.-2 p.m., Monday through Friday and evenings5 p.m.-10 p.m., Monday through Friday.
Runza Drive In 2700 Iowa St.
749-2615
Waterbalaion Representative-National company seeks college reps to sell waterbalaion launcher. "Lunar Launcher" Send name, address, phone number, history work history Shaw Mission, KS, 66201 P.O. Box 5921 work Shaw Mission, KS, 66201
MISCELLANEOUS
$10 $260 Weekly Up, mailing circular to
$30 $540 Weekly Up, mailing circular to
$80 $120 Address envelope CM/NA-DQP COL 7730
CM/NA-DQP COL 7730
"And sometimes, in my dreams, I remember Student Senate. but we don't talk about Manderly anymore. But you can always remember your sister. You can apply now. Kansas and Burge Uunions. 864-3710."
SKYKENTYNE for Thanksgiving, November
low package prices, includes airfare/hotel/ski
transfers/iff.tickets. Call 843-5698
Package available without air.
Small established foreign car repair shop for sale in Lawrence. Inquiries: 841-5496
PERSONAL
CHUCKLES. Thanks for being my Best Buddy.
D never change. You’re Awesome. Xx00
Free kitties. Bartles and James. House broken for apartment or house. (call 842-6471)
ATO's, Tri Delt's, Fiji's, Pi Phi's, and Phi Psi's-
Thanks,
The Alpha Chi's
Had a blast on the beach!
Intelligent, good-looking' guy who interested in
sports music, curly hair, nature is looking in
book to see a woman. Nature, lifestyle or
never been married with some interest. I
have never been married with some interest.
I
OXYMORON. This duck walks into a bar and the
says, "Hey! you're just a duck!"
bardtered you. Hey! they are just a duck.
Sui-Ki- Happy Anniversary. Hope there are more to come. I love you very much. P.S.-Won't ya be my love slave? Love, FROG
**exam1** Support network, newsletter for you.
@SASE to Box 1545, Lawrence K. 60044
BUS. PERSONAL
--testing
Rare and Used Records. Buy, Sell, or Trade.
Campbell's 11 New Hampshire.
Lovability & Character,
not pedigree, count most.
You know it!
NOW PROCLAIM IT
about your pet
(pooch, kitty, other pet ...
boy/girl friend)
by way of an
Individualized and
Distinctive
*(shown on Certificate)
$5 check/money order, to
Send (please print)
Your name, address, zip Pet's name* Owner's name*
I L $ ^{**} $ Y $ ^{**} $ A* Y $ ^{**} $ A*
Certificate
Special Student Membership
$150 per semester
Raquetball, Tennis
THE COMIC CORNER
NE COFER of 23rd & Iowa
841-4294
Role-playing & War Games
Bloom Ground Stars
Old-fashioned old comics
Dr. Who, Star Trek, Miniatures and More!
I P F
Bros For People
Box 1075
Lawrence, Ks 66044
Gravstone Athletic Club
841-2277
BRIDGESHIE, BACKACHE, ARM PAIN, LEG
PAIN? Student and most insurance accepted. For complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Mark
Johnson 843-3979
The Coldest Beer Around
"Of all the Student Senate Committees in the world, she had to walk into mine." Face up to your past-apply now, as time goes by-Kansas and Burge Unions. 864-3710.
2500 W. 6th Street 841-7230
Weekly Beer Specials
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-821-6012. Confidential help/free pregnancy
800 West 23rd
GREENS PARTY SUPPLY 808 W.23rd
Michelob 6 pk. $2.99
Coors Light 12 pk. $5.39
Budweiser 12 pk. $5.49
Miller Lite 12pk. $5.29
Strohs 15 pk. $5.29
Old Style 12 pk. $3.69
Busch 24 pk. $7.69
Wiedemann 12 pk. $3.19
Sept. 2-Sept.8
SERVICES OFFERED
"CRIMSON SUN PHOTO" is looking for young women in colorado modeling young men and teens. Call 811-452-9060.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-749-739.
Experienced rock drummer wanting to play in serious rock band. Call Mike at 749-3564
FLASHBACK PHOTO fast and dependable party picture service. Call 843-8780 to book your
Have Dives-Will Travel Mobile Sound Service.
Complete selection of dance music including Progressive, Soup and Triple 40 dance music. Experienced DJ and top equipment. Affordable MARK 7 174-839-6254
GRAF / Scientific and statistical illustration,
maze, drawing, editing aid, also water-
proof. Phone 800-627-9151
JAM FAVORS for all your party favor needs. Hats, shirts, paddies. glasses. If you have a unique favor idea, call us and we'll find it for you. 843-8770.
KR PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ekachrome
processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W service.
PASSPORT $6.00. Art & Design Building,
Room 206, 9843-476
Low Cost English Tutoring
A flexible package with your English and need an English tutor, please call Shahab at 841-7583 after 8:00 p.m. for further information.
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $8/hr, 843 9032
**MUSIC***** MUSIC***** MUSIC***** MUSIC**
Red Mobile House-Mobile Party Music, 8-track studio, P.A. and Lights, Maximum Audio Wizard-cap. Call Brad 749-1275.
low in Lawrence; inexpensive 4-track demo,
dJ sound and light company, private guitar and bass lessons. Basic Productions, 843-4243.
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Adherent Seri-
ence
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL, test driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided
TYPING
1 plus Typing. Letters, resumes, thesis, law typ-
ing or writing. 2 plus Typing. weekdays or
843-2671 evening or weekdays. 843-2671
> 1,000 pages. No job too small or too large.
Typing an typing or wordprocessing,
874-852 or L914-852.
2 Smart Word Processing. Spelling Corrected
3 Smart Word Processing. Typing Corrected
4 A reliable professional typing Term
romc.typepep Pages: 1.50 pp. Resumes $15
JUFFEEL/JFFEEL 841-3469
or 843-2671 evenings and weekends.
2 Smart Word Processing. Spelling Corrected.
M. Respaible. Call Teacher 749-7740.
A-1 rebelable professional typing. Term papers.
A-2 rebelable professional typing. Seasonal IBM
Typewriter Typebook 842-346
SECRETARY. Typing and word processing.
Affordable, fast, accurate. Spelling corrected,
letter quality. Pickup on campus. Monica
141.8346. Evenings-weekends
DISSERTATIONS. "TIRESES," LAW PAPERS.
Bring back from Australia
between 6pm & 8pm.
or professional typing/word processing, call
Myra 841-6900. Fall special $12.99/page, doubl
e price.
Experienced typist 10:25 m.p. dissertations, term papers 842-3213 after 6:15 p.m. M or F/Sal/Sun 842-3213 after 6:15 p.m.
Quality Typing includes excellent spelling, punctuation, grammar, punctuation service. Resumes must be 844-0321. 844-0324.
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing; resume, indexes, letter processing;审美, etc.
TYPHING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes HAVE M.S. Degree. 841-6254
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WANTED
quality typing or word processing for these,
dissertations, resumes, term papers, applications.
Professional editing, composition available.
Have M.S. Degree.
"Heathcliff, you simp. Either join a Student Senate Committee or never bother to show your face here again." Strong women like involved men-apply now. Kansas and Burge Union
KU alumni wants KU student to buy him season tickets to KU basketball games. Will make it worth your white. Call 1-800-821-5457. Ask for Dave Sheahan
make some money—sell your All Sports Ticket
Will pay big bucks. Stacy, 864-6896
Nonsmoking female roommate wanted $162.50
and 1/2 utilities. On bus route B. 428-262. Sue
Housename needed to stay very 2-acre, 3-bedroom house $102.50 plus 1/2 utility space.
Can any woman, male, consider roommate needed for very nice furnished house near shopping and KU w/ D/A C / 605/month and 1/4 utilities (low) Can Dat at 843-0991.
Need ride to Evansville, Indiana or vicinity. Will pay or help drive. Would like to seep Sept 4 or Sept 5.
Pianoist for Lawrence Wesleyan Church. One hour Sunday morning, two hours during week for rehearsal with solos. Compose music for person or personal rehearsal. Call 842-3281/7836.
Policy
Portuguese ios book - Modern Portuguese. If willing to sell, call 864-6825.
Roommate wanted for large 4-bedroom house
Close to campus and excellent utilities. Quiz great
work. Available on weekends.
Tufts. All subjects $4 (individuals) 8/group.
Submit application, schedule, transcript of classes and tutoring times. Supportive Educational Services. 864-3971.
total services, 684-9717
Wanted: ALL SPORTS TICKET-will pay
onerously KIM 864-2282.
Rework:
A good room for a pure white female kitten,
four months old, all adults, decaled, booted train.
Very cute and lovable. Must Give Ask!
Please call 749-5774.
Wanted: Female roommate $140/month plus 1/3
units; own bus. On route 749-4379
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16
Wednesday, September 2, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
K. U. STUDENTS & FACULTY Welcome To Rent One Vide Get One
AND TO
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We've got the heat
---
AIR WINGED BIRD
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details page 6
Thursday September 3,1987 Vol.98,No.10
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Ex-coordinator has not paid KU for all stolen funds
By MICHAEL HORAK
Staff writer
Steve McMurry, the former coordinator of KU on Wheels who embebled more than $257,000 from the campus bus system between 1978 and 1982, has not made a restitution payment in five months, KU records show.
nose same records show that McMurry has paid the University of Kansas only $1,460 since he was released from prison three and a half years ago. That amount is only about one-fourth of what he and his parole officer agreed he could afford to pay.
McMurry, who now lives in a Denver suburb, could not be reached for comment.
A stipulation in his 1984 parole agreement states that McMurray would repay the University $257,051.17, which would be divided in monthly payments depending on his income.
In September 1982, McMurry was arrested and charged with five counts of felony theft of property. He was convicted in Douglas County District Court in June 1983 and was sentenced to one concurrent and four consecutive two- to five-year prison terms. He was released on parole after spending 17 months in Kansas state prison.
in Mansfield State University. McMurray sent his last restitution payment to the University in April. His restitution payments in the past have been sporadic.
payment in the past. He will receive
but officials with the Kansas Department of
Corrections in Topeka said they had no intention of revoking McMurry's parole for not paying restitution.
in putting it off.
"As long as we feel he is meeting other obligations of his parole agreement and he is making an attempt to repay his restitution, we don't feel it is in the public's best interest to reincarcerate him," said Larry Cowger, special assistant to the secretary of corrections.
Cowger acknowledged that McMurry was not abiding by the restitution stipulation in his parole agreement.
Cowder said his department would be more concerned about the case if McMurry were jeopardizing public safety, but he said that was not the case.
was not the case. Because McMurry is living near Denver, the Colorado Department of Corrections is supervising his parole. However, Kansas parole officials still have jurisdiction over his case.
The Kansas Department of Corrections' position on McMurry's restitution payments has left McMurry's current Colorado parole officer puzzled and has frustrated at least one University official.
Mary Prewitt, KU's assistant general counsel, said, "One of the most disappointing things that has happened is that he was
See McMURRY, p. 6, col. 1
'Nice Girls' flick fizzles
Staff writer
By BEN JOHNSTON
The movie "Nice Girls Don't Explode" had a gala premiere April 1 in downtown Lawrence, but since then the cheers for it have stopped.
Julie McArthur, assistant to the vice president of distribution for New World Pictures, the Los Angeles company that produced the movie, said ticket sales totaled only $65,369. The movie, which was made in Lawrence, cost around $1 million. It was produced by Doug Curtis, a KU graduate.
Dong Curtis, a UCLA graduate,
Elden Harwood, district manager for Commonwealth Theatres, said the movie showed in Lawrence for only eight days.
To put it crudely, it bombed. The film just absolutely did not make money. The first night we let a lot of people in for free and donated the use of the theater. But that was the only time people showed up.'
- Elden Harwood
District manager
for Commonwealth Theatres
“To put it crudely, it bombed,” Harwood said. “The film just absolutely did not make money. The first night we let a lot of people in for free and donated the use of the theater. But that was the only time people showed up. It, though it, was a nice little picture. I
don't know what was wrong with it.
The movie, which premiered at the Grana
da Theatre, 1020 Massachusetts St. appeared in Dallas, Denver, Kansas City, Mo., Charlotte, N.C., Minneapolis, Cincinnati and Salt Lake City between April 3 and June 11. McArthur said.
"In Charlotte and Los Angeles the movie only played for a day or two," McArthur said. "The only two places it ran for longer than a week were Kansas City and Minneapolis." The movie appeared for 20 days in Kansas City, Mo., and for 15 days in Minneapolis, she said.
those cities also served as distribution points for the movies' appearance in smaller cities, she said.
the tilt appeared in countless smaller towns throughout the country," McArthur said. "Lawrence and Kansas City were not the only places in the Kansas area where the movie appeared. In fact, the movie could have been seen in many parts of Kansas."
have been criticized.
Dan Truly, creative executive for New World Pictures, said, "The film had a very limited audience and a very bad reaction. Whatever the film did, it didn't do it very well."
"There are two types of films: those that are distributed nationally and those that are distributed regionally. This film is being distributed nationally, yet it cost about the same as most regionally distributed films," he said.
But Chuck Martinez, director of the movie, said he was still optimistic that it could make money, partly because videocassettes would be distributed nationally beginning in October.
"It it's too early to judge if it is going to make money," Martinez said. "The film was made very cheaply. It only cost about $1 million to make.
Martinez said the film would open Sept. 11 in New York City and Chicago.
SAM BORCHER
Tie-dye is making a comeback at the University of Kansas. Dave Roberts, Boston senior, sported a tie-dye shirt while enjoying a beer earlier this week at the Rock Chalk Bar, 618 W. 12th St.
Students rediscovering fashion value of tie-dye
By KIRK ADAMS
Staff writer
By the looks of the T-shirts students are wearing at the University of Kansas these days, one might think the campus is stuck in a '60s time-warp.
Either that, or the band The Grateful Dead must be in town. But then again, even the sorority girls are wearing tie-dies. Maybe something psychedelic is in the Lawrence water, because the bright yellows, purples, greens and blues on those tie-dye shirts scream like a Woodstock flashback.
Multi-colored tie-dyes are flowing through the KU campus, Brad Wolgast, Topeka freshman, that in Topeka he had sold from 100 to 150 tie-dyes he made this summer to help him pay for school.
"These are the '60s kind," he said, pointing to a purplish tie-dye he wore. Wolgast said the '60s tie-dyes were simpler than the modern ones. The old tie-dies have more basic colors than the new ones and have circular designs, he said.
"the new kind just doesn't grab me I don't like them as much," he said. "The
new kind is like a seashell design — really intricate."
He said he liked tie-dies because they made him feel casual. "I don't consider myself a Deadhead, but I really identify with hippies, the music, the whole deal."
"There aren't many of the '60s kind around anymore." Wolgast said.
Deadheads are loyal fans of The Grateful Dead, whose popularity has remained steady since the heyday of tidewater music. Their variety of teeshirts are scarce.
Meiella Carolan, Kansas City, Kan,
junior, was wearing a tie-dye on campus
yesterday. She said she had friends who
sold the T-shirts at Grateful Dead shows.
"I listen to The Dead a lot," she said.
She likes her shirt because it is comfortable, she said, and because it is so colorful.
CONTROL
Mike Parmley, Wichita sophomore, said, "It used to be where you could go up to anyone with a tie-dye shirt and you would know they were a Deadhead, but now it's, like, fashionable."
See TIE-DYE, p. 6, col. 3
Protests keep elm by new library
by MARK TILFORD
Staff writer
When the University of Kansas' new $13.9 million science library opens, knowledge will not be the only thing in full bloom.
"We're taking all the precautions we can not to harm the tree," said James Modig, campus director for facilities planning.
Thanks to protests and a petition by students, the new library, expected to be operating by the fall of 1989, will have a 50-foot American elm as its neighbor.
The four-story science library will be on the slope between Hoch Auditorium and the Military Science building. The outside will be finished in three floors with matching buildings on campus.
Judith A. Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, will preside over the ground-breaking ceremonies.
Speakers will include Chancellor Gene A. Budig; Jim Ran, dean of libraries, and Charles D. Michener, Watkins distinguished professor of entomology.
in the fall of 1984, though, different kinds of gatherings were taking place near the oak tree. KU students met there to protest the planned site, saying it could have meant the destruction of the tree and the surrounding area
In September and October 1984, more than 3,000 students signed a petition to keep the tree and save green space. The petition was later passed by Student Senate.
A University committee including students, faculty and administrators later recommended the present plan, which will allow the tree to stay.
"I think it's a positive step," she said yesterday. "I hope it's more than just a token step, though. I hope the University will really concentrate on saving campus greenery."
know the tree to stay.
Martie Aaron, now director of the Associated Students of Kansas, was involved in the petition drive to save the tree.
Once the library is completed, it will bring together about half a million volumes of science and technology library materials on campus and other holdings such as maps, journals and microforms. Most of these are now housed in small departmental libraries.
"It's very difficult to operate a library at the capacity it is even now," said Kathleen Neeley, head of the science library on the sixth floor of Malot Hall.
"I imagine we'll be barely breathing at the time the new library opens," she said.
14. 1) Andersen Construction Co. of Topeka will begin construction soon. Andersen submitted a bid of $9.58 million for the first part of the construction.
Money for the library was provided through the state educational building fund and was approved by the Kansas Legislature.
Modig said parts of some campus parking lots would be closed at certain times during the construction to provide access roads for construction vehicles.
Those parking lots will include thes behind Stauffer-Flint Hall and the Military Science building. The parking lot behind Wescoe Hall will be closed throughout construction, he said.
saf.
Parking on the access road west of Hoch Auditorium will be permanently eliminated by the new building, he said.
Liberal arts dean will resign next summer
By VALOREE ARMSTRONG Staff writer
Staff writer
After almost seven years of the ups and downs of running the University of Kansas' largest academic school, Robert Lineberry, dean of liberal arts and sciences, announced Tuesday that he would resign next summer.
Lineberry, who has been at the University since 1981, announced his decision at Tuesday's College Assembly meeting in Alderson Auditorium. He will stay at the University as a professor of political science.
"I'll have been here seven years."
Lineberry said yesterday. "I've done all the good — and the damage — I could do."
"You do a job like this year in an year out and the problems become repetitive," Lineberry said, speaking of increasing enrollments and budget cuts. "Seven years is a long time."
But Lineberry, who will continue to teach Political Science 110, which he taught while he was dean, also said he wanted to spend more time with students, at the University or else-where. He is 45.
American government," he said. "I've always enjoyed it. And I'd like a chance to do that without just grabbing my lecture notes two minutes before class."
You do a job like this year in and year out and the problems become repetitive. Seven years is a long time.'
Robert Lineberry dean of liberal arts and sciences
Lineberry said he'd his marks at the University, including hiring one-fifth of the college's current faculty, revising curriculum requirements and rebuilding the undergraduate Honors Program.
Charles Himmelberg, chairman of the department of mathematics, said, "He's done a fine job. What's impressed me is that he's absolutely insistent on high standards for hiring new faculty.
"It's a very stressful job. He saw us through a very difficult time
budgetarily."
Del Brinkman, vice candlecor for academic affairs, said in a written statement. "He has held the deanship in a period of unparalleled enrollment growth and severe budget constraints. He has managed well in a time of difficult circumstances. We wish him well as he prepares for his next academic assignment."
Michael Johnson, chairman of the department of English, said that although people might forget the range of problems the department had faced the last several years, they would remember how well Lineberry had dealt with those problems.
Kathy McCluskey-Fawcett, chairman of the department of psychology, said Lineberry had appointed her a year ago and had been supportive of her and her department.
"I told him I'm sorry to see him go," she said. "He walked into a difficult situation. The fact that the college is still strong speaks to his abilities."
Brinkman said a national search for Lineberry's successor would begin immediately. Administrators hope to fill the position by the start of the 1988-89 school year.
Lineberry, who was born in Oklahoma City, is married and has two children.
Robert L. Lineberry Education:
B. A., University of Oklahoma, 1964
Ph.D. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1969 Administrative Duties:
Administrative Duties:
University of Kansas, Dean,
College of Liberal Arts and
Sciences, 1981-present.
Academic Positions:
University of Kansas, Prof.
of Political Science, 1981-
present.
Northwestern University,
Assoc. Prof, 1974-1976 and
Prof, 1976-1981 of Political
Science and Urban Affairs.
University of Texas at Austin,
Assist Prof, 1967-1971 and
Assoc. Prof of Government,
'871-1974.
Academic Visitor, University of Kent at Canterbury, 1979.
---
Richard Stewart/KANSAN
2
Thursday, September 3, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Jackson to announce Monday whether he will run for president
WASHINGTON — After months of campaigning around the country, Jesse Jackson plans to disclose Monday whether he will be a candidate for the presidency in 1988.
Jackson, who has given every indication that he intends to repeat his 1984 bid for the Democratic nomination, will reveal his decision on ABC-TV's "Good Morning
America" and then make a Labor Day swing through three Eastern cities.
S. Korea plans elections: strikes continue
"All indications are it's positive," said press secretary Frank Watkins.
They also agreed that the government should not intervene in labor disputes and promised legislation to increase the rights of workers. But labor turmoil continued as striking shipyard workers went on a rampage and auto-workers fought riot police. Officials said 750 strikes were in progress yesterday.
SEOUL, South Korea - Government and opposition leaders agreed yesterday to hold the first direct presidential election in a generation by Dec. 20.
Victims' friends oppose man's parole
JOLIET, III. — Richard Speck belongs behind bars or in a grave for stabbing and strangling eight student nurses 21 years ago, a prosecutor argued yesterday as a state panel considered whether to grant parole.
seven former classmates of the slain nurses attended the hearing to oppose freeing Speck, who is serving eight consecutive 50- to 150-year terms. The Illinois Prison Review Board will announce its decision Sept. 9.
More than a dozen relatives and
S.Dakotans go all out for outhouse race
KADOKA, S.D. — The third annual South Dakota Championship Outhouse Races take place this weekend, when families, businesses, clubs and entire towns will push outouthouses offitted with wheels down Kadoka's Main
Street. No steering devices are allowed.
First prize, won last year by Owen Ferguson of Long Valley, is a hand-craft, miniature outhouse. "I look at it a lot." Ferguson said.
The Associated Press
Rust apologizes to Soviets
MOSCOW — West German teenager Mathias Rust apologized to a Soviet court yesterday for flying a single-engine plane into Red Square. He said it started as a mission of peace but ended as the greatest mistake of his life.
Rust testified that he encountered Soviet warplanes during his flight and shut off his radio to avoid hearing any orders to cut short a trip he said was aimed at bringing about East-West disarmament.
"My flight was not the best action to bring this about. I'm very sorry." Rust, a 19-year-old resident of suburban Hamburg, West Germany, said during nearly five hours of testimony on the first day of the trial at the Soviet Supreme Court.
It was his first public appearance since he piloted a C萨七尼 172b across the Soviet border on May 28 and set it down amid hundreds of astonished pedestrians on Red Square near the Kremlin, the seat of Soviet power.
The flight led to a shake-up of the Soviet military establishment.
Rust faces charges of hooliganism, illegally crossing the Soviet border and violating international flight rules, and he could get 10 years in prison. The trial is expected to last three days.
He said he wanted to meet with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev to discuss a new political system that would bring east and west together in "full democracy, democracy in the fullest sense of the word."
Dressed in a blue suit, a light blue shirt and tie, Rust called himself "a very sentimental man" who meant no harm to anyone.
"I sought the source of peace, and the source of peace is not in Washington, but in Moscow," said Rust. Pale but poised, he spoke in a firm, clear voice and did not appear to be intimidated.
Rust's mother, Monika, also testified in his behalf, saying he wished only for world peace.
From The Associated Press.
Her testimony and Rust's portrayed the tall, thin pilot as a looner who was worried about international relations but who never took part in the West German peace movement.
Supreme Court Judge Robert Tikhomirnov and prosecutor Vladimir Andreyev repeatedly reminded Rust that he could have killed or injured many people by landing on crowded Red Square.
Rust first told Tikhomirnov after the charges were read that "I am aware of my guilt," but later said he did not acknowledge guilt on the charge of malicious hooliganism because he had no intent to harm anyone.
"My flight did not have any aggressive intentions," he said.
Under questioning from his Soviet lawyer, Vsevolod Yakovlev, and prosecutor Andreyev, Rust told the court that with the perspective of the last 14 weeks in Lefortovo Prison, he realizes that his approach was wrong.
Iran, Iraq attack seven gulf ships
Eighteen attacks on ships have been reported and 13 confirmed since Iran and Iraq, which have been at war since September 1980, resumed their "tanker war" last weekend after a six-week lull.
The latest confirmed Iraqi raid was on the small offshore supply ship Big Orange 14, which is based in the United Arab Emirates. It was reported sunk by an air-fired missile late Tuesday near Kharg Island, Iran's main oil export terminal in the northern gulf.
MANAMA, Bahrain — Iranian speedboats and Iraqi warplanes attacked at least seven ships in the Persian Gulf within 24 hours, and U.S. warships prepared yesterday to escort more tankers through the war zone.
Lloyd's of London underwriters announced yesterday a 50 percent increase in the cost of war risk insurance premiums for ships entering the gulf, to .375 percent of the vessel's value from 25 percent.
Dispatches from the Iraqi News Agency reported attacks yesterday on two "large maritime targets," which usually means ships, and an Iraqi attack on a Cypriot tanker Tuesday was confirmed.
The Associated Press
Iran's official Islamic Republic News Agency quoted Prime Minister Hussein Musavi as declaring yesterday that a policy of "blow for blow
will be pursued in a calculated fashion."
Arms train strikes war protester
The Associated Press
The Iraqis reported a fifth day of air raids on Iranian shipping, oil fields and other industrial targets. Iran said its artillery shelled military and industrial installations in southern Iraq, and Iranian planes struck in the northern area of the 730-mile border warfront.
Bouquets of flowers and pebbles spelling "Peace" marked the spot where S. Brian Willson was struck Tuesday outside the U.S. Naval Station during a protest over weapons shipments to Central America.
Shortly before he was struck, the 47-year-old Vietnam veteran told a reporter for the Oakland Tribune, "I have to say, 'You can't move the train without moving my body.'" the newspaper reported yesterday.
CONCORD, Calif. — Dozens of people watched in horror as an anti-war demonstrator was run over and dragged by a munitions train as he knelt on a track, leaving him critically injured.
"He lunged for the train, like he was angry," said the Rev. David Duncombe, who was standing next to Willson.
Willison, of San Rafael, suffered a skull fracture, and one leg was severed below the knee, said Sandra Ryan, spokeswoman for John Muir Hospital. Surgeons amputated the other leg below the knee, she said. His condition improved from critical to serious this morning.
After a news conference, he knelt on the track with others trying to stop the three-car train as it left the depot. But the train, operated by a civilian Navy employee, hit him as about 30 people watched.
Willison, who was about to start a 40-day fast, was leading 25 demonstrators outside the weapons station.
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Deadline Friday, Sept. 11
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Judicial Board
Libraries
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Human Relations Calendar Academic Computing Events Transportation Board
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(Applications available in 105 Burge Union or the Sen-Ex Office : grads can apply also!)
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, September 3, 1987
Campus/Area
3
Local Briefs
Commissioner returns to work after operation
Douglas County Commissioner David Hopper returned yesterday to his office in the county courthouse after a three-week absence and said that it was good to be back.
Hopper had surgery Aug. 13 to remove a malignant tumor from his right lung. He was released on June 20. Mission Medical Center in Meridian.
"The biopsy showed that the lung was clear," Hopper said. "It was great news."
He said that papers had piled up on his desk a little while he was gone but that he had them under control.
"I'm going back to work full time to become 100 percent involved," he said.
All women who did not participate in fall sorority rush are invited to sign up for open rush, a process in which KU sorority houses that did not pledge 80 women can select more members.
Sororities announce fall open rush for KU
Shannon Parker, membership chairman for Panhellenic, said nine of KU's 14 sororities were eligible to select more members. The houses are not required to meet the quota, she said.
Those interested should call the Panhelenic office at 864-4643. The names of women who participated in fall rush and did not pledge already have been forwarded to the houses for consideration.
Language, social workshops offered
The Student Assistance Center is offering two workshops for students.
"Learning a Foreign Language," a study skills workshop, will be presented for the final time this semester from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Tuesday in room 300 of Strong Hall.
A program teaching social skills, "Dealing with that Uneasy Feeling," will be from 6:30 p.m. to 10:00 p.m., 10 in room 100 of Smith Hall.
Company sponsors $10.000 contest
Institutional Shareholder Services, Inc., is sponsoring "The Corporate Challenge" essay contest with a first prize of $10,000.
Contestants will respond in 5,000 words or less to realistic problems faced by a fictional company in a case study.
Contestants must be undergraduate or graduate students at accredited U.S. universities and may enter individual or in groups.
Corrections
Because of a reporter's error, the cost of an AIDS test at the Lawrence-Douglas County Health Department was reported incorrectly in yesterday's Kansas. The test is given free.
Because of a reporter's error, the location of the new Dickinson Plaza Shopping Center and Theatre was reported incorrectly in yesterday's Kansan. The shopping center is at 2329 Iowa St., and the theater is at 2339 Iowa St.
From staff and wire reports
The Associated Press
Senate passes altered highway bill
TOPEKA - After $ _{1/2} $ days of experimentation with several amendments, the Senate passed yesterday and sent to the House a highway improvement bill greatly
Special Session #77
Hayden's
Highway Plan
scaled down from what Gov. Mike Hayden wanted but close to what legislators think taxpayers can afford.
The plan, which will form the basis of the Senate's negotiating position in bargaining with the House during
this special session of the Legislature, would cost $934 million and would be financed entirely by increases in motor fuel taxes and vehicle registration fees.
It contained no sales tax increase and no honds_would be issued.
Senate passage came on a vote of 22-15, with at least 21 votes required in the 40-member Senate to approve a bill. It had just 18 votes on the first roll call, but four state senators switched and voted for Senate invoked a parliamentary maneuver to force all senators to vote.
The bill went to the House, where the Transportation Committee immediately began amending the
measure to conform to decisions it had made on what it wanted in a highway program.
The Senate avoided a sales tax increase to fund its program, while the House committee had recommended a half-cent sales tax increase be made a part of the funding package, which would be subject to a vote of the people at next August's primary election. The House panel wanted a $1.33 billion program.
Speaker Jim Braden said the House probably had "three times as many amendments" to be offered during debate, which he would begin today. It could last into tomorrow, but Braden said he hoped it
would be completed in one day.
The Senate is certain to reject House amendments, sending the bill to a six-member conference committee to try to work out a final version that can gain 21 votes in the Senate and 63 votes in the 125-member House.
The four state senators who changed their votes to pass the Senate measure with one vote to spare are: Gus Bogina, R-Lenexa; Tom McCauley, R-Topeka; Aileigh Salisbury, R-Topteca; and Joe Warren, D-Maple City.
During floor debate, an amendment incorporating the second plan State Sen. Robert Talkington, R-Iola, bad offered during the special session was adopted 19-18.
However, on final roll call, the vote was 18-19 until the four switches, which passed the bill, 22-15.
Talkington's proposal, unveiled before the Senate Republican caucus yesterday morning, would spend $934 million over the next 10 years, of which $288 million would be for new congressional members, including a new road from Wichita into the southeast corner of the state.
Talkington said he offered the $934 million program as a compromise. He conceded it wouldn't build all the roads people wanted, but said it was a start and the best he thought possible in this special session.
4
Fred Sadowski/KANSAN
Sprucing up
Harvey Boyd, KU facilities operations employee, paints the word other painters who were working yesterday on the field said they would be "Jayhaws" in the north end zone of Memorial Stadium. Boyd and three painting for the rest of the week.
Helpers give labor of love at centers
Staff writer
By BRIAN BARESCH
In the basement of the Community Children's Center, 925 Vermont St., two Head First preschool teachers to 5-year-olds more or less in order.
Six of the children are absent. The cheerful, hurrying supervisors will be scurrying even more when they all show up.
Down the street at the Lawrence Senior Center, 745 Vermont St., the weekly afternoon dance is going on upstairs, while several men and women downstairs work on crafts and class life with the center's helpers.
Both centers get their money from the government, so they need volunteer help. Head Start volunteers spend two hours a week helping children learn self esteem and social skills through program programs in the senior center help older people with crafts, activities and just plain conversation.
for 21 years. The federally-funded program supervises and provides free medical exams to children who come from families below the legal poverty limit.
Yesterday was the preschoolers' first day this fall, and teachers Stacy Morrison and John Clawson had their hands full by late afternoon, even though not all the children had showed up.
Morrison, in her third year with Head Start, kept grinning, even when some of the children spilled their orange juice at snack time. Clawson, too, was having almost as much fun as the children themselves, who scurried around the room laughing and playing.
and just plain cancun
Head Start has been in Lawrence
Volunteers don't need a lot of experience, Clawson said. They just help the kids work on shape, color and number recognition.
The program needs at least eight volunteers a day, five days a week, said director Charline Freitag.
"Last year we had 50, so that was 10 a day, and that was great," she
said.
Frettag said volunteers were needed to improve the student-teacher ratio, now about 10-to-one. The class size is limited to 20 children at a time, and a waiting list ensures that the class stays full.
When children see the volunteers, it helps them develop self-esteem, one of the program's goals. Freytag gives the volunteers themselves a lot of out of it.
"They get a thrill out of the kids throwing their arms around them. 'Mikey's here today!' They get a great reward out of that." Freitag said.
"We have T-shirts that we wear that say 'Head Start: a labor of love,' and that's what it is."
Volunteers at the senior center also get that kind of reward. Shirley DeLano, fiscal manager of the center, said volunteers drove the Bus 62—the vehicle that brings clients to the center. Volunteers also deliver meals to people in their homes and help at the center in the Adult Day
Although the program gets some KU students whose courses require volunteer work, the center needs more. she said.
Cathi Bollin, Leavenworth senior, was a volunteer for a year at the center before she got a paying job there. Aside from having a great time, she said, the experience is important for her course work in therapeutic recreation.
Phone book listings lead to junk mail
Staff writer
By JORN E. KAALSTAD
Friday was the last chance for students and faculty to withhold their names from the KU telephone directory. When the directory comes out in a month, those listed could soon find their mailboxes brimming with junk mail.
Students are a targeted consumer group whose records are readily available for anyone to examine.
Gary Thompson, director of student records and registration, said the University of Kansas could release information about a student such as name, address, level and school, age, participation in activities, major field of study and degrees and awards received.
Students who want that information kept confidential must notify the office of student records and request records be withheld. Thompson sale.
"We know that confidentiality is a sensitive issue to students," he said.
Students' right to withhold information was instituted by the federal Family Educational Rights and Privileges Act, commonly called the Buckle Amendment.
But Thompson said it was his office's policy not to give out student records to mailing companies or other profit-oriented businesses.
"They can find that in the campus directory," he said.
But Russell Johnston, president of ACS Direct Mail Services of Hutchinson, said student telephone directories alone did not contain sufficient information to reach the desired student consumers.
Directories don't list information such as household income, sex and especially age, which is an important factor in pigeonhooning markets, he
Johnston said mailing lists aimed towards students had been cross-compiled from many different sources.
But they might as well leave off Farhad Sanadizadeh, Marlow, England, junior.
"I never pay attention to junk mail," he said. "But I always check if there might be personal letters stuck between the junk before I throw it away."
Thomas Olson, president of Enteret,
169 Massachusetts St., said mailing lists with 1,000 names cost from
$30 to $500, depending on the amount
and the exclusivity of information
they contained.
A $500 list could, for example, specify eye and hair color, personal income and other unique data, he said.
"The more qualified a list is, the more it costs," he said.
ROCK CHALK ADVISORY BOARD
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Applications can be picked up at the Organization and Activities Office in the Burge Union.
Applications must be submitted by 5:00 to the Organization and Activities Office,
Tuesday, September 8.
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4
Thursday, September 3, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The United States and the Soviet Union are not known for reaching agreement.
It is time to try harder
Try, try again
It is time to try harder.
However, as the possibility of a U.S.-Soviet summit in the near future increases, United States leaders continue to voice their skepticism rather than to welcome negotiation. Although there have been breaches of trust and problems with verification over agreements reached at past summits, the United States and the Soviet Union must both continue to try — and try again.
Kansas Sen. Robert Dole was quoted as saying that "any new agreement will be a worthless piece of paper unless we can guarantee they won't be able to cheat." Verification on both sides is a significant issue to be addressed at the summit, so an American attitude of "we won't play because they might cheat" must be avoided.
Last week in Los Angeles, President Reagan played up the political differences between the two countries. In response to Reagan's comments, spokesman of the Soviet Foreign Ministry Gennadi Geramisov said, "It has almost become a rule that before every important Soviet-American meeting, the American side starts to play up the hostility."
may never come. Arms belong to West Germany has made a significant contribution toward peace by asserting a willingness to allow the Pershing missiles to become obsolete.
sides start to pay up until the world cannot wait for safety from the arms race until the United States and the Soviet Union align politically — that day may never come. Army negotiations demand a hearing now.
The world is watching the superpowers. Europe is waiting for an agreement. The Soviet Union has expressed a desire to communicate and to make strides in verification. It is the United States' turn to cooperate.
tates turn to cooperate.
Don't quit. America. Arms control is worth the frustration.
Q. WHAT DO KANSAS USE WHEN THEY RUN OUT OF TOILET PAPER?
A.
SPORTS ILLUSTRATED
s.Kiing
Football . . . no joke
Sports Illustrated calls it "a joke."
But we're not laughing.
The Aug. 31 edition of the magazine summarized the program with two scathing sentences.
"Kansas has had one winning year in the last 10. Prognosis: boorless," the magazine bites.
it's time to give KU football credit and support.
Many students seem to forget that Kansas has a football team. But lost in the shadows of a top-rated basketball team is an outstanding football team. Yes, outstanding.
For too long the football program has been ruthlessly criticized. A campus joke.
Ticket sales are down, despite a continual rise in enrollment. The all-sports ticket is more aptly the all-basketball ticket. The Athletic Department has to resort to gimmicks to get students to attend football games. When students do watch games, it's increasingly just to party on the Hill.
But we have a great football program.
Students, fans, unite. KU football deserves our loyalty, spirit and support.
KU football is going all the way.
To the Big Eight Championship. To the Orange Bowl.
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board
News staff
Jennifer Benjamin...Editor
Jul Warren...Managing editor
John Benner...News editor
Beth Copeland...Editorial editor
Sally Streff...Campus editor
Brian Kaberline...Sports editor
Dan Ruthmann...Photo editor
Bill Skeet...Graphics editor
Tom Eblen...General manager, news adver
Business staff
BUSINESS MANAGER
Bonnie J. Hardy ... Business manager
Robert Hughes ... Advertising manager
Kelly Scherer ... Retail sales manager
Kurt Messersmith ... Campus sales manager
Greg Knipp ... Production manager
David Derfeit ... National sales manager
Angela Clerk ... Classified manager
Ron Warnes ... Director of marketing
Jennie 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 staff position.
faculty or staff should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The
guest sheets will be photographed. They
writer will be present. He reserves the right to re edit or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
can be made in Letters, guest shots and columns are the opinion of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University Daily Kansan. Editorials are the opinion of the Kansan editorial board.
The University Dialy Kansas (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stairwater-Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60405, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class subscription $40 in Douglas County, Kan. 60404. Annual subscriptions are $40 in Douglas County and $50 in county. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through www.usps.com.
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansas, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
JOHN BROWN 1974
Live music lives in Lawrence
As a student of the U. of K., you need to be able to answer one very popular question. How did you get here?
you see. I was guided to Larryvillie by a dream that I had many years ago as a high school senior. I came home one night from a concert, ears ringing, and fell into a fittal dream.
I was alone on a desert. The ringing in my ears turned to music. I turned around to see I was before large pillars, a gateway, with a circus-sideshow barker / evangelist. On the other side, a purple-and-orange-clad Jimi Hendrix tortured his guitar beside a single burning amplifier, smoke stretching high into the sky.
"What am I doing here?" I asked the man with glasses, cane and pipe.
"You, my friend, have come to the pearly gates of Live Music Haaayven!" the animated man barked. "Wouldn't you like a ticket?"
Yes, I said. Yes, I wished.
But looking at Jimi, now joined by a half-naked Jim Morrison, I wondered whether the man had said Live Music Haven, not heaven. I envisioned a small roadside cemetery made famous the day the Music died. I didn't want to go there.
Tim Hamilton Staff Columnist
I started to ask the Jims. They just looked up the stairway of smoke, which I started to climb.
"Yes." I said. "Yes. I would."
the stairway of smoke, which I started to climb.
I saw a shining figure descending the stairway.
I recognized the man as the one some people insist on calling the King,
king of rhinestones, the hunk-a-hunk of burning Haven. I was crushed. It was Live Music Haven.
"Elvis, I thought this was Live Music Heaven." Elvis just shifted his weight dramatically, threw back his hair and said, "Ooh, man," I hurt
"Nice shoes," I said, apologetically. "Please, take me there."
his feelings.
take me there.
In a gyration and a snap of his fingers, Elvis disappeared, and I found myself in a dark bar, watching a woman dance and sing.
watching a woman dance and sing.
She had the sweet suitty voice of a Joni Mitchell, the quirky lyrics of a Joni. . . By Jove,
it was Joni Mitchell.
it was JOHN MITCHELL.
After she finished, she picked up the roses scattered on the stage, came over and sat down by me. She ordered us wine.
by me. She offered to I, "Where am I, Joni?" I asked. "Is this really Live Music Heaven?" She just laughed and hummed a few bars of "Woodstock."
"Don't you want to dance with the lady with a hole in her stocking?" she sang.
"Why am I here?" I asked.
She knew I loved to dance and wanted to since Elvis had gone. We went to the dance floor as Elton John, in a Donald Duck costume, began to play.
Joni led, of course, and soon we were a soinning, twirling blur.
When I opened my eyes, I was in the middle of a thrashing, head-banger crowd. I heard S迪 Vici
ous and the Sex Pistols, and the crowd grew frenzied.
As Sid spit on the crowd, the band exploded into song and the crowd carried me close to the stage. I felt several people "dancing" into me, so I climbed onto the stage. As I tried to stand up, Sid turned and threw me backwards into the crowd.
When I opened my eyes this time, I was laying on my back on the Jayhawk in the middle of Memorial Stadium. I sat up to look at James Brown, the Godfather of Soul, in all his sweaty grandeur and funkiness. Dressed in white satin with plenty of gold, he looked truer than life. I started sweating immediately.
"Haiy! Yeew!!" James screamed into the omnipresent mike, undulating. I looked around for a band or back-up singers. Instead, he broke into a sermon.
"If you want to listen to Live Music," he said,
"you got to get up and live. And if you want to live,
you got to listen to Lilie Music." What logic
I woke up. No Jims or Joni or James. But I was still sweating.
"This is the place," said his grace. And with a "Haaya" he was gone.
So I moved here after graduating and have been in heaven ever since. Whatever you're into; funk, punk, rock, reggae, blues, jazz or even the Dead, you'll find it live and in Lawrence.
Check it out this year, even if you think you're here to study. Hey hey, my my.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Insulting description
Tim Hamilton is a Wichita senior majoring in journalism.
In the Aug. 27 edition of the University Daily Kansan, Jon Gregor wrote an article examining college lifetyles. He directed his article toward freshmen students who are in the inevitable process of "seeking their identity." I have a few comments for you, Jon. That is, if this capuccino-no-drinking, barefoot, Glass onion frencher can do that. (I'm not sure whether it was included in your list of "hippie" activities.)
1 tail to see the point of this article. Its only purpose is to cut down everyone who attends this school. It left me confused and wondering why such an article was allowed to be printed.
question. "Are these my choices?"
I was extremely insulted by your descriptions of the variety of people who attend this school. To sum up the personalities of thousands of people with merely a few words — I believe drunk, dumb, athletic and hippie were a few of your choices — is an outrage. If all you see when you walk across campus is bows, long hair and baseball caps, then you might as well be blind.
You say in your article, "The worst that one can do is not be in any group at all." If I were a freshman and read your misleading article, that would seem the only appealing option.
If the article were humorous, I could swallow it, but it was blatantly rude and uncalled-for. The freshmen do not yet understand the inuendoes and campus "jokes" and are left with the
I would like to say to our new students that, contrary to your article, every lifestyle can be good, depending on your interest and beliefs. The variety is what makes our student body beautiful.
And finally, Jon. I would like to ask you which group you fall into. Perhaps the narrow-minded, short-sighted journalist?
Jenny Hoeffner, Salina sophomore
Simplistic outlook
I was appalled and amused by the simplistic interpretation of the students of the University of Kansas by staff columnist Jon Gregor in Thursday's Kansan (Aug. 27).
The complete population of KU, more than 25,000 students, was reduced to a few subsections of two groups, the Greeks and the GDI's. Gregor belittled every student on campus with this single column.
I wish to speak for myself and others who do not think they were justly portrayed Thursday.
The idea that KU is either pro-greeks or con-greeks as described by Gregor is laughable. He completely overlooked the older, foreign, physically challenged, politically active, black, shy, devout religious and economical taged students who attained Even this list only begins to show the diversity among KU so far. Accurately, there are more than 25,000 separate individuals, many of whom don't care about the Greek system at all. By the way, there are black fraternities and sororities at KU also. You left them out of your descriptions Thursday. Don't they count as students here
I realize you were trying to entertain, Gregor I could not see your column as simple entertainment, however. It displayed an attitude intended or, not, which I deplore.
I hope that if your column displayed your true views of this university and its students that you get out more. Meet a few of these 25,000 people your column insulted.
also?
Gregor said, "The worst that one can do is not in any group at all." I disagree. The worst thing you can do is to adhere to that kind of junior high school clique-mentality.
Jadey Anfinson, Joplin, Mo., senior
Best and brightest
Dan Houston's Aug. 25 column hit the nail on the head. KU should raise out-of-state tuition to $20,000 a year, which will assure that only the "best and brightest" students from "wealthy, intelligent" families can attend the University.
Also K-Staters should no longer be allowed to transfer to KU, because all they do is go to parties and school. Their education is a communist idea. Let's make KU the elite institution it deserves to be.
Ben Asher, Springfield, Mo., senior
BLOOM COUNTY
NOPE. WON'T DO IT. MY CLOTHES STAY ON.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday. September 3, 1987
5
THE FAR SIDE
Bv GARY LARSON
9-3
©1987 Universal Press Syndicate
Pirate manicures
On the Record
A KU student was injured in a fight with another KU student Saturday night near a bar in the 700 block of New Hampshire Street. Lawrence police reported that the injured student did not require hospitalization.
A Chevrolet Camaro valued at $500 was taken between 4 p.m. Monday and 8:30 p.m. Tuesday from an apartment complex parking lot in the 1600 block of Oxford Road, Lawrence police reported.
A car radio/cassette player and a cassette tape, valued together at $200 were taken between 6 p.m. and 8 p.m. for the parking lot near Hawkwer Towers parking lot near Hawkwer Towers
■ The front door of a KU sorority was damaged sometime between Saturday and 8 a.m. Sunday in an apparent attempt to enter, Lawrence police said. Damage to the door was estimated at $200.
Get Something Going!
Make the cash flow
Apartments, KU police reported.
■ A house in the 2000 block of Kasold Drive was broken into between 6 a.m. Sunday and 9:30 p.m. Tuesday, Lawrence police reported. Nothing was reported missing, but $200 damage was done to two doors.
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City is still without workable mall plan
UNIVERSITY FORUM
Campus/Area
The preservation of existing structures, especially historic buildings, is another important responsibility of the city, Watson said. The city has spent $3 million of a Community Development grant to older homes and the city commission would like to have an ordinance protecting older structures.
But Watson does not think that growth should be confined just to older structures.
By VIRGINIA McGRATH
Staff writer
He married Annabel Casey on Dec. 30, 1923, in Iola
Five months after Lawrence voters soundly defeated a downtown mall proposal, the city still has not settled on any alternative plan for downtown. Lawrence city manager Buford Watson said yesterday.
Three developers have proposed suburban malls, but the city doesn't endure and hasn't acted on any of the proposals. Watson said during a speech to about 50 people at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
"Our master plan still says we can only justify one regular shopping area." Watson said, and that area has to be downtown.
In addition, many Lawrence residents are shopping at big discount stores that aren't located downtown. "We need to find out what our public wants and satisfy that concern," Watson said.
Lawrence has tried to develop a mall in the downtown area for 14 years. The most recent downtown mall proposal was scuttled after Lawrence residents voted 3 to 1 against the mall in a public referendum April 7. The mall, which was proposed by Jacobs, Visconsi & Oleynik of Cleveland, was been in the 600 block of Massachusetts and Vermont streets and would cost the city about $20 million.
The Lawrence city commission rejected a different downtown mall
plan in 1983. The commission had blocked efforts before to build suburban malls by refusing to rezone land or, in one instance, annexing the proposed site and zoning the land for residential use only.
Watson said that finding a way to meet the city's retail needs was difficult. Lawrence's population has grown in the last 30 years but the size of the downtown shopping area has not.
The commission also wants to work on ways to use existing space instead of expanding the downtown area, he said.
In 1985, Dr. Crook finished his dissertation and oral examinations at age 84 to earn a doctorate in geology
Dr. Crok, 86, was a member of Sigma Xi honorary science fraternity and a life member and Gold Medal member of the University of Kansas Alumni Association.
Ernest Angino, chairman of the department of geology, said one of Dr. Crook's longtime ambitions was obtaining his doctorate.
Man who received Ph.D. at KU at age 84 dies
By a Kansan reporter
Dr. Crook first attended KU in the early 1920s but did not receive a degree. He later went to work for National Gympum in Buffalo, N.Y., as director of engineering. He retired in 1966.
Dr. Crook returned to college at age 66 to complete his undergraduate degree in geology from the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Maurice C. Crook, an octogonarian who earned a doctorate degree at the University of Kansas two years ago, died early yesterday at Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
always had a goal," Angino said. "It was something he always wanted to do, and after he retired, he did it."
"He was a quiet and unassuming man but
Services will be at 10 a.m. Saturday at the Rumsey Funeral Home 601 Indiana St. Friends may call at the funeral home from 9 a.m. Friday until service time. Burial will be in the Iola Cemetery in Iola.
He returned to Lawrence in 1970 and in 197 earned a master's degree in civil engineering.
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6
Thursday, September 3, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
False alarms force jet landings
From the KU Weather Service
The Associated Press
Two American Airlines jets made emergency landings Wednesday after a bomb threat in northern California and a reported engine fire in Florida.
An American Airlines DC-10 carrying 276 passengers from Dallas to San Francisco was diverted to Stockton Metropolitan Airport after a crew member found a handwritten bomb threat in a bathroom, an airline spokesman said.
The pilot of the aircraft diverted Flight 295 to Stockton and landed Wednesday afternoon. All 276 passengers and 13 crew members were evacuated through emergency exits.
No bomb was found on board after a four-hour search of the plane, said Tom Schwartz, a spokesman for Fort Worth-based American Airlines.
The FBI questioned passengers for about four hours, then allowed them to board buses for San Francisco, about 90-minutes away. In Sacramento, Special Agent Tom Griffin said the FBI had no suspects.
Some of the passengers were disgruntled by the delay, Griffin said.
The passengers and crew of Flight 907 en route to Tampa from Nashville and Milwaukee were evacuated by emergency chute when the plane landed at 12:10 pm EDT at Tampa International Airport, an airline spokesman said.
In Florida, an American Airlines 727 with 32 passengers and a crew of six made a safe emergency landing after the pilot reported an engine fire, the Federal Aviation Administration said.
"They were upset, but I would rather be safe than get back on that plane," Griffin said. "I know it's hot in Stockton, about 105 degrees. But I'd rather be hot than dead."
Two passengers were injured slightly using the chutes.
A warning light in the cockpit of the Boeing 727-200 indicated a possible fire in one engine while the plane was on approach, but controllers in the tower saw no flames or smoke, said John Hotard, a spokesman at the carrier's Dallas headquarters.
"It appears at this point it was a faulty warning light," said spokesman Al Becker at American's Dallas-
headquarters.
Officials said the light came on when the flight was about 10 minutes from the runway. The pilot activated two fire extinguishers built into the engine.
headquarters.
engine.
"Apparently he blew both bottles and the light still may have been on," Hotard said.
The pilot declared an emergency landed the aircraft, turned onto a taxiway and opened the chutes.
Michelle Fulcher-Carlisle, 24, of New York was treated at St. Joseph's Hospital emergency room for minor head injuries and released, said hospital spokeswoman Barbara Fernandez.
Vivian Tekamp, 68, of Waukegan, III., was listed in satisfactory condition undergoing tests, Ms. Fernandez said.
In Chicago, meanwhile, smoke from an overheated air conditioning unit caused evacuation of 131 people from a United Airlines DC-8 at O'Hare International Airport on Wednesday night, an airline spokesman said.
WEATHER Lawrence Forecast
TODAY
Sunny and hot
HIGH: 92°
LOW: 67°
Today will be mostly sunny, windy and warm. The high will be in the lower- 90s.
The evening skies will become partly cloudy with lows in the mid- to upper- 60s.
5-DAY
FRI
Partly Cloudy
92/65
HIGH LOW
SAT
Possible Showers
86/66
SUN
Partly Sunny
85/63
MON
T-Storms
82/64
TUE
Partly Sunny
86/67
North Platte
95/60
Partly Cloudy
Omaha
87/62
Partly Sunny
Rain T-Storms Snow Flurries Ice
Goodland
97/59
Partly Cloudy
Hays
95/60
Partly Sunny
Salina
94/63
Sunny
Topeka
89/64
Sunny
Kansas City
88/64
Sunny
Columbia
85/62
Sunny
St. Louis
83/62
Sunny
Dodge City
96/64
Partly Sunny
Wichita
94/66
Sunny
Chanute
92/67
Sunny
Springfield
87/63
Sunny
Forecast by John Dolusic and Jamie Zahara.
Temperatures are today’s high and tonight’s overnight low.
Conditions are forecasted for this afternoon.
Tulsa
94/68
Partly Sunny
McMurry
Continued from p.
allowed to go to Colorado, which makes it very difficult to collect on our judgment."
our pennants.
Prewitt said that the University could go to court to garnish McMurry's wages but that the expense of doing that would be significant. The University would have to hire a Colorado attorney to start any legal action against him.
"I wouldn't say I've written it (the money) off," Prewitt said. "But realistically speaking, I doubt, given the circumstances, we'll ever get all the money back."
Colorado parole officials say McMurry is employed and makes between $700 and $1,200 a month.
they were as capable of opening an emergency door and assisting in an evacuation as people with sight. They also objected to what they said could be condescending treatment by airline employees and needless demands, such as that they use a wheelchair while boarding.
Larry Cavnagh, McMurry's Colorado parole officer, said he was unsure how Kansas wanted him to handle McMurry's case.
"It's unfortunate that we have to spend so much money to collect our money." Prewitt said.
arrangement.
Department of Commerce
Cavennah wrote a letter in July asking Kansas for clarification on the details of McMurry's parole
"I want to know what they are going to do if he doesn't repay the money," he said. "At this time it doesn't look like he is going to do it, and I don't have an answer from the Department of Corrections."
"It's totally up to them about what I do about him," he said.
Kansas parole officials said yesterday that they would tell Cavnaght that they will not take action against McMurry if he maintains the other conditions of his parole.
CONTAINS
Next July, McMurry will automatically be off parole and will no longer be under Kansas' jurisdiction, said George Jones, director of the Kansas State Parole Board.
Blind passengers protest airlines' policies
Then, even if the state wanted to take action against McMurry, it couldn't, Jones said.
could it, Jones said that regardless of state action, she would continue University efforts to collect money from McMurry. The University also filed a civil suit against McMurry in 1984. A Douglas County Circuit Court ruled that the University was entitled to restitution equal to the amount in the parole agreement. Thus, KU can demand restitution payments indefinitely.
Seating rules are discriminatory, they say
Maurer and other blind people who addressed the board focused their complaints on policies many airlines have of prohibiting them from sitting near emergency exits, a practice the carriers say is based on safety concerns.
Prewitt wouldn't comment on what actions the University would take.
WASHINGTON — The president of the National Federation of the Blind told a federal panel yesterday that the blind were ready to use "every morally justifiable means" to end discrimination by the airlines, including blocking runways.
runways in front of the planes?" Marc Maurer, president of the federation, asked a committee weighing rules to prevent discrimination against the handicapped by airlines. "That is a question that the behavior of the airlines themselves will answer."
Onera. The blind, however, argued that
cluding blocking I walk away.
"Should the blind lie down on the
Continued from p. 1
Tie-dve
The new trend could cause a backlash from former tie-dye wearers, he said.
said.
"I predict that the real Deadheads will stop wearing them, or at least won't wear them as much," he said.
Other people are wearing tie-dyes for different reasons.
for different reasons.
All 67 members of the pledge class of the Alpha Chi Omega sorority, 1500 Sigma Nu Place, were given tie-dye shirts at the beginning of the year by active members.
active members.
Margo Hackel, Omaha, Neb,
senior, said she was appointed chief
tie-dyer for the sorority.
"Every year when we get a pledge class we give them a shirt, she we wear it."
really popped she and some friends Hackel said she and some friends saw the host of Mr. Rogers' Neighborhood, a children's television show, make tie-dies by winding shirts around a broomstick. She said her sorority made its shirts with Mr. Rogers' method.
really popular over the summer. "
"The actual process is fun." she said.
aid. "It's like the big thing
"For some reason tie-dyes got
Sorority members decided to give their pledges the T-shirts just to be different and because they thought the shirts would be noticeable.
Carolyn Russell, Leavenworth freshman and a member of the Alpha Chi Omega pledge class, said she liked the tie-dyes because each was unique.
more and an active in the sorority, said that at first she was a bit teery of wearing a tie-dye. She said she thought the people who wore them at her former college, DePauw University in Greencastle, Ind., were a little weird.
werd.
"But they (her sorority sisters) all said, 'Oh this is totally great,' and I trusted them. One of the things you gotta do is always trust your sisters," she said.
Many students are making their own tie-dyes, but a few stores in town are selling them, too.
unique!
Tara Savre, Overland Park sopho
are being Kathy Morrow, co-owner of The Yellow Sub, 624 W. 12th St. said the would have some tie-dyes for sale next week. She said the shirts would sell for $10.
Laurie Culling, a salesman at Natural Way Fine Gifts and Exotic Jewelry, 820 Massachusetts St., said the store had some tie-dye shirts, dresses, tank tops and shorts. The tank-top shirts now cost $4 to $8.
Jeff Clardy, Commerce, Texas, freshman, said he thought one of the reasons tie-dyes were in fashion was because the latest Grateful Dead album was being played on pop radio stations.
stations.
Clardy said tie-dyes also were being worn for the same reasons they were worn in the '60s.
The-dye clothes are very popular with students, she said.
were just like this.
"It's just that old '60s way of feeling totally free — 'This is me, this is the way I want to look,' " he said.
1985
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Dates: See schedule below
Time: 8:30-4:30
Bring: K.U.I.D. with Fall 1987, fee sticker
Spouse Ticket- Please bring proof of marriage.
SCHEDULE
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A-E Monday, Aug.31st 8:30-4:30
F-K Tuesday, Sept. 1st 8:30-4:30
L-R Wednesday, Sept. 2nd 8:30-4:30
S-Z Thursday, Sept. 3rd 8:30-4:30
If you miss your assigned date,you have from Sept. 4th until Oct. 1st to pick your ticket up at Allen Field House.
Clip and Save
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, September 3, 1987
Arts/Entertainment
7
Spencer Museum of Art celebrates 10 years of growth
By JENNIFER ROWLAND
Staff writer
Ten years ago, the Spencer Museum of Art was moving its works to a new building west of the Kansas Union and trying to accommodate everyone from brides and grooms to musicians and diners.
"Suddenly everyone wanted to do something with the museum," said Doug Tighman, acting director for the museum. "We had requests for weddings, concerts, meetings, dinners. People wanted to show films in the museum. We suddenly were the hot place to do things," he said.
he placed two images.
He said the museum was instantly popular when it relocated from Spooner Hall, east of the Kansas Union, to west of the Union on Mississippi Street in 1977.
"We got requests for everything that first year. Then it tapered off a little, and we decided we weren't going to kill ourselves forever," he said.
"That lasted for quite awhile. We had to decide what we could do and couldn't do. We don't do weddings."
The museum moved into its present quarters after Kansas City arts patron Helen Foresman Spencer donaed most of the money needed to construct the $4.6 million building.
Since then, the museum's budget has grown from $200,000 a year to $1 million a year, about half of which comes from state funds.
Tilghman said the museum's primary responsibility was to serve the
est of students.
"We try very desperately to meet requests for academic support. Those are our first priorities, obviously. If somebody wants to bring their class to the museum, we very seldom turn down something like that." he said.
University and the academic interests of students.
"The other side, of course, is providing service to the public. For example, we work with the local school district. We give tours to every fifth grade and sixth grade in Lawrence, preceded by a talk at their school," he said.
"The building and the community support that we have are the reasons we've grown," he said. "The growth of our staff and our budget and our level of activity are the ways that we've grown in response to that stimuli.
The museum also offers tours to some area grade schools, high schools, regional colleges and the community, he said.
we may not have the collection that some other university museums have, but in terms of what we do with that collection, we'd have to be ranked very high," he said.
Tilghman said good staff relations helped the museum to thrive.
"A lot of university art museums do not have very good relations with the art departments or the art history departments. They sort of exist within in the academic department. And if they don't, they are viewed as com-
said.
"We do not have that problem. We have developed really good relations with the art history department."
petitors for staff and attention," he said.
with the art teacher. Several artists, including contemporary painter Elizabeth Murray and noted photographer Aaron Siskind, are scheduled to speak at KU about their works. Tilghman said obtaining exhibits and attracting speakers hadn't been difficult.
work. he said.
One recent acquisition, titled "Chaotic Lip," is a 20th-century painting by Murray, who is considered one of the top painters of the '80s. She is scheduled to speak at 7:30 p.m. Sept. 11, the 10th anniversary of the museum's dedication.
in the "Most artists want to explain their work," he said.
Siskind is scheduled to speak Sept. 28 and 29 at 7:30 p.m. in the Spencer Museum of Art auditorium.
Museum.
The celebration will begin Jan. 15 with a party for the Friends of the Art Museum, followed on Jan. 16 by a public exhibition of about 150 works acquired over the last 10 years. Jan. 16 will be the 10th anniversary of the public opening of the museum. A concert designed to attract students also will be that evening. On Jan. 17, Oxford University art historian Francis Haskell will speak.
Francis Baker was a visitor. Although the museum's reputation is good, there is still room for improvement. Tilghman said the 20th-century art collection was one area the museum was working to
improve
"You don't get many donations in that area. It's hard to acquire contemporary art because the best is expensive."
Thomas Southall, curator of photography at the museum and associate professor of art history, said he came to the University of North Carolina in 1978, opened to the public in January 1978.
"I think the collection has well more than doubled in the last ten years," Southall said.
He said a collection including 500 photographs from the 1950s and 1960s, published in Esquire magazine and acquired by the museum in 1980, had helped the national reputation of the museum's photography division.
Other highlights of the collection include photographs by Harold E. Edgerton, Ansel Adams and more than 30 original photographs by the famed 1960s photographer Diane Arbus. This is one of the largest museum collections of her work, Southall said.
portraits of 19th century French authors donated by the department of French and Italian also have added to the exhibits, he said.
Southall said regional photographs of small-town activity by Earl Iversen and of Kansas landscapeing by Terry Evans also were on display.
KU senior's practice pays
Michael Tyler plays on album with jazz great Bill Watrous
By MICHAEL HORAK Staff writer
Michael Tyler regrets never getting the chance to trick or treat on Halloween when he was a kid. Walking around in costume would take time, he was told, and that meant being away from his trumpet.
"I always envied the other child, Kids would come to our door, and we'd have to stop practicing to do it," Tyler said. "I really bothered me."
"Our music and keeping us fed was all that mattered to my dad. It was his obsession, so we practiced all the time," he said.
Tyler, Dallas senior, said practice started the moment school was out and sometimes didn't end until 2 or 3 the next morning
During that 10-day stay, Tyler so impressed Watrous that he got to play a duet with him called "Mountain Dance." That song will be included on the instrumental jazz album scheduled for national release on the "Soundwings" label this month.
"When Mr. Watrous was here last spring for our jazz festival, I slipped him a tape of five songs I wrote, hoping he would give them to Quincy Jones," Tyler said. "The next week, he called me back and said 'Mike, if my daughter likes this, it's got to be good.'"
Recently those long hours of intense work began to pay off. In June, Tyler was flown to California at the invitation of world-known trombonist Bill Watrous to watch the production of Watrous' next album.
Watrous and music producer Pat Williams, famous for writing
the theme songs to "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" and "The Bob Newhart Show", invited him to Los Angeles for the recording session.
Tyler said his duet with Watrous was an accident. He said that when he heard "Mountain Dance," he thought it would make a great duet. He mentioned the idea to Watrous, who agreed. Tyler said he had to beg to be considered for his role in the duet.
"The Spencer Museum started collecting photography in the 1960s, which was ahead of most museums in our country. Most museums around the country," Southall said.
Watrous didn't want to waste time on a college kid, especially when studio rental was costing him $2,000 a day. Tyler said.
"When I walked into the studio, he said to me, 'When the red light goes on, that's when you've got to it. I knew if I didn't do it right, I would be taking the next plane home.' he said.
"I did it in one take, and I did it great," he said.
Appearing on Watrous' album was one of the highlights of Tyler's music career, he said.
nat career, he joked, started before he was born.
I tunnk I was probably playing music when I was in my mother's womb," he said. "I've always loved it."
Tyler, now 21, is bitter when he talks about growing up in a household obsessed with music.
"I didn't have a normal childhood," he said.
Iyer said that when he was nine, he traveled with his family's band around the nightclub circuit. He would play into the wee hours of the morning, go home and get up to go to school.
Boy Scouts, after-school play and television were specifically
Scott Carpenter/KANSAN
Copyright Jerry Cameron/MLC
forbidden.
Michael Tyler, Dallas senior, recorded an album this summer with trombonist Bill Watrous.
toobudget
During grade school, Tyler members secretly watching television for a couple of hours one afternoon instead of practicing.
His father came home from work, felt the warm console and as punishment made him practice all night.
Tyler went to a high school in Dallas that emphasized fine arts and music. During his four years there, he won several top county, city and state music awards.
He said playing in school bands offered him an escape from pressure at home.
It was during a high school cross-country band trip that Tyler was first introduced to the KU music department.
muse department. "On our way back from Minnesota, we came through Lawrence and just happened to play at Lewis Hall," he said. "Being a sophomore in high school and seeing all those women, I said, 'Man, this is the place for me.'"
Ron McCurdy, coordinator of jazz studies at KU, said he saw Tyler at Lewis Hall and knew he bad talent.
"Some people have great instincts, he's got more than that going for him," McCurdy said. "It's only a matter of time before he makes it big."
the talents Tyler exhibited during that Lewis Hall performance continue to impress his music professors. Not only does he play the trumpet; he also has studied the flugelhorn, drums, trombone, piano and bass. He sings and claims to be a decent whistler.
Roger Stoner, assistant chairman of the music and dance department, said, "The combination of abilities he has is truly remarkable. He is not just good by college standards, but I consider him good for professional standards.
Recently, he has been spending most of his time composing and arranging new material. He has written more than 100 songs in the past year.
For now, Tyler is declining offers to drop out of school and become a professional. He said his career would take a back seat to the two years he still has left to graduate,
In spite of the confidence Tyler's peers and professors have in his abilities, he said it would take more than talent to make it big in the music industry.
"He will definitely make it in the big time," Stoner predicted. "If I had to bet on the stock market, I'd bet on him."
He will continue to write and record music, under the sponsorship of Charles Oldfather, retired KU professor of law.
"If I have to, I will commute to the West Coast, but I won't quit school." he said.
"I guess the whole moral is never let a dream loose . . . get after it and work hard to attain it, because nobody is going to give it to you.
He said that hard work and making contacts within the music industry would be the keys to his failure or success.
"I honestly believe that God put me on this earth to play music. If I don't do it and do it well, I think I will be letting God down."
He said the photography exhibits had attracted students and that the Edgerton and Adams exhibits had been popular.
been popular. The museum's print collection is another attraction, partly because of its historic span.
"We have almost 500 years of graphic art in our storage area," said Steven Goddard, curator of prints. In the past three years, the museum has worked to expand its collections, including 16th-century Northern European art, which is Goddard's special. A January exhibition of Dutch posters had been a recent highlight, he said.
THE MUSEUM OF ART
Jamaica | arson/KANSAN
James Larson/KANSAN
A sculpture by artist Louise Nevelson called "Seventh Decade Garden" is located outside the Spencer Museum of Art. The museum is celebrating its 10th anniversary.
MARISLA MAYER
She-Bop, from left, Nancy Crane, Carol Dressler, Kim Allison and Jody Biesche have been playing together as a band for four months. The group performs rock 'n' roll mainly from the '50s and '60s.
Ordinary women turn rockers by night, form new local band
By KIRK ADAMS
Staff writer
By day they're ordinary folk — a high school junior, a music store owner, a secretary at a KU school and another at a grain elevator in Lawrence.
By night, they're members of what they say is Lawrence's only all-woman rock band.
As a rock band, they're doing exactly what they've always wanted to do.
The group, called She-Bop, was formed by Lawrence resident Carol Dressler in May. Dressler is a secretary in the aerospace engineering department at the University of Kansas.
The band plays '50s and '60s music, and they try to stay as close to the original material as possible.
original material to purchase.
"But it's mostly male material, so it sounds a little different," Dressler said.
Dressler and Jody Bieshe have been playing together since November. Later, their friend Nancy Crane joined the group, and they found their lead guitarist, Kim Allison, through a newspaper ad. All are Lawrence residents.
are Lawrence. "We do some '70s and '80s stuff,
too, some Bananarama, some Bangles.
Mainly what we do in the way of music is Buddy Holly, the Beatles and Elvis." Dressler said.
and EVIs. The band plays its own rendition of "Venus" modeled after both the Bananarama and the Shocking Blue
versions.
They sing together for "Chains" by Cookies and "The Peppermint Twist" by Joey Dee and the Starlighters. They really find a groove when they play "Stormy Monday", modeled after the Allman Brothers' version.
— Carol Dressler She-Bop band member
The four of us have come together and it's one journey for now. These are three of the most committed people I've ever worked with.'
keyboard. Before She-Bop, she played rhythm and blues.
"T
Biesche said, "We've got the ultimate gimmick — we're all women!"
Dressler said she thought the Lawrence music scene had some tough competition. But she said the group members all had a common goal to make the band successful. They have been practicing twice a week.
Biesche plays the drums and also plays the guitar. She is experienced in folk and bluegrass music. Biesche has played in the bands New Reflections and Apropos, and has played in
marching bands. She is co-owner of Band Instrument Care, 2601 Iowa St.
"I once drove 45 miles just to play
Biesche also plays the harmonica and banjo in solo acts.
All the women help with vocals, but Crane is the lead singer for the group. Crane works as a secretary at a local grain elevator. She plays the guitar, keyboard and drums. Crane, a KU graduate, has played in the bands Dream Machine, Sun Puppy I and Sun Puppy II.
Allison, a Lawrence High School junior, plays lead guitar, bass, keyboard and the flute. Allison said she liked classic rock like Led Zeppelin and Yes.
"We call Kim 'The Ice Woman' because she's so cool." Biesche said. "Kim is our favorite person to pick on because we're all old, and she's young and talented, and we're jealous."
Dressler said that each of the band members had different preferences in music, but they wanted to appeal to a large audience and also be danceable.
unikeabee.
She-Bop will perform for the first time at 9 p.m. Sept. 26 at Bogarts, 611 Vermont St.
"The four of us have come together and it's one journey for now. These are three of the most committed people I've ever worked with," Dressler said.
---
8
thursday, September 3, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
State/Local
House debate on highways expected to be frustrating
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — House members are expecting a grueling day of debate over a highway proposal today, one the chamber's leaders say could last longer and be more frustrating than the Senate's 12 hours of wrangling over a road plan.
House leaders are saying now what the Senate's leaders were saying two days ago: They don't see a general consensus for any single plan and they expect one endorsed by a committee to face many amendments. Debate is scheduled to begin at 9 a.m. today, the fourth day of the Legislature's first special session in 21 years.
"We have three times as many members with three times as many ideas and probably three times as many amendments," said House Speaker Jim Braden, R-Clay Center. "It could possibly take longer, but I'm hopeful we can get through it in one day."
The House Transportation Committee endorsed yesterday a plan that calls for spending $319 million over the next $1½ years to increase financing for the state Department of Transportation's normal operations and to increase maintenance financing of existing roads by $163 million.
To pay for the maintenance program, the state would increase its gasoline and diesel fuels taxes by 3 cents a gallon. Vehicle registration fees for trucks would increase by 25 percent, and fees for passenger cars would be increased to $2. The package would raise $545 million.
To have the state finance any new construction, voters would have to approve a proposed constitutional amendment increasing the state's sales tax a half-percent in the August 1988 primary election. This would raise $824 million.
The committee basically ignored a plan the Senate passed earlier in the day. That plan called for $528 million in pew construction.
in new construction. The plan would have increased the motor taxes fuel by 4 cents on Oct. 1 and another penny on Jan. 1, 1989, as well as increasing vehicle registration fees.
Gov. Mike Hayden's comprehensive highway plan has not advanced in either chamber, and it calls for $1.71 billion in new construction.
The Senate's 40 members rejected several proposals during its debate Tuesday and yesterday. House Majority Leader Joe Knopp, R-Manhattan, said things may go rougher in the house, which has 125 members.
"The problem is, the Senate only has to count to 21." Knopp said.
House Republican leaders also worry that Democrats may try to use their votes on amendments and plans against them in 1988 elections. In fact, Knopp reminded Republicans at a caucus of their custom of letting only Braden and Knopp decide when to call for a roll call vote.
"I think we are going to be very careful in trying to protect House Republicans," Braden told the caucus. "I will assume that we won't be trying to twist any arms to get you to vote for something that would put you in jeopardy in your re-election campaigns."
Impact.
Minority Leader Marvin Barkes, D-Louisburg, said he found it difficult to vote for any highway plan without seeing what was proposed for other state programs, such as education. Barkes has said the state needed to take a balanced approach to helping its economy.
ing its economic Barkiic criticized the Senate's plan and said he could not support a large increase in motor fuels taxes or vehicle registration fees. He said he thought a House-Senate conference committee would end up developing the final highway plan.
Panel ignores Senate road bill
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — The House Transportation Committee yesterday ignored the highway bill the Senate passed earlier in the day and substituted its own, a plan that includes "enhanced maintenance" on state roads but does not contain any new projects.
The Senate bill proposed $528 million for new construction on major road corridors, including a new road from Wichita through southeast Kansas to Joplin, Mo.
Both plans fell short of Gov. Mike Hayden's proposed $1.7 billion highway package rejected by the Senate on the first day of the special session.
The House Transportation Committee's bill would raise $545 million, including $348 million to cover the projected shortfall of funds for the Kansas Department of Transportation, and $163 million for increased maintenance, by raising motor fuel taxes and vehicle registration fees.
axes and vehicle registration Under the House bill, money would
be raised by a 3-cent increase in the fuel tax, one cent of which would be returned to cities and counties; an increase in motor vehicle registration for all four categories of passenger vehicles, including pickups, to a flat $32; and a 25 percent raise in the registration fee for trucks.
The increase in the fuel tax would raise $363 million over an 8½-year period, with $242 million going to the state and $121 million going to local governments.
The committee's bill was developed during hearings and committee discussion two weeks ago.
Rep. Jeff Freeman, R-Burlington, was the only committee member to amend the bill. His amendment would allow local governments to replace bridge decks on structures that are less than 30 years old. Currently, a bridge can be replaced without a vote of the people only if it is more than 30 years old, Freeman said.
The committee also sent to the House a resolution for the August 1988 primary election ballot proposing a constitutional amendment to raise the sales tax from 4 percent to 4.5 percent with voter approval.
The extra half-cent sales tax would raise $284 million for new highway construction projects over an $1/2-year period. Placing that proposal on the ballot will require a two-thirds vote by both houses of the Legislature.
However, during a House Republican caucus, only 25 members indicated they could support the proposed constitutional amendment. Even if the proposed amendment had the support of all the House's 51 Democrats, it still would fall eight votes short of the two-thirds majority it needs to pass.
House Speaker Jim Braden, R-Clay Center, said he might not even bring up the proposed amendment for debate.
The International Club Welcomes All Students Back To School With A Picnic
On
Saturday, September 5, 1987
Food and beverages are free. Rides in the double decker bus will be available from the main lobby in McCollum Hall at 11:30 a.m. to the Dam. 50¢ per ride will be charged.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, September 3. 1987
9
Campus/Area
Yearbook to try new approach
By BRAD ADDINGTON
The Jayhawker yearbook would like to have KU undergraduates shot—with a camera, that is. The yearbook is incorporating pictures of undergraduates this year for the first time in its history.
The yearbook is incorporating undergraduate in celebration of its 100th anniversary, said Kim Dean, junior and editor of the yearbook.
"We think that it would represent the University more," Dean said. "It would give people a better view of exactly what's here."
In addition to pictures of undergraduates, the yearbook will feature portions of past年books, Dean
said.
said.
"This year the yearbook is going to be totally different than it's ever been." Dean said.
The yearbook will continue to include undergraduates in future years. It might also start including pictures of graduate students in a few years, Dean said.
The yearbooks' price of $23 did not increase from last year. Dean said the yearbook's size would increase this year if more than 2,000 undergraduates decided to have their pictures taken.
"We're hoping that the sales will go up to compensate for the price we have to pay to increase the size of the hook." Dean said.
book, Dean said.
Bob Turvey, an adviser for the
yearbook who works in the student assistance center, said. "We're not going for an incredibly large number of students but more to make a statement about the 100th anniversary of the yearbook."
The last day students can have their pictures taken is Nov. 11.
Students wishing to appear in the yearbook must pay a $1 sitting fee, present a yearbook receipt or purchase a yearbook at the time of the
their pictures.
Yearbook photographers will be taken pictures of residents of residence and scholarship halls through Oct. 14. Pictures of fraternity and sorority members will be taken after that.
Official asks for better financing to combat dangers of alcoholism
The Associated Press
TOPEKA- A state official told the House Interim Committee on Federal and State Affairs yesterday that funding for state programs was inadequate to combat the problems that come pouring out of bottles.
that come into contact. Andrew O'Donovan, commissioner for alcohol and drug abuse for the Kansas Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services, said the "working poor," whose lives can be
devastated by alcoholism, were especially underserved by state treatment programs.
ment programs.
The interim committee is examining the distribution of funds raised by the state's excise tax on alcohol. No proposal for a liquor tax increase has been made.
O'Donovan told the committee that alcohol abuse cost Kansans an estimated $566 million a year in the form of lost productivity, treatment and
law enforcement.
o'Donovan, former administrator of the Thomas County Alcohol and Drug Abuse Education and Prevention Program, said, "I think society is going to pay for this problem, one way or another."
way of another Kansas spends about $7 million for state alcohol treatment programs and funnels another $2.2 million to local communities for similar programs.
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FrameUp custom framing & gallery UP TO 40% OFF SELECTED FRAMED ARTWORK
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15 E. 8th, Downtown Tues.Sat. 10:30 - 12:00 on other coupons or disc. apply with special sale prices UDK
IMPROVE YOUR STUDY SKILLS!
Attend The
ACADEMIC SKILL ENHANCEMENT WORKSHOP
Covering: Time Management Study Reading Listening and Notetaking
Thursday, September 6:30 to 9:00 p.m.
300 Strong Hall
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Walnut Valley Festival 16th National Flat-Picking Championships
**starting in person.**
•Doc Watson
•Hot Rize, with guest artists
•Red Knuckles & The Trailblazer
•Mike Cross
•New Grass Revival
•Berline, Crary & Hickman
•Good Ol' Persons
•Walt Michael & Co.
•Chameleon Puppet Theatre
•John McCutcheon
•Foster Family String Band
•Alleeen & Elkin Thomas
•Horse Sense
•The Wood's Tea Co.
•Hoofin' High Cloggers
•Last Kansas Exit
*Tim Henderson & The Beltbuckle Band*
*Full Circle*
*Steve Beck*
*Stranters Strangers*
*Spontaneous Combustion*
*Neal Hellman*
*Kim Robertson*
*Harvey Reid*
*Becky Blackley*
*Lindsay Haisley*
8 Contests
$23,000 Cash Prizes,
Trophies & Instruments
Contests are limited to 64
contestants per contest.
wv
Ticket Information:
*General Advance 4-day Weekend: $30 (Fri): $13; Sat: $19; Sun: $10*
*2 days $22~Specify Fri. Sat or Sat.Sun*
*Children under 12 with Admission will receive*
*Al Gate: 4-day Weekend: $33 (Fri): $15; Sat-15; Sun: $10*
*2 days $25~Specify Fri. sat or Sat.Sun*
*Children Under 12 Free with Adult*
*(Admission to Thursday show is free for children 12+)
*for the first 11th. Sept. 11th. Mail orders postmarked Sep. 11th
*receive the advance price. All orders received Sept. 4th or will be held at gate.*
Workshops
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This will be the BEST FESTIVAL IN THE U.S. this year!!!
Tandon wins state contract
Success in the
See PCs on campus, September 10
Lawrence, KS - Success in the OEM (Original Equipment Manufacturer) market has prompted Tandon Corporation to promote the microcomputer market. Available at Computer Outlet (804 New Hampshire), the Tandon PC line has become increasingly popular on campus.
Since the late seventies, Tandon Corporation has been known as the leader in the microcomputer disk drive market. To maintain their position as a market leader, they have redirected their marketing and manufacturing efforts to meet new requirements of computer manufacturers and endusers, including the introduction of an IBM-compatible computer.
In March, the State of Kansas signed a contract with Tandon Corporation to purchase PC/AT-compatible machines. The PCA is functionally equivalent to the IBM PC/AT at almost half the price.
Tandon went to the top to ensure the success of their microcomputer launch. Four IBM veterans, who were closely involved in the development and manufacturing of the IBM Personal Computer, were hired to manage the engineering and marketing divisions. This dedication to a quality product has allowed Tandon to make significant inroads into the PC marketplace.
With an 80286 microprocessor, an optional 80287 co-processor, and keyboard selectable clock speeds of 6 and 8 MHz, it offers comparable performance. The PCA was rated "operationally compatible with IBM PC/AT" by Future Computing, which is the highest compatibility rating given. The University of Kansas has
The Tandon PCA comes with 1 MB of RAM and a wide selection of hard disks for about half the price of a comparable IBM.
found that a computer with these features and benefits is definitely $q$ good buy, especially at state contract prices.
Tandon also has a PC/XT model which is ideal for word-processing and data entry. Both Tandons are a good choice for anyone who needs the security of a brand name and nearby dealer service. "Tandon offers high quality workmanship at an affordable price", says Mark Husby, Computer Outlet Sales Representative, "Overall, it is a good value."
The Tandon line of PCs will be featured during a seminar at the Computing Center on September 10 sponsored by Tandon Corporation and Computer Outlet. This seminar, which is open to all students, faculty and staff of the University will include topics on microcomputer selection, compatibility, desktop publishing, choosing a word processor and modem communications.
Paid advertisement, Computer Outlet
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Thursday, September 3. 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Fertility marriage rates low
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The nation's fertility rate fell to a record low last year, while life expectancy reached a record high and marriage and divorce rates dipped to the lowest levels in a decade, a government bureau reported yesterday.
Average life expectancy in 1986 reached a record high of 74.9 years, said the Center for Health Statistics, an arm of the Department of Health and Human Services. That was up from 74.7 years reported in 1985.
The highest life expectancy was 78.9 years for white females, up from 78.7 last year. White males saw an increase from 71.8 to 72.0 years.
Life expectancy for black people rose from 65.3 to 65.5 years for men, but declined from 75.7 to 73.6 years in the same decade. A summary of vital statistics reported.
Births totaled 3,731,000, down
18,000 from 1985.
That represented 64.9 live births per 1,000 women ages 15 to 44, 2 percent below last year and the 8 percent in the United States, the report said.
The drop reflects the trend of recent years, as many young people have postponed marriage and families to pursue education and careers, the report said.
Social scientists have debated in recent years whether this represents merely a delay in having children or a decision not to have families.
Trends in the number of annual births are affected by two factors: the rate of births among women and the number of women in the childbearing age.
The number of women ages 15 to 44 increased one percent between 1985 and 1986, but the bulk of that was among women ages 30 and over, where birth rates tend to be lower.
Garth Sangerbuck ANSA
Alan Sholz of Raymore, Mo., lows a bucket of hot tar to construction workers below him. Sholz was part of a crew working yesterday on the roof at Gertrude Sellars Pearson-Corbin Hall.
ACLU says Reagan afraid of Bork's past
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The American Civil Liberties Union said yesterday that the Reagan administration was afraid of the speeches and articles Supreme Court nominee Robert H. Bork had produced over the years.
White House officials "have made a strategic judgment they can't sustain the nomination based on (Bork's complete) record," ACLU President Norman Dorsen told a news conference. He said the administration was trying to hide the truth about Bork, a federal appeals court judge.
Caustic exchanges between the White House and the ACLU have become a daily occurrence after the
civil liberties group departed from its traditional neutrality on judicial selections and announced Monday its opposition to Bork's confirmation by Sage.
White House spokesman Martin Fitzwater on Tuesday accused the ACLU of playing partisan politics.
MANILA, Philippines — Conspirators in plots leading to last week's bloody coup attempt discussed killing U.S. citizens and burning CIA headquarters in Manila, the government said yesterday.
Filipino officials say rebels targeted U.S.
A general who commanded the army under deposed President Ferdinand E. Marcos was involved in plotting a military takeover, said the report, prepared by President Corazon Aquino's security force and released by the Presidential Palace.
Aquino, in a national broadcast yesterday, said that 53 people were killed in Friday's coup attempt, including 12 loyal soldiers, 19 rebel troops and 22 civilians. Hundreds were wounded, including her son, Benigno Aquino III.
Col. Gregorio "Gringo" Honasan, who led the coup attempt, remained at large, and the military intensified air and ground searches for him in Manila and north and east of the capital.
The "after-battle" report said Marcos laysons loyal to July 14 at a Manila restaurant to discuss "CIA support for destabilization," bombing campaigns, the assassination of three unidentified U.S. citizens and "burning of CIA headquarters." It did not elaborate.
It named Maj. Gen. Josephus Ramas, former army commander, as being involved in plotting a military takeover. Aquino fired Ramas after taking power in a February 1986 civilian-military uprising that ousted Marcos, who fled to Hawaii.
The report said intelligence agents learned that Ramas and Honasan planned a "blitzkrieg attack" last June, but it was postponed
The charges about killing U.S. citizens and the CIA were in the background part of the report, and it was unclear whether all the alleged plots were part of the same conspiracy and why other plots were postponed.
Maj. Gen. Eduardo Ermita, deputy chief of staff, declined comment and
said he was unaware of the report.
Aquino said that 50 officers and 1,300 enlisted men took part in the revolt, but did not say whether that included those who joined in Cebu City, San Fernando and southeastern Luzon. She said 1,033 mutineers were in custody.
The mutineers "turned their backs on their duties and pursued their own goals," Aquino concluded, switching from English to Tagalog, a Malayan dialect spoken in the Philippines. "They ignored the lives of our brothers because all they wanted was to kill me and run our government."
"I grieve for the dead on both sides," she said. "When I ordered the attack I knew that there would be violence. But it was necessary because I had to prevent greater violence."
Honasan led attacks Friday on the presidential palace, broadcast stations and key military installations, as well as headquarters at Gama Argueda.
The rebels said they were acting because of the government's handling of the Communist insurgency, its move to give some autonomy to Muslim rebels in the south and mountain tribesmen in the north, and because of generally poor conditions in the military.
Even Aquino's generals have pressed her to give the military more say in national policy and to address the military's needs.
On Tuesday, armed forces chief of staff Gen. Fidel Ramos demanded the immediate convocation of the National Security Council, the joint military-civilian policy-making committee that Aquino has never convened.
Military sources who spoke on condition of anonymity said they believe the president's civilian advisers do not want the council convened because it would give the military more say in national policy and because of bitter memories of the 1972-81 martial law under Marcos.
--reg. $28
Alpha Gamma Delta Presents
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Sunday, Sept. 27, 1987
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, September 3, 1987
Campus/Area
11
KU ROTC includes cadets from near and far
British cadet finds corps less class-conscious, fit
By VIRGINIA McGRATH
Staff writer
Staff writer
Stewart Ross salutes a little differently from the other members in his military corps. And his loyalty is to the Union Jack, not the stars and stripes. But for this year, Ross is a member of the KU Army ROTC.
Ross, an exchange student from the University of Essex, Essex, England, is the first exchange student to participate in the program.
Major Dan Reinke, assistant professor of military science, said, "We're treating him like a regular cadet."
Ross, who wears the British beret and fatigues, is in the KU ROTC under a provision that allows students from allied countries to participate in the U.S. program.
Ross is an American studies major at Essex and a member of the Officer Training Corps of the British Army. His field of study requires that he study in the United States for one
in England. Ross was a member of the British Officer Training Corps' Territorial Army, which is similar to the U.S. National Guard. When he returns to England, he would like to join the army's Royal Tank Regiment.
milit. Ross receives his pay from the British Territorial Army for his ROTC work.
British university students have a certain ambivalence towards the military. Ross said.
"My university is fairly left-wing, so there's a certain dislike of the army. At many other universities it's well-accepted." Ross said. "But the army keeps a low profile in Britain. It always has and always will."
Ross' family has a history of participation in the British military. His brother plans to join the British marines, his grandfather was a member of the Royal Air Force and his great-uncle was also in the military.
tary.
Ross has been to the United States once before. He plans to see more, including Fort Lauderdale at spring break, before this year is through. He also will travel to Canada in December and to South America next summer — if his money lasts, he said.
cross played rugby in England and will try out for the KU club. He enjoys life at KU, he said. "I've found it easy to fit in here, particularly if you're a sportsman."13
KU cadet learns leadership by commanding army troops
By JULIE McMAHON
Staff writer
Not every college senior could lead an army platoon as it patrolled the Czechoslovakian-West German border. But that's what Bill Sheehy did this summer.
Sleevy, Leavenworth senior, was one of five ROTC cadets at KU chosen for cadet troop leadership training. While others were stationed in the United States, he led an army platoon in Schuylkill, NJ, during July 16 to late August, when he returned to KU for the start of classes.
"It was probably the best experience of my life." Sheehy said.
ence of my life. Shetty said.
Major Dan Reinke, assistant pro-
teacher of military science, said the program allowed college ROTC students to gain experience working in real military situations.
The program is designed to give future officers a chance to command soldiers. Sheehy was in charge of 29 enlisted personnel and six M3 Brad Sternberg.
"I had people with 18 years experience who were as old as my dad, and I had someone who were 18 years old." Sheehy said.
He liked leading actual soldiers because it was more real than leading students in ROTC. He said the experience would help him when he became a lieutenant, which would be his rank after he graduated.
- Stewart Ross ROTC cadet
In England, there's more of a class difference. There's a great deal of difference between the officers and the men.'
year. He asked his commanding officer in England whether he could participate in ROTC while in the United States, received permission and came to the University of Kansas.
Since beginning the ROTC program at KU, Ross has noticed some differences between British officer training and ROTC.
SHEEHT
"In England, there's more of a class difference," he said. "There's a great deal of difference between the officers and the men. That's not as true here, which is quite good. That's not to say that the officers and men are on an equal basis here, but they do seem to get on well."
"Now I won't go in all big-headed and nuffy-chested." Shehee said.
Sheehy said he also learned that he didn't know it all.
Sheehy's platoon patrolled a one-kilometer-wide zone between West Germany and Czechoslovakia. He said he didn't see anything unusual during his time there, but he couldn't have told anyone if he had.
"We were dealing with some sensitive stuff," he said. The border itself wasn't elaborate, he said.
His verdict isn't so good on the physical condition of the soldiers. "The average ROTC can't quite as fit as the Petition counterpart," he said.
as season.
Rose would like to become a member of the Ranger Battalion, the ROTC version of a collegiate sports team. The nine-member KU Ranger Battalion competes against other teams in the Big Eight in military exercises such as marching and hiking.
Stewart Ross, left, British foreign exchange student, and Bill Sheehy programs. Ross is the first foreign exchange student to join the KU ROTC Leavenworth senior, have both left their native countries in military training program.
"The Czech border doesn't even have a fence," he said. "We could have rolled over and come back."
Sheehy said he wasn't used to just commanding and not helping out.
"I had an overwhelming desire to help," he said. "I had to curb it; it's not my place."
Sheehy has been involved on the civilian side as well. He was president of Joseph R. Pearson Hall his sophomore year and is now a resident assistant at the hall.
Bill Sheehy ROTC cadet
Sheehy also is captain of the KU mascots squad. For football, basketball and other KU athletic events, Sheehy dons the big yellow beak and boots of the "Big Jay" costume to cheer on the Jayhawks and shake the hands of admiring youngsters.
"They ask ludicrous questions like,
when do they pick up the garbage
that I brought."
As a resident assistant, he likes working with freshmen because he can help them with their problems, he said.
"Everyone should get a chance to be a mascot at least once to get the feel," he said. "We get paid for this, and it's so much fun."
The Czech border doesn't even have a fence. We could have rolled over and come back.'
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Sheehy has as much enthusiasm for the Army as he does for being a mascot. He had been at another training camp in Fort Riley, near Junction City, for six summers before he went to West Germany. He said he will share his whole summer in his camouflage uniforms but didn't mind.
but you think.
"It's a challenge I love," he said.
"I can't wait to get back out there and play."
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12
Thursday, September 3, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Feminists warn of Jewish jokes
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Jewish American Princess jokes are fueling an increasingly vicious form of bigotry, especially on college campuses, by portraying Jewish women as self-centered and materialistic, feminists said at a conference yesterday.
Susan Weidman Schneider, editor-in-chief of Lilith, a Jewish-feminist magazine, said the situation had degenerated since a T-shirt appeared about 10 years ago featuring the word "Princess," with a Star of David dotting the "i."
Today, she said, shirts, greeting cards, graffiti and jokes perpetuate stereotypes of Jewish women as materialistic, sometimes dishonest."
"I think the late-night television jokes have entered a new reality," Schneider said at the conference at
the American Jewish Committee headquarters.
In its fall edition, Lilith described several reports gathered this year at college campuses:
Congratulations at American University in Washington, D.C., two Jewish male disc jockeys sponsored a "Biggest JAP on Campus" contest. Students wore T-shirts that read, "Slap a JAP."
- Desks and walls at Syracuse University's Bird Library were covered with "anti-JAP graffiti," some containing obscenities. Students, both Jewish and non-Jewish, wore "JAP-Buster" T-shirts. Cheering sections chanted "JAP JAP!" whenever a stylishly dressed woman got up from her seat at a sporting event.
- At the University of Pennsylvania,
"JAP-Buster" T-shirts were
worn predominantly by Jewish men, according to June graduate Judy Siegel.
Siegel.
"There has been relatively little notice taken in the organized Jewish community of the fact that Jewish women have been maligned in these ways," Schneider said. "It has always seemed to us that it was because it was 'only' women who were the victims of the current wave of stereotyping."
of stereotyping.
Schneider said jokes about Jewish women had given rise to "classic anti-Semitic graffiti", jokes, comments and other kinds of verbal abuse."
adobe.
"Jennie Klagsbrun, editor of
*Free to Be ... You and Me*" and author of "Married People: Staying Together in an Age of Divorce," said many people used the term "JAP" without realizing its damaging
effect.
But, she said, "There's nothing funny about a put-down of Jewish women that has become a generic term for materialism, self-indulgence, loudness and so on."
The problem is that tolerance of the term has been strong, she said
Klagsbrun told of a female acquaintance who explained that the term "shows how good Jewish men are to their women. . . Everybody wants to be a JAP."
Klagsbrun said it was no coincidence that "at a time when Jewish women have finally begun to carve a place for themselves," serving as rabbis and cantors, the term 'JAP' is being used more than ever before.
"The new-found achievements of women threaten and disturb many men," she said.
New drug affects memory loss in rats
The Associated Press
NEW YORK - A substance that stimulates brain cells has partly reversed a memory deficit in aged rats, suggesting that similar drugs might help treat Alzheimer's disease and other neurological disorders, researchers reported.
Infusions of a "nerve growth factor" into the rats' brains also partly reversed age-related shriveling of some brain cells, researchers said.
The effect on age-related deficits suggests such substances may one day help treat such disorders as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and Lou Gehrig's diseases, said Anders Bjorklund of the University of Lund
in Sweden.
In a telephone interview, Bjorklund cautioned that the test-rats did not have Alzheimer's disease and that the link was "only by analogy."
Bjorklund, professor of neurobiology in the university's department of medical cell research, reported the results in yesterday's issue of the British Journal Nature with Swedish colleagues and scientists at the University of California at San Diego.
Nerve growth factor stimulates growth of nerve cells and helps them survive after injury. It appears to be one of a family of similar substances produced in the body, Bjorklund said. Some shriveling in brain cells with
age may be related to reduced production of such substances or lessened response to them, but the evidence is unclear, Bjorklund said.
For the new study, scientists focused on cells in the rat forebrain that communicate by using a substance called acetycholine.
other brain abnormalities, the
Bjorklund and colleagues reported
The amount of atrophy seen among those cells is related to the rat's degree of impairment in learning and memory. Borklund said. A similar relationship has been observed for acetylcholine-use cells and performance disease, among other patients also have other brain abnormalities, he said.
on work with 24 rats that had an age-related impairment in learning and memory. A tube was implanted in the brains of 11 rats and connected to a pump that gave a continuous supply of nerve growth factor for four weeks.
Some of the remaining rats were infused instead with an inert substance. All the rats went through two sessions of a test in which they search for a platform submerged in opaque liquid.
In the first test sessions, which began about a week after infusion started, the rats getting the growth factor performed no better than the other impaired rats.
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, September 3. 1987
13
Lisa Jones/KANSAN
**DUMPING**
Parting shot
Brian Taylor, Chanute freshman, grimaces in his efforts to launch a successful shot-put throw. He was practicing with the freshman track team near Kansas Memorial Stadium yesterday afternoon.
Valesente may redshirt as many as 20 freshman
staff writer
By CRAIG ANDERSON
Kansas practiced under the lights last night in an attempt to get ready for its opening night game at Auburn on Sept. 12.
Coach Bob Valesente said he hoped to redshirt as many as 20 freshmen this season. He did say, however, that some of the newcomers had a chance to make the 45-man traveling squad for the opener.
rreenman neineback Kyle Schenker headed the list of first-year players that had the best chances to get varsity playing time. Schenker moved up to the second team after last night's practice.
Cornback John Autenreith, safety Michael Page, offensive guard David Dunne, tailback Frank Hatchett and tailback Maurice Hookett were all named by Valesente as players who had a chance to travel with the team to Auburn.
The two freshmen running backs
eventually will be great players for the Jayhawks, he said.
"Maurice Hooks is going to be a great back," he said. "Frank Hatchett can flat-out run."
Valesente said he wasn't sure whether Hooks had been overlooked by recruiters because he missed much of his last season at Omaha South high school as a result of injuries.
The physical play of the Jayhawks during practice pleased Valesente. He said the team needed to stay consistent with that kind of playing style.
"I was glad to see that we do have it in us." Valesente said. "We need to keep playing like that practice after practice."
Mentor program receives high marks
practices.
An area in which the team had impressed Valente was in its physical conditioning. He said the work the players had done over the summer was helping them avoid the minor, nagging injuries.
Bv CRAIG ANDERSON
The success of the Kansas football program should be measured by more than just its accomplishments on the field, Coach Bob Valesente said.
Staff writer
said.
"We want to sell the kids on the fact that if they come to Kansas to play football, they will be preparing themselves for the rest of their lives," he said. "The preparations they make now will affect them forever."
forever.
Through an academic mentor program, many players are able to become a member of the KU faculty as their personal counselor. Last spring when the program was implemented, 40 faculty members participated. This fall, 60 members of the faculty have volunteered their time.
in the program, faculty members are available to help answer any questions players have. Academics are only part of the questions that may be involved, said Richard Lee, director of Support Services for the athletic department.
academic adviser. He said the goal of the program was to make an athlete feel as if he had a friend on the faculty that he could talk to at any time. Lee said the security that an athlete could gain from this would pay off for him both on and off the field.
Lee said a player's mentor was designed to be more than just an
"I've always felt that a well-rounded, smart athlete will beat the more gifted athlete every time." Lee said.
"This security makes the young man feel better about himself in whatever he does."
Stan Rolfe, professor of engineering, said Valesente's commitment to academics convinced him to volunteer for the program. He said Valesente was ahead of his time in the strides he had been made for improving relations between the faculty and the football team.
Rolfe serves as a mentor for freshman tight end Wolf Blaser.
man tight end Wolf Blaser.
"I will look him up several times this semester to check on how he is doing," Rolfes said. "He has a standing invitation to come into my office any time."
two semesters as an indication that the program was working. The team GPA rose from a 2.03 in the fall of 1986 to a 2.57 last semester.
Lee cited it in the overall team grade point average during the last
Senior defensive tackle Von Lacey said that the program had helped him budget his time better and improve his grades. The program would be especially helpful, he said, to new players at the University.
"The program has a lot to offer the players if they take advantage of it," he said. "They can orient themselves both academically and socially to the University."
Junior running back Arnold Snell said that the program was the reason he was able to raise his GPA to a 3.0 last semester. He said he felt as if he could go into his mentor's office and get answers to any questions he had.
"He got to be a real close friend to me," Snell said. "I felt like any problem I had, I could go talk to him about it."
Fifth-year senior Eldridge Avery, a mathematics major, said he wished he could have had a mentor early in his career at Kansas. He said he probably would have been able to graduate on time if the program had
been started when he was a freshman or sophomore.
The goal of the program, Valesente said, was to make his athletes total persons. By "total persons" he said he wanted to show that players could be successful not only athletically, but mentally and spiritually as well. This is important, he said, because less than one percent of college football players ever play in the National Football League.
The only way the program could reach its full potential was to build on itself, he said.
"It's just like anything else in life, you have to build on previous success and just keep striving to do better." Valesante said.
Lee said that the success an athlete had in the classroom often was overlooked because of what people saw on the field.
"People don't realize the time and energy that the athletes have to use," he said. "Most just think in terms of the time they spend on game day.
"We want people to realize the accomplishments they make as just another student who happens to play football," Lee said.
Students attempt to start lacrosse club
By ROBERT WHITMAN
Staff writer
When his attempts at organizing a lacrosse club failed last year, Mark Glassman became discouraged about trying again.
about trying to be better. But when he found people were interested in the sport this year, he again decided to organize a club in a sport played mainly east of the Mississippi River and in Colorado.
"I didn't even bring all my gear," said Glassman, Lake Forest, Ill., junior. "But so many people came up to me the first day of classes and wanted to play."
wanted to play Glassman and two friends, Ron Conner, Lakewood, Colo., sophomore, and Bruce Cameron, Evanston, Ill., sophomore, put their names and phone numbers on a flier they were distributing yesterday at a table in front of Wescoe Hall.
Cameron said they had collected about 40-50 names by 1:00 p.m. yesterday. Many of the people who signed up, he said, were from places east of Kansas where lacrosse was popular.
The flier invited people interested in joining a lacrosse club to a meeting at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Campain and told the of the proposed club's plans to provide equipment and raise funds.
Glassman was getting the names and phone numbers of people interested in joining a club, if it got past the planning stage. He said he needed at least 20 people who were seriously interested in the sport for the club to operate.
To become a sports club recognized by the recreation services office, organizers must first become recognized as a student organization
through the organization and activities center, said Gordon Kratz, coordinator of club sports for recreation services.
SERVICES
Becoming recognized by the University as student organization requires that the club fill out an application at the organization and activities center, listing, among other things, the names of the club officers and adviser.
The application is reviewed by the organization and activities center and a decision is made whether to recognize the club as a student organization. Part of the decision is based on the number of students projected to be involved in the club, a spokesman for the center said.
But Glassman said he wanted to make sure there were enough people seriously interested before even applying to become a club.
"I don't want to turn in an application to become a club without having something to show them," Glassman said.
said.
If a lacrosse club is established and recognized, the club will be able take advantage of services provided by the recreation services office. Kratz said.
Kratz said his office provided the opportunity to reserve use of recreation service fields, advice for organizing and scheduling games and tournaments and contacts with other club sports' representatives at other universities.
Recognized sports clubs also are eligible for Student Senate funding, Kratz said.
Glassman said money would be needed for equipment, travel to out-of-town games, referees, goals and uniforms.
Corked bat could undo Astros
The Associated Press
HOUSTON — The last thing the Houston Astros need in the midst of the National League West pennant race would be to lose its leading hitter. But that's exactly what may happen as outfielder Billy Hatcher faces a possible suspension for using a corked bat.
Hatcher, one of the few Astros who has hit consistently all season, was ejected in the fourth inning of Tuesday night's 3-2 loss to Chicago after his bat split in two, revealing it had been corked.
Umpire crew chief John McSherry said the bat contained 3 to 4 inches of cork and had been sent to the league office. Katy Feeney, the league's spokeswoman, said it would be several days before a decision could be made on suspension.
"I have to stand up for him because the bat wasn't even his." Houston Manager Hal Lanier said. "I'd hate to be without a player of his caliber for any length of time at this stage of the pennant race."
Two pitchers, Joe Niekro of Minnesota and Kevin Gross of Philadelphia, have been suspended for 10 days this year. Both had sandpaper in their possession when checked by umpires during games.
Tuesday night's loss was Houston's seventh in a row, dropping the Astros $5\frac{1}{2}$ games behind division leading San Francisco.
fourth in the league with 149 hits. He has 11 home runs and 57 runs batted in.
Hatcher is hitting .311 and ranks
Hatcher said all of his regular bats were broken, so he unwittingly grabbed the corked bat in Tuesday's game.
Lanier backed Hatcher's story.
"Putting cork in a bat is not going to help a Billy Hatcher at all because of the kind of hitter he is," Lanier said.
"That is one of the bats our pitchers use to play their silly little games to see how far they can hit the ball in batting practice.
"It just happened to be the same model of bat Billy uses, and he was out of bats, so he picked it up."
The incident occurred at a time when the league was looking into the possibility that some batters have loaded their bats with cork or shredded rubber to add distance to their drives.
Howard Johnson of the New York Mets, Pedro Guerrero of the Los Angeles Dodgers and Candy Maldonado of San Francisco have had their bats checked. Managers have the right to ask that one bat each game be confiscated for examination if they suspect tampering.
they suspect abuse. The Cubs also were involved in incidents involving Johnson and Guerrero.
Hatcher said the bat was one used by Astros pitchers in pregame batting practice. The bat had No. 45 on its handle, the number of Astros relief pitcher Dave Smith.
Chicago Manager Gene Michael, who last week accused Smith of scuffing the baseball, said stiff penalties should be issued.
ties should be issued.
"Three months suspension without pay, that would deter people from doing this stuff," he said.
Half-baked potato ploy mashes player's career
white keeping the ball.
On impulse during a radio interview Wednesday, Williamsport General Manager Bill Terlickey
By game time, team officials said they had collected only two bushels of potatoes, but fans also had collected some spuds, complete with Bresnahan's autograph.
The 25-year-old backup catcher was released Tuesday from the Eastern League's Williamsport Bills after he tried to trick a base runner by throwing a peeled potato while keeping the ball.
The Associated Press
WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. — Behind the plate, catch Dave Bresnahan was mediocre at best, but Wednesday night he was a big hit in the stands as he capitalized on a potato play that cost him his job.
The throw occurred Monday night after Reading Phillies catcher Rick Lundblade reached third base and took a couple steps off the bag. Bresnahan unscored a wild throw with the potato beyond the base and Lundblade made a run for the plate only to be tagged by Bresnahan, who had the baseball in his glove.
decided to take advantage of the publicity and offered to let fans in for a potato and $1 instead of the usual $2.75 general admission price. The game was the last home contest for the AA club, a farm team for the Cleveland Indians.
Not all fans approved — some grumbled about Bresnahan showing irreverence for the sport.
About two dozen fans crowded around the catcher as he signed his name and wrote "this spud's for you."
Lundblade was called safe at home by umpire Scott Potter, and Bresnahan was charged with an
error, which put Reading ahead 2-0 before Williamsport rallied to win 4-3.
Bresnahan, whose distant relative, Hall of Fame catcher Roger Bresnahan, innovated use of skin guards in the early 1900s, said he had checked the rule book and didn't think umpires would allow the run to score.
At most, he said, he figured he would be finned and would see Lundblade sent back to third.
Lilliamade sein sein
"I read in a baseball book where
years ago some catcher pulled this
in off the lower minor leagues," he
Hits lacking for Royals in 3-2 loss
said. "I was sitting around one night with some of my teammates having a few beers, and I told them about it. . . We got out a rule book and couldn't find anything in there where it would be a penalty for doing this."
He said he kept the potato in a spare glove he retrieved from the dugout before the play.
The Associated Press
rugby before. The Bills were second from the bottom in the standings; the Phillies already were assured of a playoff spot with three games left in the season.
The loss was the third straight for the Royals. Tuesday night, Milwaukee's Ted Higuaiz pitched a one-hitter against Kansas City.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Bill Wegman and two relievers combined a three-hitter and Bill Schroeder hit a three-run homer last night that led the Milwaukee Brewers over the Kansas City Royals, 3-2.
Wegman, 9-10, gave up Steve Balboni's two-run homer in the second but allowed only two other singles through six innings. Chuck Crim pitched two innings and Daniex finished for his 23rd save as the Brewers won for the seventh time in nine games.
Robin Yount, who singled home the winning run in Higuera's 2-0 victory Tuesday night, drew a one-out walk in the first inning and went to second when Charlie Leibrandt balked. He was then stopped by Greg Brick walked and Schroeder followed with his 11th home run, giving the Brewers a 3-0 lead.
Danny Tartabull walked with one out in the second and scored on Balboni's 19th home run.
The Royals announced yesterday that Melido Perez, the younger brother of Montreal Expos pitcher Pascual Perez, would jump from Class AA to a starting assignment against the Chicago White Sox tomorrow night.
Perez, 21, a right-hander with a 12-8 record. 3.09 earned run average and 17 strikeouts in 198 innings at Class A Fort Myers, Fla., and Class AA Memphis, was called up to replace left-hander Bud Black in the Royals' starting rotation.
Coach works to instill toughness in swimming teams
By ROBERT WHITMAN
Staff writer
When Kansas swimmers are nearing the end of their races during meets this season, there is one thing Kansas coach Gary Kempf doesn't want to see.
"I do not want us to lose a race in the last 25 yards," Kempf said.
dry land practice The swimmers run three to five miles four days a week, do a 45-minute intensive aerobics workout five days a week and lift weights three days a week.
To meet that goal, Kempf has both the men's and women's team on a program to toughen them both mentally and phyically. Kempf calls it a dry land program.
The Kansas men's and women's team both finished second at the conference championships in March. Nebraska won both conference championships, their eighth straight men's title and third straight women's title.
it's a program that Kemp hopes will put Kansas at the top in the Big Eight Conference championship meet in March.
"I feel like we should have won titles the last two years," Kempf said. "I don't feel like we were tough enough when we had to be tough.
"Our attention is geared a step higher this year. We're returning to the form that we should be. Mental toughness is something that's
learned every day in practice."
the best returning swimmers for Kansas, Kempf said, are senior Susan Spry and junior Erin Easton.
"I call them the twin towers. They are both about six feet tail and are excellent athletes," Kempf said. "They have the potential to be among the best in the country."
Spry is a freestyle specialist and swims all distances from 50 — 1,650 yards. Kempf said he thought she swam faster at the middle distances. Spry was second in last season's conference meet in the 100-yard freestyle and third in the 200-yard freestyle. She was also on the 800-yard freestyle relay team that won the conference championship and the
400- and 200-yard freestyle relay teams that both qualified for the NCAA championships and were second in the conference.
and in the coliseum. Easton was the conference champion in the 200-yard individual medley and qualified for the 1988 Olympic trials with her time. She was also second in the conference in the 100-yard breaststroke, on the conference champion 400-yard medley relay team and on the 800- and 200-yard freestyle relay teams.
Kempf is also relying on sophomore Susan Bloomfield, who finished second in the 100-yard backstroke at the conference meet.
Kempt said there were five freshmen who could help the team inmate
Junior Glenn Tramnel leads the returning men's swimmers. Trammel was the conference champion in the 200-yard backstroke, second in the 100-yard backstroke and third in 200-yard individual medley. He was also on the 800- and 400-yard freestyle relay team that both finished second in the conference meet.
Junior Bobby Kelley is another qualifier for the Olympic Trials. He
diately: Jacki Becker, breaststroke; Gina Brown, butterfly; Jennifer Carani, freestyle; Kelley Kauzlarich, diver and Kelly Seavall, freestyle and individual medley.
in the center Tramnel has qualified for the Olympic Trials in the 100-yard backstroke.
qualified in the 400-yard individual medley, in which he placed second in the conference. Kelley was also fourth in the 200-yard individual medley and second in the 1,650-yard freestyle at the conference meet.
the king of the 1,650-yard freestyle in the Big Eight for the past three years has been senior Chuck Jones. Jones returns to Kansas shooting for his fourth conference championship in the event.
"This is probably the best freshman class in a long time based on talent and quality," said Kempf, in his twelfth season as women's coach and seventh season as men's coach. "They're going to push the upper-classmen really hard and really fast.
---
14
Thursday, September 3, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Sports
Sports Briefs
Comets sold for $2 million
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Kansas City Comets announced yesterday that team owner David Schoenstadt had sold the club to a group of 23 Kansas City-area residents for an estimated $2 million.
The Major Indoor Soccer League team said the transaction was effective starting today. The team also announced that Tim Leiweke agreed to remain as president of the club.
The club will retain Coach Dave Clements and MISL All-Star forward Jan Goosens and All-Star defender Kim Roentved, officials said.
NBA players to be in KC charity game
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kansas Citians who have missed NBA action at home since losing the
Scoreboard
Kings to Sacramento, Calif., in 1965 will get to see some big-league plavers in a charity game Sept. 18.
Earvin "Magic" Johnson of the Los Angeles Lakers and Mark Aguirre of the Dallas Mavericks are among 20 National Basketball Association players scheduled to participate in the Kansas City Basketball Classic, a benefit for the Boys Club.
Correction
Also scheduled to appear are Dallas guard Rolando Blackman, a former Kansas State standout, and Cliff Levingston and Antoine Carr of the Atlanta Hawks, both for Wichita State players.
Because of a photographer's error, Christopher Rogala, La Grange, Ill., sophomore, was misidentified in a photograph in yesterday's Kansan.
From staff and wire reports.
American League
Baseball
Milwaukee 3, Kansas City 2
Detroit 2, Cleveland 1
Toronto 7, California 6
New York 3, Oakland 2 (10)
Minnesota 5, Boston 4
Seattle 8, Baltimore 6
Chicago 5, Texas 0
National League
Montreal 7, San Francisco 3
Pittsburgh 2, Atlanta 0
Houston 10, Chicago 0
Cincinnati 3, St. Louis 1
New York 4, San Diego 3
Philadelphia 6, Los Angeles 2
Birthday boy Connors wins early in U.S Open
NEW YORK — Birthday boy Jimmy Connors didn't do any wild celebration after winning his opening-ground match against Joey Rive at the U.S. Open Wednesday.
The Associated Press
"This is no different than the last 18 years," the 35-year-old Connors said after downing Rive of Lake Worth, Fla., 6-1, 6-4, 6-4 at the National Tennis Center. "I've celebrated my birthday here every year. I'm looking forward to the day when I don't."
In women's play, top-seduced Steffi Graf overpowered Bettina Fulco of Argentina, 6-0, 6-3, and No. 3 Chris Wheeler of Stowe of Lexington, KY₁-₆, 1-0.
"I want to get on and get off (the court) as quickly as I can." Connors said. "On the other hand, I will play as long have to. If I'm down two sets to one, I'll break my back to get to a fifth set."
Connors served extremely well against Rive, who is ranked 101st in the world. The five-time Open winner connected on 89 percent of his first serves during the match, including 96 percent in the final set.
"I played quite well." Connors said. "I just wanted to keep my mind on my business."
Connors, the highest-seeded American male at the Open, said his sore right foot, which he hurt last month in Cincinnati, didn't bother him during the match with Rive that
"It's a day-to-day situation," he said. "Todav it was OK."
lasted 1 hour,43 minutes.
"The last couple of days I wasn't really nervous, but I was anxious to play," she said.
Graf lost only six points in the first set against Fulco, the 55th-ranked women's player. It was Graf's first match since gaining the No.1 ranking in women's tennis last month.
The West German teen-ager had dental surgery last month after winning the Virginia Slims tournament in Los Angeles.
"I didn't play for six days," she said. "I had to go back and forth to the dentist. I hate dentists, but I didn't." She wouldn't be in good shape, so I bad it done.
Evert, who has won the Open six times, eliminated Sloane in 52 minutes.
"It was my first match, and I was fighting nerves," Evead said. "I felt good to get out and play a match. I feel more vulnerable in the early rounds and I usually get sharper by the second week."
In other women's match involving seeded players, No. 5 Pam Shriver of Lutherville, Md., defeated Wendy White of Atlanta, Md., 6-3, 3-1. No 11 Lori McNeil of Houston defeated Oleksiyovskaya 6-3, 6-1. No 12 Bettina Bunge of Monaco beat Mary Lou Piaket of Munster, Md., 6-3, 7-5.
Putt-Putt®
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- Ice Cream Shoppe
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Fri. & Sat. 'til Midnight
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PUTT-PUTT
GOLF COURSES
843-1511
"An education is more than classwork; A university is more than mere buildings"
Get Involved In Making Both Better
Student Senate Committees
Kansas Union, SUA 8:00-5:00 Burge Union 8:00-5:00
Give Something Back-
Make Student Representation Effective
1033 Mass. Downtown
Quality Haircuts at
Reasonable Prices
STADIUM BARBER SHOP
Barbers:
enny & Earl
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THE BEACH HOUSE
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9 EAST 8TH
749-0334
Sub & Stuff
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841-DELI
5 p.m.-Midnight
CHOCOLATE
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DEALS, DEALS
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at
THE WHEEL
CONTRACTOR
Tonight $4.00 cover
10¢ draws all night
Videoxpress
1447 W. 23rd
Open 9 a.m.-10 p.m. Daily
Video Player
Four Movies
Two Days
Tandon
LEADING EDGE
Independent LAUNDROMAT Open 24 hours 9th & Mississippi
KAYPRO
EPSON
NCR
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864-4567
Find out the daily specials at the
Best Prices!
Panasonic
COMPUTER OUTLET
Your computer connection at 843-PLUG * 804 N.H.
Find out the daily specials at the Kansas and Burge Unions
- Dealer Associated Value Added Reseller
ACADEMIC SKILL ENHANCEMENT WORKSHOP
SAC
TEREO
COLLEGE
IMPROVE YOUR STUDY SKILLS! Attend The
Covering: Time Management Study Reading Listening and Notetaking
Thursday, September 3
6:30 to 9:00 p.m.
300 Strong Hall
offers you:
Cee and water paid
Presented by the Student Assistance Center.
Avalon Apartments
- One or two bedroom apartments.
- Gas and water paid.
- Extra storage space available.
- Applianced kitchen.
- Off-street parking.
- Applianced kitchen.
- Rental Furniture available from Thompson-Crawley.
- Laundry facilities.
- Close to KU and Hillcrest
- Off-street parking.
- Laundry facilities.
- On KU bus route.
PMS
9th & Avalon Rd. 841-5797
Avalon Apts. Located: 4 blocks east of onia to Avalon Rd.
Leasing Office located 111 W. 8th, #101.
PIMS
Professional Manager of
property management
service
111 W. 42nd St. NW
Laurier, KS 67805
Lakewood, KS 67805
McCall's Shoes
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Regular Price $50
America's Finest Walking Shoes
SAS SPECIAL SALE!
829 MASSACHUSETTS
DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
ENTERTAINMENT
Volunteers needed. Headquarters Crisis Counseling Center. Training provided. Information meeting, September 9; on Sunday, September 13, 8: 9 p.m.; 14:19 Massachusetts
"As God is my witness, I never be uninvolved again." Maybe there isn't always tomorrow. Join a Student Senate Committee. Kansas and Burge Uniones. 208-396-5711 EVID VAPD
BARNEY
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Out Yourself in our Shoes
Heading home for the holidays? FLY CHASE.
Call us now. Carpenters travel, 843-5608.
A Group Bash at the Royals Baseball Game Don't Miss the Fun on Thurs., Sept. 17 Watch the Kansan for more info or call the SUA office at 864-347
At your request is Lawrence's Best and Most Afloat
and Lighting and for Any Ocean.
911-1400
"I do believe in Senate-oh, I do, I do believe in Senate." Don't be afraid to get involved. Join a Student Senate Committee. Kansas and Burge Unionn. 864-3710.
LIBERTY HALL
A FILM BY ALEX COX
STRAIGHT TO HELL
JOE STRUMmer DICK RUDE
ELVIS COSTELLO DENNIS HOPPER
7:30 & 9:30
only $3
ClassifiedAds
Join the Travis McGee Fan Club! First meeting
Call George Call 841-9723 or Keith at
614-502-1272
Just starting and you're already stressed out? Get the knits out at Lawrence Therapy Massage. gift certificates available (no!) 'Tell your friends how much you love Bruce and Alice at 814-962 or its to knit you to!'
BARNEY RUBBLE RESTORATION
HAS LOST THEIR SIGN.
Life is shaky in Bedrock.
Fred & Wilma are depressed.
Dino ran away. Bambam is now on crack, and Betty... is not healthy. Please help us find our sign. Reward offered. 813 Maine.
ULTIMATE ENTERTAINMENT
MACHINE DJ System. For All Occasions.
Philip 1823098.
WANTED: LEAD SINGER for established rock band. We play a variety of songs with REM, Dira Straits, and U2, Call Paul at 841-9682
1 bedroom apt. sub-rent. $200/mo. Close to cam.
pushed, furnished, water paid, no pets, 864-4211
FORRENT
pus, furnished, water paid, no pets, 864 ...
BRAND NEW completely furnished 4 bedroom
ups available immediately. On the bus route and
to nearby airports. Details of $5 ... 794 ... $64 ... $54 ... $42 ... $30 ... $18 ... $16 ... $14 ... $12 ... $10 ... $8 ... $6 ... $4 ... $2 ... $1 ...
Ever tried cooperative living? It's convenient and a lot of fun. Sunflower Student Cooperative.
Call or stop by: 1406 Tennessee at 749-0871, ask for Debbie.
Excellent location! Walk to campus. Newer
2 bedroom room w/ Washer. Hookups desk.
2 bedrooms in flat.
Female roommate needed. Non-smoker,
18 yrs old, living in Campus
Place. Call 409-749-2006.
Female roommate wanted to large louse,
very close to campus. $145-190, all utilities paid,
washer/dryer fully furnished. No pets. No smoke
room. Call 2517 for information ask for Carmine
or Marine.
For sublet 1 br abpt with microwave,
for sublet 2 brand new on bus route.
pool facilities.
Farmed room with shared kitchen and bath
Kitchen with stainless steel on street park
No pet please. 841-5000
www.holidayhomes.com
Need a roommate to cut rent. Close to campus-*$100 with insurance*. Call 845-5135
Glenhaven Apartments walk to class
2% blocks from Union 1135 Ohio, 2 bedroom and bedroom 1½, 1/2 bath. Exciting energy efficient kitchen microwave, microwave, dryer. Wired for cable.
841-5797
HOUSE FOR RENT R奉 large 5 lbm/2 bath house CLOSE TO CAMPUS with LAUNDRY IN DASEMESTR and 6 lbm/2 bath. Two rooms (gays need 2-4 more people to share rent and bats at 11th and Kentucky. Contact Darryl at Topeka, Wichita, KS 67214. 1217 N. Topika, Wichita, KS 67214.
NAISMITH PLACE
OUSDAHL & 25th CL.
841-1815
2 bdr., jacuzzi
water pd.
15
Furnished two bedroom apt, one block from the street. off-street parking. No pets. Please 414-5050.
GUARANTEEED SPACE at Naisimun Hall for '78
LADY ROSS' at Naisimun Hall for '78
LIST! LOST Mat. 442; Matt 345 for details now
STATE RESIDENCE
SUNRISE PLACE 9th & Michigan
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, September 3, 1987
Sunrise Apartment
Offering luxurious townhomes 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
Sunrise Apartment
9th & Avalon
To need sublease 2 n bedroom apt at Aspen West. Water is included on monthly rate. With deposit and 1/2 rent of September paid! Available immediately! Call now at 749 9066
NAISMITH PLACE
OUSDAHL & 21st Ct.
841-1815
BRAND NEW
2 BEDROOM APTS.
* Jacuzzi in each apartment
- Fully equipped kitchen
* b. kik. to K.U. bus route
* Satellite television
* Private balconies
* Basketball court
* Park-like setting
* On site management
* Furniture available
--sion, antique toys, fine art glass, doll house furniture, miniatures, fiesta, and the best selection of antique furniture in the area. Cincinnati, OH. 811 Newham Street, Open Sat. & Sun. 10-5
LEASE NOW AND RECEIVE A TRIP
TO PADRE ISLAND DURING
SPRING BREAK OR $250 OFF THE
FIRST MONTH'S RENT OR
DEPOSIT
Hillview Apartments
1733 W. 24th
841-5797
Room for Rent $ Suburban House, RM 4, bath, DW, FP, Deck, Trees, Clean, Living Room, LV, M156 Sleeping rooms - 2 brm apts, close to campus Summer & Winter lease. No Pets: 842-8971
NOW LEASING Starting at $250/mo
- on bus route
- 1 & 2 bedroom units
- on bus route
- water paid
- off street parking
- rental furniture available from Thompson Crawley
...
FOR SALE
12 speed mountain bicycle. 23" men SRI Semi-Pro
Touring front and rear rear tires. 840cc
913-673-3800
Doni Waltz TS 250 $350 Call 843-8304
1974 Suzuki TS 250 $350 Call 843-8304
1975 Honda 125a Tire Diameter Only $250 Call 749-8653 after 9 o'p.m. 1979 Yamaha 600 Endura, street legal, new wheels, new tune-up. Call Dave at 749-8653.
1974 SUKUJ 125 250cc Car Sunroof
1975 Honda 125 motorcycle Dirt bike Low
1985 Honda Elite 150 Deluxe. Excellent condition.
260 miles. Scooter cover and helmet included.
$1100. 1-648-0902.
1966 Moped sale - Honda Spree Great condition,
$840. Mail 834-7341
28 inch Cambridge ten-speed bicycle. Like new,
590 or best offer. Call 843-4118.
$80 or best offer Call 843-4118
78 Honda Accord parts for sale or entire car
GV 742-5988 - keep trying
16v VW. Halogen Converter, Sony stereo, A/C
12v Battery, Convertible, $70,000; see Joe
AIRLINE TICKET FOR SALE: Round trip. Kana-
city City. Los Angeles. Labor Day Weekend,
or August 4, 1987 $160. Must sell. Call 843-8160
or 843-8254.
An Absolutely Awesome Array of Antiques, collectibles and neat stuff we have in the shop. From small antique beds to new combo furniture, Playboards, Penthouses etc. loads of antique, Indian, European and vintage clothes for any occasion. The right vintage clothes for any occasion.
Apple iPhone/stand. Plus power supply
Makes home or office compute e75
$75
Brand new color television for sale, great condition.
Call 843-4945.
A team for sale -Olympus GM1 with 0 waters
for sale separately. Call all 814-1014 or 814-7668.
Call all 814-1014 or 814-7668.
Carpet for sale - dorm size, brown, foam-backed,
excellent condition. Will deliver $40.
Corporate carpet in 16"x24".
Enlarger for sale: Omega D2V, D3V, w/variable
card. Also allow a message to be left.
Leave message at 841-9088.
For Sale Takara 23" 12-speed bike. Great
condition. Blue $100.0 B.O. 841-6801
For Sale 2-bedroom mobile home
Great shape
Great location
$500 OBO
$4194 for sale
condition Blue 8109 $109
For Sale: Technique SLP11 programmable CD
Salesman: Carl B. 841-369-2560
FULLY IBM PC/XT COMPAATIBLE foanlain
computer 1200/300 band internal MODEN
CPU 16MB RAM
For Sale. Hemo-Roto Toms 6" *8"-10" Good condition.
Call 813-443-8432, ask for JK.
GREAT BOOKS OF THE WESTERN WORLD, 52
large set, excellent condition,
with bookcase. New set is $1300, mine is $895.
Call 913-441-1401 after 5 p.m.
september 5, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.-Apartment furniture
furniture in the basement, banquettes,
inspired carpet, dual turntable.
Garage Sale - 104 Wagon Wheel Road, Saturday
September 5, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.-Apartment fur-
est
He tattooed, pump, blower, heater, booster, some equipment required. 1973 Chrysler, runs great, new transmission, battery and more. Ask for Kurt. 749-0862
I overbought 5/14 and 3/12 Computer Disks. Sell-in
at conj, Call 814 4354 and ask for Paul.
Kapro 2000 i2 b. Laptop IBM compatible, 720 KB
3.5i盘, battery or A/C powered, 800- 364- 2340
KORG Digital drums, digital percussion units.
Professional sound, all accessories, only $100
apece 81-94-568
MAX COSMIC Comic Books, Playbys, Pen-
tion Press, New Hampshire
**** MOTHBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE
Monday Friday 10:5-6 p.m. Weekdays 10:4-9 p.m.
Mountain bike 19 inch chair. Like new. Have
hun m.i. Mp. Driead. 2251-1 836-2128
fun on Mt. Ute (M)
Mountain bike Specialized Stumpjumper Sport.
(phone) $83, 749-7920.
Great shape $129.00
MUST SELL - 500 or 600AXS-excel condi-
tion
84377 or 84377 or 843-252
Multi family garage sale September 4, 8 a.m. to
4 p.m. September 5, 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. 1839 W.
7th Terry. stereo, TV, antique cues,
electronic electric stove, clothing,
clothes bedding, plants mats
Pentax Plan Plus 35mm w/28-80 mm zoom,
70-290 mm zoom, Pentax AF-290T flash unit,
tripped, and durably carrying. Retail $750.
Asking K451. Call 814-1497.
Pioneer stereo receiver, cassette, tautable
Pioneer stereo receiver. Recent album. tapes-all
£50 IOHO 843-1173
racing lifejacket 22 pounds $800 one year ago,
battlefield at $100 841-9488
SHARP* Black and white men's 12 speed bicycle.
Excellent condition. $125. Bright red 1985 Honda
Spree Scooter. Very low mileage. $300. Call
814-197.
Silver Reed EX&P electronic typewriter, daisy
paper仁童 1250* ribbon. Drafting table 150*
imagewriter paper $400. Ralans (kneeling)
chair $63. 843-2562
Suzuki G450 E9. Must sell for $750. OBO. Will pack.
Call 841-7876
Tatakale review course for all four parts of CPA exam for $300. (A new one is $500). Used once to pass the CPA exam on the first try. Call after 5 p.m. at 316-326-5694.
Purple,
mattress, box springs, and frame. Like
new, fall $100, 84-849).
WATERBED A SALE. Super single-headboard,
waterbed, mattress sheets, and filler kit include
Like new. Like 2 weeks. Will deliver.
Call 724-4980 or 749-4985. $125 or best offer
AUTO SALES
1973 Honda 350 only 16,000 miles, new battery,
rood condition. Best offer. B41 9652. Paul.
1974 Mercury Montego, runs great, A/C F/M/AM
caster steer, $500 and callout. -Call Mi
Lewis
1823 Mazda GLC new paint, new muffler, $235 or best offer. Call 841-4906.
1982 042 Frenza 4-door, 4-speed, A/C, Cruce,
bakelight iMKM stereo, 3800, 842-9076
(ii Message convertible $4500, 81-7600 First came first!)
$ message_convertible "$4500", 81-7600
First came first!
70 VW Bentle, excellent condition, no rust, heat
works, radio, white. N. W. Lawrence $850
Motors, blue. N. W. Lawrence $850
Super-Beele new parts Good condition.
$1500 or best offer. 841-8752.
79 Celius Manual standard features w/air conditioning, stereo, etc. Good condition; newly maintained.
repaired $230 or best offer 842-4527
Bertone XI 9-18, leather interior. loaded 31K.
Bertone XI 9-18, leather interior. loaded 31K.
beretta
before delivery. 841-4699 or 381-4742.
BILY NEW CARS. NEW TRUCKS $250~$450 over
CONT. DELBERT D. THOMAS 8144
CARL SELL for $150 (average) . Also please
fill out the following forms:
CSL-ID: 2007006000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
GST-ID: 6007006000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
EXPIRY DATE: NO MORE THAN 30 DAYS FROM PURCHASE.
CARM SELL for $155 (average!) Also jeeps,
SUVs available 958-820-6000 Ext. FX
for details
FUN SPORTS CAR-1967 TR, great condition
CALL (811) 494-6974 (Lenexa).
Take up your import car $35. Parts and labor in
the GUARANTEED GUARIANCE Call Aaron
- 6029
Gold ring with one pearl and two small diamonds on either side. Lost in Union girls bathroom one week ago. Strong sentimental value. $50 reward. Call 864-1412.
LAST-MEN's class ring. St. John High School, Beloit, KS. Royal blue stone. Grad date 1861; inside on肌登 BIF. If you need, PLEASE return to McClure high school or 522 call 6487 6375 and ASAP.
Last cat-$140 reward. Yellow neutered male, thin with
eyes. Call 812-296.
teal.Teen Jantzen swater. Left in 100m
return to LanguageLab 4th Floor Wescoe.
HELP WANTED
ATTENTION: STUDENTS?! Natl firm preparing for Fall/Winter work. How much money will you earn? Are internships are possible, & you may earn 2. 3, 4 credit/hr or semester. Must apply now!
101-660 Weekly/up mailal circulating? Rush self-
packed stamped envelope offered: Opportunity, 9016
Wilshire Blvd, Box 226, Dept. Q, Beverly Hills, CA
90711
Bakery sale (cleaning, One for Tuesday, Thursday, and saturation; and one for Wednesday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday). Attend vacation after 1 year. KU grad student preferred. 48 per hour after training. Apply at Munchers
Bucky's Drive-in, a AU tradition for 26 years, has four noon-hour shift, weekend shift, and night shift. Apply in person between it and 5 p.m. THANK YOU. BUCKY'S DRIVE-IN,
Buffalo Rob's Stoubhouse and Mass. Street Deli now hiring food service and massage, table service and concierge; table service and table service, table service & $2.1 plus tips. Must have experience and some hunch time. Apply to Buffalo Rob's Stoubhouse.
Bike mechanic with Shop Experience. Call Gary at 942-6063
Checkers Pizza has an immediate opening for $5 pizza order today, willing to work at安排周末工作-week one. Checkers Pizza is open Saturday night. $30 hour to start and $50/hour after 2 days. Apply in person. Checkers Pizza.
DESPERATELY SEEKING. WORK STUDY
STUDENTS for 3 positions at Spencer
Assistant, and Information Assistant,
and Information Dept/Tekhoppe Assistant.
Inquire at the 5th floor of Spencer Art Museum.
Available immediately part-time position (12-20 hours per week as research assistant with social service agency. Position requires demonstrable knowledge of computerized statistics analysis.
time computer operator. This job entails operation of an IBM i383 (100-VB) mainframe customer terminal. The system is preinstalled in the operation of the above equipment, dependable, and looking for long-term employment. Apply at Computer Service Agent Smithsina, Lawrence. KS 65074. 849-8625, through 9-4
Computer Service Agency is looking for a part-
time computer operator. This job entails operation
of an IBM 4331 (OSN-V2) mainframe com-
available, mature person to assist with personal care for my disabled (former professor) husband in exchange for rent in separate living quarters. 10-15 hrs. a week expected OR assist on hourly basis weekly. 7:30 a.m. to 6:30 a.m. during the week with handicapped, with handicap card. 842-3370.
Kansas and Burge Union Food Service Department needs part of each help: dining room workers or for p. 1 pm-4:30 p.m. line workers 11:m-1 p.m. dishwasher 10:30 a.m. Apply all Jobs Monday through Friday to Personnel Office, Fifth Level Main Unit Building, EOE.
Female for assistance with my care. Mornings or evenings. Call 749-4395.
GOVNMENT JOBS 81 $140-$193/yr. Now
GOVERNMENT JOBS 808-687-8000 for current
federal job seekers
Sub&Stuff Sandwich Shop
Now accepting applications from energetic, hardworking, responsible individuals. Openings available on all shifts.
Attention!!
Delivery!!
Kansas Union Catering Dept needs caterers for fall semester. At 4$/hr, Varied hours are available. For more information, contact the Kansas Union Personnel Office, 5th Level, EOE. Naismith Hall is accepting applications for part-time positions in the school. If interested, please fill out a Job Application to lily.brown.hall on tull out an application soon. Naismith Hall, 1800 Naismith
Bob Dole Needs K.U. Students!
New accepting applications for drivers,
2048 hours, hourly wage plus CASH
PAID NIGHTLY. Please apply at
Stuff A. Stuff W. 13rd.
B. Stuff W. 13rd.
To help with his.
New bring part time see./receptionist. Approximately 60 to 35 hrs per week for at least the entire school year. Duties include typing, filing, and some bookkeeping. Must have experience in general office procedure. Ward processing experience helped me at 110 Mbps, above BFU.
to help warden presidential campaign
*Organizational meeting at 7 p.m., Thursday, Sept. 3 in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union, or call Brett 864-7114 for more information.
Now hiring for part-time video route position.
Will maintain, repair, and collect video games.
Must have experience and credible reference
starting wage $40 per hour. Apply at 719 Mass
above baited moors in this area.
Now hiring experienced line cooks and prep
cook, have commensurate with experience.
Must have some dask time availability. Apply at
710 Mass, above Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse.
SALE! Cook and sell a great meal for over 250 in this area. P/T or F/ T
Flex* hours! This is a great ground-level operat
The Mass is enahanced onto a hardcover book that can help sell a great line of over 250 gifts in this area. P/T or F/T Flexible hours. This is a great ground-level opportunity for an ambition, our students! Call 843-9430 at 843-9430.
RUNZA
SERVE INF
RESTAURANT
Runza needs part-time morning help 9 a.m.-2 p.m., Monday through Friday and evenings 5 p.m.-10 p.m., Monday through Friday.
Runza Drive In
2700 Iowa St.
749-2615
Preferred Qualifications: knowledge of University payroll and accounting procedures and knowledge of microcomputer database management. Salary Range: $12,000-15,000. September 04, 1967. Apply in person in Rm 210 Strong Hall. *Tentative start date: Sept. 08, 1987.*
STUDENT MONTHLY POSITION AVAILABLE
12-10 HOURS/WEEK) Duties include: processing student applications and preparing students for college computer assists with general office duties, working on special administrative and budgetary programs; must have good mathematical skills, some familiarity with
Teacher's aides need for childcare program, 12:50-3:30 for infant room and 11:39-3:00 for five hour classroom experience. Teacher's aides need to children, early childhood. Bring resume to Children Learning Center, 331 Male, weekdays. Wanted: Enthusiastic, self-motivated people for the largest pizza delivery center in NYC. Requires job commitment and commission on mileage. You can average $5.00 or more. Must own insurance and APPLY NOW at www.teacherstables.com.
Lawrence Campus Center needs church
nursery assistants; Sundays 9 and or 10:30 a.m.
$5 per session. Call Diana at 749-1638 or Karla at
841-1548.
Waterbailion Representative-National company seeks college repis to sell waterbailion launcher. "Lunar Launcher" TW Send name, address, phone number to P.O. Box 6521, Shawnee Mission, KS, 65201. P.O. B. Box 6521, Shawnee Mission, KS, 65201.
"And sometimes, in my dreams, I remember Student Senate. but we don't talk about Mandery anymore." But you can always remember your wife. You can apply now. Kansas and Burge Urms. 664-3710.
$10-$360 Weekly/Up mailing circulars! No Qoos/
losses, information: RUSH self-
addressed envelope. CM/NA-CDQ POLB 7730,
Rockford, IL 61126.
MISCELLANEOUS
SKI KEYSTONE for Thanksgiving, November
residency free of charge
request ID tickets Call 843-900-9980
I will answer your questions with the information provided in the image. I will transcribe and format it as requested.
The image is a black-and-white photograph of a young boy. He has light brown hair and is wearing a dark shirt with a bow tie. His smile is cheerful, and he appears to be looking directly at the camera. The background is indistinct, focusing attention on him. There are no visible texts or distinctive features that can provide additional context about the location or event.
PERSONAL
Happy birthday my little pumpkin head! You're a super friend. And remember if you can't beat them run em down. Love ya lads-jen.
Intelligent, good-looking 'kuy' who's interested in sports, music, dancin', nature, etc. is lookin' for intelligent, attractive, mature, single gal-who's never been married with same interest. Please see to do picture and write the truth yourself in Javier, Jay, P.O. Box 1523, Lawrence, KS 60044
Brett-Thank you for two fantastic years and for being my best friend. Happy Anniversary. Love
BUS. PERSONAL
Small small established foreign car repair shop for sale in 1 st avenue; innomines: 841-5496
OXYMORON: This dook locks into a bar and the bartender says, "Hey, you've just a duck!"
HEADACHE, BACKACHE, ARM PAIN, LEG PAIN? Student and most insurance accepted. For complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Mark Johnson 843-3797
THE COMIC CORNER
NE Center for 23rd & Iowa
841-4294
Roleplaying W/Game Games
Bloom County & Far Side T-Shirts
@ Dr. Who, TV Mini-Magazines and More!
Asexual? Support network, newsletter forming for you. SASE: 1054 Bagley, L545. KS, 60044
14 kt. Chain
Repair
Kizer
Cummings
jewelers
Happy 21st Birthday to the Kid from Kingman!
"Of all the Student Senate Committees in the world, she had to walk to face mine." Up from your past-apply now, as time goes by—Kansas and Burge Unions. 864-3710.
$25 per month
SEMESTER
MEMBERSHIP
- Certified Instructors
- IDEA/RHYTHMIC AEROBICS
- Individualized Weight and
- Exclusively For Women
- Hourly Classes
- Air Conditioned
- Air Conditioned
- Whirlpool
- Membership Transferable
- 0500 Clubs
Body Shapes
TNESS CLUB
Hours:
M-F 8:30-8:30
Sat. 9:00-4:00
Sun. 1:00-4:00
843-4040
★★★★★★★★★★★★★
Rare and Used Records Buy, Sell, or Trade Quantity's 811 New Hampshire
GREENS
841-2277
The Coldest Beer Around
RINGS
sized, repaired & cleaned
Kizer
Cummings
(jewelers)
800 Mms. 736-4332
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-4821. Confidential help/free pregnancy testing
800 West 23rd
SERVICES OFFERED
GREENS
PARTY SUPPLY
808 W. 23rd
Weekly Beer Specials
Michelob 6 pk. $2.99
Coors Light 12 pk. $5.39
Budweiser 12 pk. $5.49
Miller Lite 12 pk. $5.29
Strohs 15 pk. $5.29
Old Style 12pk. $3.69
Busch 24 pk. $7.69
Wiedemann 12 pk. $3.19
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
"CRIMSON SUN PHOTO" is looking for young women patient in developing a modeling portfolio that will give them the opportunity to
Sept. 2-Sept. 8
PENNYLINE
CONNECTS • COMPICT DOCS • RECORDS • VOCOS
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation required 841.7749
FLASHBACK PHOTO fast and dependable party picture service. Call 843-7870 to book your next session.
JAM FAVORS for all your party favor needs.
Hats, shirts, paddles, glasses. If you have a unique友你 idea, call us and we'll find it for you.
841.8770
GRAF/K Scientific and statistical illustration,
manual drafting, editing aid, also water-
proofing. Phone: 612-873-5404.
Have Disc-Will Travel Mobile Sound Service.
Complete selection of dance music including Progressal, Sweat and 40 top舞乐 music. Musica-Emotion Equipment, Equipment, Allfaircare. Mark at 749-699.
Leaving Town?
Airline Tickets
At airline counter prices no extra service charge
Make your travel arrangements on campus
See Maupintour Travel Service for:
- The lowest airfares—Complete travel arrangements
- Eural and Japan Rail Passes
* Car rental—Hotel confirmations
* Student semester break holidays
* Travel Insurance
ON CAMPUS LOCATION in the Student Union and 900 Mass.
Maupintour travel service
Experienced drum player wanting to play in serpent rock band. Call Mike 749-364-563
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $8/hr, 843-9032
[0. p.m.]
New in Lawrence - inexpensive $1-30 demos.
New in Lawrence - premium priced $45-$85
bass gigs. Home St. 214-796-1234
MUSIC
Music
House Audio-Mobile Party Music, @track studio, P.A. and Lights, Maximum Audio Wizard,
Cabril Grad 749-1275.
PRIVATE OFFICE 0Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park . (913) 451-8788
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided 841-236.
Fall Merchandise is in-
top coats, beaded sweaters,
wool berets & lots of jewelry
Barb's Vintage Rose
Graystone Athletic Club
Special Student Membership
$150 per semester
Raquettball, Tennis
Exercise Equipment
9520 W. City Street 841-763-6250
927 Mass, M-5-10-5:30 Th.' til 8 - 841-2451
Warm, caring people who like children ages three to five are needed at Heststad志愿者 for a team that will work with children between 7:30 and 3:30 Monday thru Friday. Daycare volunteers needed from 12:30 to 5:30.Friday
HARPER LAWYER
TYPING
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing. Judy. 842-7945 or Liza. 841-1915.
AAbolutely Fast Typing is Back! Dependable,
Reasonable Intensity, Availability
Available. 403-679-2586 403-679-2586
ACT NOW, Fathers 1$ 30, Resumes 1$ 15
WRIFF LIFEHINE B41-3469.
2 Smart Word Processing. Spelling Corrected Very Reasonable. Call Foster 749-2740.
very important. Can it be used?
A-1: reliable professional typing; Term papers. Theses, Resumes, etc. Reasonable. IBM Electronic Typewriter, 842-3246
For professional typing/word processing, call
professional typesetting.com. Fall special $129/page, double
sizes, ptca.
*
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS
MOMMY'S TYPING is back from Australia
SERIES
Experienced typist - thues, dissertations, term paper,
942 1210-6215 at 6:15 p.m. M or F/Sat/Sun
Quality Typing includes excellent spelling, punctuation, grammar, editing. Frequent reliable sentences are expected.
KU SECRETARY. Typing and word processing,
affordable, fast, accurate. Spelling corrected,
letter quality. Pickup on campus. Monica
841-8243. Evenings weekends.
Quality typing or word processing for theses,
dissertations, resumes, term papers, applications.
Professional editing, composition
available. HAVE M.S. Degree.
available in New York. TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing, manuscripts, resumes, theses, letter quality printing, etc. e43 5062
WANTED
Female upperclassman desired to share 2 BRL plu,
at Harvard Square $200 plus 1/2 electricity and phone. Pool, KU bus route. Available im-
mediately? Call after 5! 841-780.
Homestead needed to share very 2 story,
2-bedroom house $10.50 plus 1/2 utility
"Heartcuff," you simp. Either join a Student Senate Committee or never bother to show your face here again. Strong women like involved men-appow. Kansas and Barge Unions.
KU alumni waste KU student to buy him season
KU basketball games. Will make it
worth your life. Call 1-800-821-5457. Ask for
Dave Shehan
Make some money-sell your All Sports Ticket Will pay big bucks. Stacy. 864-6896.
Need ride to Evansville, Indiana or vicinity.
Would help or drive help. Would like to visit Sept. 4 for
safety.
Nonmusking female roommate wanted $1250 a week for three months. Call pianist for Lawrence Welman Church. One hour Sunday morning, two hours during week for three hours. Call pianist for choral and piano for personal rehabilitation. Call pianist
- Policy
Tutors All subjects: $4 individuals; $8 group.
Submit application, transcript, schedule of classes and tutoring times. Supportive Educational Services, 864-3971.
Non-smoking male, consider roommate need.
Male in nice furnished house near shopping
KU w/ KU, D/A C $165/month and 1/4 utilities
(low) Call Dan at 843-099.
Portuguese 104 book - Modern Portuguese. If willing,
to call, sell, call 844-6825
Wanted:
ALL, SPORTS TICKET-will pay
gently. KIM 864-2282
Wanted: a good home for a pure white female kitten. 4 months old, all shots, decaled, box trained. Very cute and lovable. Must Give Away! Please call 749 5774
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wanted: Female roommate $140/month plus 7%
ownless. On bus route. Call 749-8378.
Policy Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
Classified Information Mail-In Form
Words set in BOLD
Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words
based on consecutive day insertions only
Classified rates are based on consecutive day insertions only No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
Insertion to an available
No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising
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 Rds
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.
4. 00nm 2 davs prior to publication.
CLASSIFIED RATES
Words 1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 days 15 days 1 month
0-15 2.85 4.20 6.00 10.00 14.95 18.90
16-20 3.35 5.00 7.05 11.30 16.55 20.75
21-25 3.90 5.80 8.10 12.60 18.10 22.60
26-30 4.40 6.55 9.15 13.90 19.70 24.40
31-35 4.95 7.35 10.20 15.25 21.25 26.25
Classifications
001 announcements 300 for help 500 help wanted 800 services offered
002 intermental 300 auto sales 700 personal 800 professional 990 wanted
003 funeral services 700 funeral services 990 wanted
Classified Mail Order Form
___ Phone no.
Address___
(phone number published only if included below)
Please print your ad one word per box:
ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Date ad begins ___
Total days in paper ___
Amount paid ___
Classification ___
DLOLW KANSAN POLAN
Make checks
Daily. Daily Kansan
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
16
Thursday, September 3, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday September 4,1987 Vol.98,No.11
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Workers prepare 'Greatest Show'
By JENNIFER ROWLAND Staff writer
James Larson/KANSAN
The crackle of a popcorn popper and the rattles of chains hitting the cement echoed in the Kansas Expcentre yesterday as workers set up the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus in Topeka.
Outside, the sun blazed and a chorus of little girls could be heard yelling "Go Clowns" as they cheered for their favorite team of circus clowns in a softball game against local radio personalities.
See Labor Day Weekend events,
pgs. 8 and 9.
This was the day before the circus opened for eight shows during Topeka's Labor Day weekend, today through Monday. About 8,500 maroon and green chairs in the ExpoCentre's performance area remained empty during the afternoon as white trucks displaying the circus logo were driven into the arena.
"It's blowing my mind. We've been so busy for the past five days," said Debi Drummet, Expocentre box office manager. She said tickets had been on sale since late July, and that opening night was almost sold out.
romight is WIBW-TV family night, and tickets are $8, $7 and $5.
Tickets are $9.50, $8.50 and $6.50 for the 1 p.m. and 5 p.m. performances Sunday and Monday.
Billed as "The Greatest Show on Earth," the feature attraction is a group of Shanghai acrobats from the People's Republic of China.
Tomorrow's performances are at 11 a.m., 3:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.
The tigers, horses, elephants, camels and various other animals began arriving late in the afternoon and trainers were spreading hay and setting up wire cages for their animals.
One of the show's tiger trainers was shoveling sawdust into the cages. The two male Bengal tigers he owned had just ridden 12 hours on a train from their last show in Omaha, Neb.
Royal Lions BARNUM & BURNS
Another horse-and-zebra trainer and his wife and daughter had traveled the country, performing their two-ring act.
Cindy Holman, Topea resident, was one of about 50 spectators for the afternoon softball game. Many were sitting on blankets and soaking up the sun. Holman had brought her three young daughters for the event.
"The kids are an excuse for the adults to come," she said with a laugh.
The clowns, some dressed in fluorescent pink suspenders, red striped pants and oversized shoes with pea-green shoelaces, were winning the opening event.
The Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus pulled into Topeka yesterday. Doug Boyd, above, is a regular clown with the circus. Below, circus elephants parade down Sixth Street on their way through downtown Topeka. The circus will be at the Kansas Expocentre in Topeka tonight through Monday.
Tickets for the performances can be purchased at the Expocentre box office.
100
Graduates of KU high school reunite
By VIRGINIA McGRATH
Staff writer
For almost 40 years, some Lawrence students attended high school at college.
The University High School, which operated from 1911 until 1950, was across from the Kansas Union in what is now the University Relations building on Louisiana Street between Grace Pearson Scholarship Hall and the Hilltop Child Development Center.
On Saturday, about 100 former students will meet at the Adams Alumni Center for their second reunion. A reception will begin at 2 p.m.
The school was run by the School of Education. KU students majoring in education taught at the high school instead of student teaching in public high schools, as they do now. In addition, KU faculty from the education department helped teach the classes.
and a buffet will be served at 5:30 p.m.
The largest class had 12 students, said Harry Hunn, a Lawrence resident and a former student. "We felt like we got a lot more out of school than other high school students," Hunn said. "It was very competitive, partly because some of the students were children of faculty."
Many students who attended the school were children of University faculty. Students from farms and the city of Lawrence also attended, but classes were small, allowing more individual attention than was offered in public schools.
Alita York Cooper, associate professor of human development and family life, attended the school from 1943 until 1947. She also enjoyed attending a small school. "We had the opportunity to participate in more extra-curricular activities. And we were close because you knew almost everybody," she said.
The students were able to see what a college was like by attending high school on a college campus. Many of their classes were in University buildings. "We were able to use the Fraser Hall theatre for our school plays; we had gym class in the old Robinson gymnasium and language classes in Strong." Cooper said.
They also had more freedom than the average high school student. "We could come and go as we pleased, just like a regular University student," Hunn said. "We didn't need to have a note from our parents to
See REUNION, p. 6, col. 1
KU will reenter Kaw canoe race
Bv IAVAN OWENS
Staff writer
University of Kansas students will be back in the canoe again this year as both KU and Kansas State University residence hall officials revive the Kaw River Canoe Race.
The Sept. 12 race starts in Manhattan. The race is a tradition that began in the '60s, but KU students not participated the last two years.
Last year, KU was not able to race because of scheduling conflicts.
Scheduling was just one of the problems the race has had in recent years, told Todd Stritze, president of K-State Association of Residence Halls. KU and K-State students' parachute has declined in the last few years.
In 1984, the race was called off because of the lack of participation. Stritze said he hoped this race will change that trend.
"This year, it has come together faster than what it has years before. We're trying to build it up again," Stritzke said.
Sonya Clark, Ellsworth Hall director and adviser for the KU chapter of the Association of University Residence Halls, said a group from KU went to Manhattan on Wednesday to complete plans for the race. She said she was pleased with the way K-State had planned the race.
"Everything looks like it's in pretty good shape," she said.
As a result of KU and K-State's agreement to revive the event, Clark said K-State would sponsor the race from Manhattan to St. Marys this
year. KU would reciprocate with a race from St. Marys to Lawrence next year.
Clark said that the teams were limited to students who live in the residence halls. She said the number of KU teams would be limited by the number of canoes AURH could find and afford.
Posters and bulletins have been put up in the residence halls to inform the students about the race.
The race will begin at 8 a.m. Sept.
12 and end about 4:30 p.m., with
check points along the route down
Kansas River. Three people, at least
one male and one female, will have to
be in the canoe at all times.
In the past, the canoe race had been a two-day event. Racers began in Manhattan with an overnight stop in St. Marys. Participants would finish the race in Lawrence the next day.
Pyramid Pizza, 507 W. 14th St., will throw a pizza party at the finish line for both the KU and K-State teams who finish before the other teams from their schools. Those teams will also receive plaques.
Stritzek said the duration of the two-day event had been the primary cause for the lack of participation in the past. In addition, the overnight stay in St. Marys had been a liability problem for K-State.
A traveling trophy will go to the school that wins the event, Stritzke said. The first 10 teams will score point for their school. The scores will be averaged, and the school with the most points will win the event.
Crowding forces assignment cuts
Staff writer
By MICHAEL MERSCHEL
Overcrowded classrooms and changes in the purpose of some courses have forced some KU professors to cut back on assigning term papers and projects.
But before students start celebrating, they should know many professors aren't hesitant to make such requests that have nearly doubled in size.
Pete Rowland, associate professor of political science, said his judicial process class had increased from about 50 students in past years to the same semester, forcing him to drop the only term paper required for his course.
He said he was reluctant to drop the paper because it gave many students their first chance to do in-depth, original research and it showed him what they understood about what he was teaching.
Rowland said the extra students meant he didn't have the time necessary for helping students with their papers or grading them properly.
"Students who took this class three years ago got a better education than students taking it today," he said. "The people who appropriate money for the University should think about that."
The lack of a term paper hurts the quality of his class, he said.
Rowland said he thought other professors also hoped that the class overcrowding would be temporary.
"If we didn't think that it was, we'd probably be looking at other universi-
But overcrowding isn't the only reason professors aren't assigning
Two years ago, Steven Hamburg, assistant professor of environmental studies, required term papers in his
principles of environmental studies class, until the class was designated as fulfilling a principal course distr ibution in environmental science College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Hamburg said the class had grown by about 50 percent since then, and he no longer required term papers.
But many professors said they weren't bothered when their classes were larger than they prefer, or even too much problems at a large university.
"In an absolutely ideal world, I'd prefer to have to have many fewer students," said Gln Marotz, professor of geography. "But that luxury is not available."
Marotez's environmental conservation class was redesignated this year from a freshman-sophomore level to an principalclass for juniors and seniors.
The size of the class increased from 60 students last year to 95 students this year. Marotz cut back on the number of assignments for the class and simplified the two projects he requires for the class.
Marcot said he worried about how difficult it would be to grade assignments with more students, but he learned that he earned what he wanted to teach them
Robert Oppenheimer, associate chairman of the history department, said the increase of his economic history of Latin America class from 25 students to about 45 had no effect on assignments he gave his students.
Oppenheimer said he still taught the class as he always had and gave the same number of term paper assignments.
Indecision jeopardizes KU's memorial Prairie Acre, experts say
Rv RFN IOHNSTON
Staff writer
In 1932, a group of KU alumni were concerned that a plot of native prairie, the only authentic prairie left on campus, would be replaced by a University building. So they acted.
A committee was formed that got the University to put a stone wall, made of limestone from an area near Potter's Lake, around the land, and a plaque was erected to commemorate its new preserved status.
And the Prairie Acre, directly south of Blake Hall, became a reminder of what Mount Oread looked like when Charles Robinson and his party were the first to see it while traveling along the Oregon trail to the California gold rush in 1848. Robinson later became the first governor of Kansas.
Since 1932 the Prairie Acre has been a distinctive feature of the campus. Its tall stalks of grass, brightly colored flowers, and tangles of what most people would call weeds have contrasted sharply with the stately trees and carefully groomed lawns that mark most of the campus.
Today, however, some KU prairie experts say the landmark has been deteriorating for years, and its survival is uncertain unless changes are made in the way the University manages the area.
Ken Armitage, professor of systematics and ecology, said he had seen a sharp decline in the number of prairie plants in the Prairie Acre over the last five years because trees around its perimeter have grown too large and bushes have sprouted up in
the grass.
Both produce shade that reduces the growth of the grasses in the area, he said.
"Essentially the University must decide if they want trees or a prairie acre." Armitage said. "If they want a prairie acre they must take the trees out. It should be done one way or the other.
"If the University does not adopt a plan the prairie will die out," Armitage said. "It could be maintained as a nice symbol, but to do so they have to remove all those trees."
Kelly Kindscher, Lawrence graduate student and author of "Edible Plants of the Prairie," which was published by the University Press of Kansas last May, said the Prairie Acre had brushed about 15 to 20
percent over the last 12 years and had lost many species of plants. The area now has about 30 species while larger prairies near Lawrence have 150 to 200 species, he said.
"Structurally, it still looks like a real prairie," Kindsch said, "and if they got the trees out of there it would look a lot better. The trees could be replanted. The biggest problem is that most of the things that have been lost are the most attractive wild flowers."
through the cracks, so to speak."
Kindscher said the University was not aware of the best way to manage the area.
the areas.
"The acre has not been managed properly to maintain diversity." Kindscher said. "It is just something that has not fallen under anyone's jurisdiction. I think it has just faller
Mike Richardson, associate director of facilities operations, said his department mows the grass once a year to lessen the fire hazard, but otherwise does not normally disturb the area. The Prarie Acre was mowed in late August, he said.
"We have taken trees out three or four years ago," Wade said. "There are often a lot of trees, and we watch
"We try to maintain what is there," Richardson said. "I am not aware that we have had any complaints."
Greg Wade, landscape architect for architectural services, said his department would make recommendations to facilities operations on what maintenance to perform on Prairie Acre.
to see that itdoesn't look to brushy.
"Our main goal is to maintain what is there," he said. "If we see something we bring it to the attention of facilities operations."
Right now the Prairie Acre looks brown, but that is normal after being cut this time of year, Armitage said.
"At the end of the growing season all prairies tend to mature and get dry at the end of the summer." Armitage said.
Kindscher said the best time for the Kindra Acre to be mowed is midsummer because most prairie plants grow best in the spring and mature
Kundscher also said the Prairie Acre could be restored if both the University and volunteers acted.
2
Friday, September 4, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Attacks continue in Persian Gulf; two killed on Panamanian ship
MANAAM, Bahrain — Another convoy of U.S. warships and Kuwaiti tankers steamed south yesterday through the Persian Gulf, where two crewmen on a Panamanian supply ship became the first fatalities of renewed tanker attacks by Iran and Iraq.
Iraq said its warplanes raided a tanker, and shipping sources said Iranian speedboat-borne fighters attacked a Japanese tanker and an Italian motorship.
Labor turmoil continues in South Korea
Fire from Iraqi warplanes or Iranian speedboats have hit at least 20 ships registered in nine different nations since Saturday, gulf-based sources said. They said the number at least doubled the average for a month in 1986.
Britain reflagged its first Kuwaiti tanker yesterday off Khor Fakkan port on the Gulf of Oman, shipping sources in the United Arab Emirates said.
SEOUL, South Korea — About 13,000 striking workers occupied the nation's largest shipyard yesterday, and some torched cars, destroyed office equipment and attacked a tourist hotel.
Hundreds of other strikes continued around the country after one striking shipyard worker was killed and eight of two months of labor turmoil.
Striking taxi drivers who reached a pay raise agreement in Seoul returned to work late yesterday, but a strike leader was reported in serious condition after setting himself on fire in a dispute with management. Daewoo, the nation's No. 2 automaker, remained shut down for the ninth day.
Attacks by rebels continue in Philippines
MANILA, Philippines — Communist rebels vowing to exploit the turmoil stirred by last week's failed coup attempt have killed at least 44 people since the military, the military said yesterday.
President Corazon Aquino on Aug. 28.
Moslem rebels declared support for soldiers who tried to overthrow
Brig. Gen. Alexander Aguirre, Manila area commander, warned of possible terror attacks by the mutineers and told leftists not to go ahead with a planned rally today.
Babies born with AIDS often abandoned
WORCESTER, Mass. — About one-third of the children born with AIDS are orphaned or abandoned at birth, and some die without leaving the hospital because foster or adoptive parents cannot be found in time, social workers say.
People resist taking in a child that is an AIDS victim both because they fear the disease and
"These children are born in the hospital, they suffer in the hospital and then they die," said Penny Hewlett, deputy commissioner of the Department of Human Resources in New York City.
Coffeville engineer offering free bridge
COFFEYVILLE — Available: the 226-foot truss bridge that crosses southeast Kansas bridge, good view, needs work. shes the Verdigris River, although all that's left of it is its two spans.
Montgomery County engineer Kurt Booe is offering to give away
Boee said he would even throw in about $13,000 in federal money. lated Press
Teen pilot's trial continues
Soviet prosecutor demands an eight-year sentence
The Associated Press
MOSCOW - The prosecutor accused Mathias Rust of taking an ego trip when he hedge-hopped his small plane to Red Square, and demanded yesterday that the West German teen-ager be sentenced to eight years in a labor camp.
Vladimir Andreyev said the 19-year-old pilot's goal in his daring flight to the Kremlin on May 28 was "cheap popularity" rather than a discussion with Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev about peace and disar-
He asked Judge Robert Tikhomirov to give Rust eight years for violating international flight rules, two years for violating the Soviet border and four years for hooliganism. The terms would be served concurrently.
Rust acknowledged his guilt on the first two charges but has contested the charge of hooliganism.
The trial began Wednesday and a verdict is expected today Rust and his Soviet lawyer, Vsevolod D. Yakovlev, have an opportunity to address the judge and his two lay assistants.
of testimony Wednesday, blushed yesterday under questioning from the judge and prosecutor.
Andreyev used the testimony of eight witnesses and an aviation expert to cast doubt on Rust's claim that he was on a peace mission when he took off from Finland and flew across more than 500 miles of Soviet territory to Moscow.
Rust, who was poised and spoke calmly during more than five hours
"I think this trial showed his real face," he said, looking at the defendant from across the courtroom. "He didn't want to consider the public order that exists. He deliberately committed this crime, and he's a hooligan.
"He perhaps thought, 'I am Rust, and I want to land where I want to land,' which was evidence of Rust's hooliganism. Andreve said.
The prosecutor said the request for eight years in a labor camp included consideration of the defendant's age.
Rust's flight in a single-engine Cessna created headlines around the world and made him a folk hero in West Germany. It embarrassed the military, which used a military shake-up, including dismissal of the air defense forces commander and the forced resignation of Defense Minister Sergei L. Sokolov.
Andreyev accused Rust of endangering hundreds of passengers on airliners approaching Moscow's Sheremetyevo International Airport, and said there could have been a dangerous international incident if Soviet forces had shot him down.
In testimony Wednesday, Rust said the flight was the "greatest mistake I've made in my life" and apologized it murder for it. He had no言 ill intent.
He said he wanted to draw attention to his desire for peace, disarmament and a new world order based on full democracy. The flight was the only way he could capture the imagination of people throughout the world, Rust said.
Yesterday, he said he could not remember exactly what he said about his mission when he landed.
Prosecution witnesses told the court Rust frightened many people on Red Square when he set the plane to crash. He also sidedered his flight a peace mission.
"My first reaction was to duck." policeman Andrei Molokoyedov told the court. He was on duty about 100 yards from the bridge where Rust landed and taxied onto Red Square.
U.S. delays call for Iran sanctions
Dole says he knows real folks
FORT MADISON, Iowa — Bol Dole said this week that his poor Kanas upbringing better qualified a canidate for the presidency than do Vice President George Bush's wealth.
"I do think I'm probably more like everyone else in this audience that George Bush," Dole said when asked during an appearance before 35 pele in Fort Madison, Iowa, to outline his dislike for the United States. "We're from small towns, and most of us had to work to get where we are."
The Associated Press
As a permanent member of the Security Council, the Soviet Union has the power to block the resolution with a veto.
WASHINGTON — The Reagan administration yesterday delayed its call for an arms embargo or other sanctions against Iran until U.N. General Javier Duellar Cuellar undertakes a peace mission to Teheran.
State Department spokeswoman Phyllis Ollahay had said Tuesday that drafting of a resolution to apply for the appointment of a new ambassador would entail an arms embargo.
The Associated Press
The administration had given Iran until today to accept the cease-fire ordered July 20 by the U.N. Security Council. Renewal of the war in the Persian Gulf had heightened tensions in the area.
Dole grew up in Russell.
- should begin next week unless Teheran agreed by today to stop fighting and to negotiate with Iraq.
It was understood that the United States had demanded as a condition for its approval that Perez de Cuellar not permit Iran to change the ceasefire resolution. Teheran's chief objection is that the measure did not cite Iraq as the aggressor in the 7-year-old war.
Bush's father was Prescott Bush, a U.S. senator from Connecticut. Bush attended preparatory school and Yale University.
Redman said he did not know whether Iran's invitation to Perez de Cuellar was a tactical delay or a genuine move to consider accepting the cease-fire. "It's not possible for him to make that kind of evaluation," he said.
The decision to approve the mission reflected U.S.-Soviet cooperation, but it was unclear whether Moscow would support sanctions if he did. Ceaulair failed to elicit a positive response from Iranian leaders.
Representatives of all 15 Security Council members, including U.S. and Soviet diplomats, were working at the Paris Conference in York on instructions for the mission.
But State Department spokesman Charles E. Redman said attempts to punish Iran unless it stopped fighting with Iraq would be delayed until after Perez de Cuellar visits Teheran on Thursday.
"I think we've experienced some ups and downs in our lifetimes," Dole said. "Getting where we've gotten wasn't because of any wealth in my family or because I had a powerful father or mother. My parents never finished high school, and they were never interested in politics."
He said, "So just from the standpoint of, 'Does Bob Dole know there are real people out there? Has he ever been in contact with somebody who really had a problem?' Has he ever been in contact with somebody who had to go to a food stamp line to get food?" I have."
Dole said he was not getting personal with his comments about Bush.
Downtown
RAPBER SHOP
"I think he's a fine person and a good vice president," he said. "I don't have anything but good to say about my colleagues."
Dole also repeated his contention that Republicans should support him because he understood more about rural problems and would be a stronger candidate than Bush.
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Campus/Area
3
Local Briefs
Education prof to give talk on faculty union
Robert Hohn, professor of educational psychology and research, is scheduled to speak Wednesday on "The AUAP on Collective Bargaining" at 11:40 a.m., Sept. 9, at 11:30 a.m., 12:00 p.m., 12:40 p.m., 12:80 p.m., 12:10 p.m., 12:40 p.m., 12:80 p.m., 12:10 p.m., 12:40 p.m., 12:8
Apprenticeships open in folk arts
The Kansas Folk Arts Apprenticeship Program, sponsored by the Kansas State Historical Society and the Kansas Arts Commission, is providing people experienced in a folk art with the opportunity to study with a master folk artist.
Deadline for applications for 1988 apprenticeships in the study of traditional music, dance and crafts is Oct. 1.
Money is available to pay for master artist fees, supplies and travel.
For more information, contact Jennie Chinn at the Kansas State Historical Society in Topeka.
Engineering fair set for Sept. 16
An engineering career fair will be held Sept. 16 at Allen Field House. The fair will be from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Admission is free.
The fair is designed for any student interested in a technical career, but engineering and computer science majors may benefit the most, said Jill Cunningham, engineering placement director.
Forty-five employers are expected to have booths at the fair, including American Telephone & Telegraph Co., General Motors Corp., Procter & Gamble Co., International Business Machines Corp. and the FBI, Cunningham said.
The fair will be informal, Cunningham said, and students can dash through to pick up brochures or spend as much time as they want to talk to recruiters. Last week more than 800 students attended.
Employers will benefit from the fair because they increase their visibility on campus and have a better chance of hiring qualified graduates, she said.
Ukraine role in war to be speech topic
John A. Armstrong, University of Wisconsin-Madison professor emeritus of political science, will give a lecture titled "The Ukraine in World War II" at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, in the Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union. The speech, sponsored by the department of history, will be followed by a reception at the Adams Alumni Center.
Correction
because of a reporter's error, the date of the ground-breaking ceremony for KU's new science library was reported incorrectly in yesterday Kanstan.
The ceremony will be at 1:45 p.m. Sept. 11 on the site of the planned building, southeast of Hoch Auditorium.
From staff and wire reports.
Shorter add period ends today
But departments may let students around new deadir.
Bv AMBER STENGER
Staff writer
Today is the last day to add classes — well, almost
Students still can add classes, but the process is more complex. Department officials must grant students special permission before students can add classes.
After today, students who wish to add a class must obtain approval from the designated official from the department that offers the course. Often this official is the chairman of the department. The official shows approval by signing an add card.
"This is approval to add after the last day to add, assuming the class is open," said Gary Thompson, director of student records.
If the class is closed, students must get a closed class opener card. That card permits a student to add a class even if the class is full.
However, the opener cards may be hard to get.
hard to pen. Penny Harris, Cheyenne, Wyo., freshman, tried to add a Biology 106 lab but could not because it was closed. She didn't have an opener card.
"I am taking 106, but I couldn't get into the lab," she said. "I am angry. I'll have to take the lab by itself next semester."
Because this is the first year the add period has been condensed to two weeks, Thompson said it was hard to predict how hectic would be.
"A couple of weeks ago I would
have guessed we would have been extremely busy. But considering how things kind of slowed down this week, the kind of hard to say." Thompson said.
One indication that the center might not be too busy today is that some graduate teaching assistants receive a lot of requests many requests for add cards.
"I have had fewer people asking for add cards than last year," said George Trey, graduate teaching assistant in philosophy. "But people may be getting so discouraged, they may not be asking for cards."
Thompson said that enrollment center staff had been hired to accommodate the maximum number of students in case many students had
waited to add classes. The enrollment center will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. today. But Thompson said that the center would stay open if people were trying to add classes at 5 p.m.
Although today is officially the last day to add classes, students still can drop classes.
Students have until Sept. 25 to drop classes for most departments without the classes appearing on their transcripts. After Sept. 25, each school has a policy that determines whether a "W" or "F" grade is recorded on the transcript. A "W" grade means the student withdrew from the class. Students should check page 15 of the timetable to see what the policies are.
MELISSA AND BILLY
Scott Carpenter/KANSAN
Getting to know you
Linda Moshier, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, tweaks the nose of David students feel more comfortable with each other in an Acting I class. The Osborn, Kansas City, Kan., senior, as part of an exercise to help the class met in front of Murphy Hall yesterday.
Schumm to solve mystery
By NOEL GERDES Staff writer
Schumm, a Lawrence City Commissioner who owns the Massachusetts Street Delicatessen, 941 Massachusetts St. and Bobo Falbos $150 Smokehouse, 719 Massachusetts St. said the new restaurant would be the end of Sepienmer and it was only a matter of days before he announced its name. But don't ask him how many days. That's a secret, too.
He's not telling the name of his new restaurant at 1511 W. 23rd St. That's right, the one with the sign that's been teasing passers-by since spring with the question "What's my name buh."
Bob Schumm can keep a secret.
"It's an upscale, moderatelypriced, very unique, well-decorated, fun, semi-casual restaurant," Schumm said.
He said that it was modeled after a turn-of-the-century, European bistro, and that it would be decorated with lots of marble, French light fixtures, and original posters that date from 1880 to 1920.
"It's a place where students might take their parents when they come to visit," Schumm said.
The menu will feature a wide variety of cook-to-order dishes, including fresh seafood, chicken, beef, pasta, salads, omelets and an extensive selection of appetizers, he said.
Schumm said the sign had been good advertising, especially since it
"I've been having such a good time keeping the secret," he said, "that I don't know how I'm going to break the name to everyone."
Dayne Relihan, Lawrence senior and night supervisor at Yello Sub, 1814 W. 23rd St., said employees had put a sign up in the window before that restaurant opened that said, "Hey hum, if you tell me your name I'll tell you mine." He said the sign was a joke and was up for four or five days. Yello Sub opened in the middle of July.
Schumm said his new restaurant was originally a Sambo's Restaurant, and most recently was the Egg Roll King.
Math test is made easier
Staff writer
By MARK TILFORD
For Math 101 students, there should not be as much labor after Labor Day this year.
The second test in the college algebra course, in which students work at their own pace, has been reexamined and made a little easier since the fall of 1985. Marilyn Person, director of college algebra said.
Persson said complaints from students about the difficulty of the course's second weekly test were the result of making the test a little less difficult.
"We have gone over the problems and made the figures a little more reasonable for the students," Person said. "We want tests one and two to be good, solid tests to see if they can deal with the arithmetic."
Math 101 and 002 are self-help courses. There are no regular classes, but a room staffed by tutors is available for an evening or experimental lecture is held twice a week.
Students are assigned a weekly test deadline, determined by the last digit in their KUID number. There are 12
weekly tests, a midterm and a final. Deadlines for the second test begin Tuesday.
Among other things, students may not go on to the next test until they receive a grade of 14 or better out of the 20 points possible, but they may take a test as many times as they need before the deadline.
That has helped many students get by in the past.
"More than half of the students
were proficient in John
Massad, lecturer for Math 101.
The second test gives students their first look of the semester at something they have likely seen before: story problems.
"They're a big nightmare for everybody," said Philip Montgomery, director of pre-calculus courses. "That's the big problem involving mathematics. I don't think this test is harder than the other ones, per se."
For Shannon McClure, Ottawa freshman, the test had not presented any problems so far. But she had not taken it vet.
waiting for help in the tutoring room in Strong Hall. "I've been working the problems and I'm going to take it tomorrow."
"I'm not having much of problem," McClure said yesterday while
Steve McBride, Kansas City, Kan. freshman, was not having as easy a time.
"I think it (the course) would be a little better if it were in a classroom," he said. "I went through all the math classes in high school and did pretty well, but it's still pretty tough."
Massad said that passing was likely for students who got help from the tutors.
"Those students who take it four or five times and hope they get an easy test are not going to have an easy time." Massad said.
The test isn't designed to be more difficult than any of the other tests in the semester, he said.
"This is the first time that they hit new material." Massad said.
Students plan trips to help Dole in Iowa
A newly formed committee of KU students met last night to plan trips to Iowa and a letter-writing campaign aimed at helping Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan, win the Iowa Republican primary in February.
Staff writer
Brett Frazier, Pratt junior and chairman of the KU Dole for President campaign, said students would be making trips to fairs in Iowa beginning this month. The students will be at booths where they will answer questions and hand out information about Dole, he said.
"Our main goal is to project that Kansans love Bob Dole." Frazier said. "Students, young people, have such a lot of exuberance and energy that, given the tonight turnout, I feel KU students can do a lot for Bob Dole."
Frazier, who spoke yesterday to about 55 people in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union, said several students had signed up to go to the
By BEN JOHNSTON
John Jacob, El Dorado junior and treasurer of the KU campaign, said, "Each county in Kansas was assigned by the Dole campaign to write letters, and some of the counties in western Kansas could not meet their quota, so we will have to write more to make up for them."
Frazier said he would not try to raise money from KU students for the Dole campaign. But efforts will be made to solicit other kinds of support from KU students, and the College Republicans will be involved.
"Surely all of you could do three or four or 30 or 20," Frazier said.
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The students also would write letters to registered Iowa Republicans who voted in the 1986 Iowa Republican Primary, Frazier said.
Clay County, Iowa. Fair and the National Cattle County Fair in Waterloo, Iowa. These students would spend most of the second and third weekends of September campaigning for Dole, he said.
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Friday, September 4, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A minor decision
California is about to pass into law a bill requiring parental consent before a minor can have an abortion. It will become the 29th state to do so, and Kansas may be the 30th.
29th state to do so, and Kansas may currently, Kansas requires no permanent permission or notification of a parent of 18 to have an abortion. Yet the parents of a minor must give consent before any other serious medical procedure can take place.
The Legislature, which is currently considering a parental consent abortion bill, could incorporate the "judicial bypass" clause. But legislators should at least establish that minors seeking an abortion must have their parents' or guardians' consent.
The Legislature, which is currently considering a parental-consent abortion bill, could incorporate the "judicial bypass" clause. But legislators should at least establish that minors seeking an abortion must have their parents' or guardians' consent.
The landmark Roe vs. Wade decision in 1973 allowed states to pass parental consent laws with the provision that the minor could request permission from a judge to have an abortion, essentially bypassing her parents.
Opponents of parental-consent laws worry that poor communication between parents and children will drive a pregnant teenager into an alley for a dangerous — and possibly fatal — abortion.
"Learn to labor and to wait," Henry Wadsworth Longfellow tells us.
tells us. NASA is taking his advice.
NASA booster
NASA is taking his advice. Nineteen months after the space shuttle Challenger disaster, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration successfully completed its first full-scale test Sunday. Engineers from Morton Thiokol Inc., under contract to NASA, have been working diligently since the explosion to redesign the rocket booster that caused the tragedy.
are solutions to launch the next shuttle in June but is keeping that date festive. More tests and more hard work await.
Learning from past mistakes, NASA is keeping the pressure off to make launch schedule deadlines. The test, in which the booster was bolted to the ground and fired, comes after a three-day delay because of minor plumbing and electrical problems. The test was set for Aug. 27, but it was aborted three times, twice within 15 seconds of its firing. Meteiculous attention to detail and hard work are responsible for the successful test of the new booster.
The victorious test of the redesigned rocket provides an encouraging outlook for the space shuttle program. NASA is showing the public its commitment to excellence. Diligence and patience now characterize the program. Efforts to improve and correct past mistakes are indeed successful.
And so, until the shuttle is perfected, NASA labors and the nation waits.
Distinguished centenarian
Kansas' elder statesman is 100 years old
Kansas' elder statesman is boo'd by Alfred M. Landon will celebrate his birthday Sept. 9, and the state should recognize his accomplishments as well as his longevity.
Landon, a former governor, provides an example of the results of a lifelong commitment to political service. Beginning as a precinct worker, he worked his way up through the party ranks. He worked for the cash-basis law that all-
Kansans have him to thank for the cash-basis law that allows the state to spend no more money than it brings in. And he has continued to be an instrumental adviser to state Republicans.
Landon's independent spirit shines throughout the span of his long career.
He left the Republican party to join Teddy Roosevelt's Bull Moose party in 1912.
In the face of adversity, Landon ran in the 1936 presidential race against Franklin Delano Roosevelt He carried only Maine and Vermont.
After his defeat, he did not accept an offer to move to Washington as a Cabinet member. He once said of the decision, "We decided we preferred the comparatively simple, but more intelligent, life in Kansas."
We salute him.
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board
News staff
NEWS EDITOR
Jennifer Benjamin ... Editor
John Warren ... Managing editor
John Benner ... News editor
Beth Copeland ... Editorial editor
Sally Streff ... Campus editor
Brian Kaberline ... Sports editor
Dan Ruitelmann ... Photo editor
Bill Skelter ... Graphics editor
Tom Eblen ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Bonnie J. Hardy ... Business manager
Robert Hughes ... Advertising manager
Kelly Scherer ... Retail sales manager
Kurt Messersmith ... Consumer sales manager
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David Derftel ... National sales manager
Angela Clarke ... Classified manager
Ron Weems ... Director of marketing
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 staff position.
faculty or staff position.
Guest shots should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The
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can be mailed or brought to the Kansan office. Letters, guest shots and columns are the opinion of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University Daily Kansan. Editorials are the opinion of the Kansan editorial board.
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Dukakis
Babbitt
Biden
Jackson
Simon
Gephardt
Gore
Schroeder
NUNN of the Above
Of pig tents in Yawnsville, Iowa
Respectable candidate would avoid pancake feeds in dull states
Some of the Democratic presidential candidates are complaining that they don't get enough attention as they handshake their way through Iowa and New Hampshire.
ioWA is an aide to one of the candidates whined to the
New York Times:
"We're out there slogging away at state fairs and beating our heads against the wall, and people are more interested in whether Gary Hart is coming back early from Ireland."
While I can sympathize with the candidates, it seems to me that the public's indifference is evidence of the public's good sense.
evidence of the poetic's going interesting. There are far more interesting things going on in the world than Michael Dukakis praising an Iowa farmer for his attractive cows or Richard Gephardt feigning delight as he nibbles on the prize-winning brownie cookies.
Are we expected to become giddy from excitement when we read that Paul Simon received a standing ovation outside of Yawnsville, Iowa?
immediately. Just that they are being ignored, it is because they should be ignored. Anyone of sound mind who spends these fine summer days wandering around Iowa deserves what he gets — which will probably be dug all over his Guinea.
Try going into your favorite bar and starting a lively conversation by saying: "Hmmm, I see that Sen. Albert Gore dropped into a coffee shop in Clods Corner, Iowa, and one of the five customers, plus the grill man, recognized him immediately. Isn't that something?"
The candidate I could support is the one who would have the courage to say;
Mike Royko Syndicated Columnist
"I am announcing my candidacy for the Democratic nomination for president. And the first
campaign promise I will make is that I am not going to loya.
going to now.
"I will not go to any county fairs, state fairs or pancake breakfasts, or stop my car to shake hands with some befuddled farmer who wonders why all those TV cameras are suddenly being pointed at him.
"You ask why I am not going to Iowa? I will answer that with a question: Why don't you go to Iowa?"
iowa?
"The fact is, very few Americans ever go to Iowa, except those who live in Iowa and have little choice in the matter. And I don't blame them. Iowa is dull. It might even be duller than Indiana, and that's saying something."
"That's why you, my fellow Americans, overwhelming make the free choice to go somewhere else. When you have a few bucks and vacation time, some of you go to the North Woods to do some fishing. Or maybe to Florida to slap around golf or tennis balls. Or to a Club Med to see whether you might get lucky. Or to an island in the Caribbean to soak up sun and rum. Or on a cruise to get fat. Some of you might even go to the Big Apple and take in a show or two. Or go skiing in Colorado or Utah. Or maybe to Vegas to try your luck at the tables.
"There are so many wonderful places to go in this great land of ours, so many fun things to do. But, boy, they ain't in Iowa."
"So I call upon you, my fellow Americans, to ask yourself this question: With all of these travel options, would I choose to spend my time browning around the pig tent at an Iowa county fair?"
"And your answer, I'm sure, will be, 'What do you think I am, nuts?'"
"Well, then I ask you this question: Do you want as your candidate a person who would do something the overwhelming majority of Americans think is dumb?
thus. "Of course not. You want someone whose thinking reflects the mainstream of America. And the mainstream position of this great nation is to stay the heck out of Iowa."
"Now, I make this decision knowing that I might not win the nomination. Somehow, this country has put itself in the ridiculous position of making the political opinions of a few low stump-jumpers and New Hampshire syrup-supers more important than the teeming masses of New York, Chicago, Philadelphia and other great cities.
is to stay the neck out.
"Therefore, while the other candidates are in Iowa, I am going to campaign in Aspen, Carmel, Palm Beach, Martha's Vineyard, Hawaii, the Four Seasons Restaurant in Manhattan and all the other places you would visit if given a choice."
"Well, I'm having no part of it. And maybe I will lose. But there's one thing I know for sure. When this campaign is over, my shoes won't smell funny."
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Narrow-minded view
The "columnist" attacked every lifestyle in an offensive and stereotypical manner. He leaves no lifestyle unabused.
In response to the article, "College lifestyles fuel clique war," by Jon Gregor, I cannot believe that the Kansan allowed this narrow-minded and uninformed article to be printed.
How annoying it is to see the student body represented as jocks, long-haired dumps, dumb blondes and drug addicts. It is obvious to me that KU offers a lot more freedom and variety in choosing a lifestyle than Gregor has let unspecting freshmen to believe. KU is what you make it, and he is not making much of it.
Gregor concludes by suggesting that if you do not fall into one of these lame categories, you
are a nobody. And I quote, "The worst that one can do is not in any group at all." It seems to me that the idea of individualism is foreign to him and that he would rather see people blend into cliques as nameless, faceless people. God forbid that you stretch yourself and be your own person.
This article left me angry and confused. The article seems to have no other purpose than to put people down. If there is another point to be made, I sure would like to know what it is.
Kelly Luck, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore
MR. BADGER by AD long
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Flight Destination Time
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506 Chicago Cancelled
510 Denver Delayed
513 Manageman Under investigation
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IN LAWRENCE PENCE
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I THINK OF THEM AS CHEATING COUCH-POTATO SLIME
LAUREN'S PLACE
University Daily Kansan / Friday, September 4, 1987
5
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
9-4
© 1984 Lumberjack Press Syndicate
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Sponsor of bill to pull Kansas out of waste compact not confident of measure passing
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Kansas would pull out a regional compact for the disposal of low-level radioactive waste under a measure introduced yesterday in the House.
chance of getting as far as the House floor for debate.
the robes.
However, even the measure's sponsor, Rep. Delbert Gross, D-Hays, acknowledged that the bill had no
1337 Mass. 9:30-6:00 Mon.-Sat. 749-0636
R-Manhattan, said the bill would not get out of committee because House leaders wanted to limit to highways the debate of a special session of the Legislature that convened Monday. Gov. Mike Hayden called the session to have lawmakers consider a comprehensive highway proposal.
The measure would withdraw Kansas from the five-member Central Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compact, which it joined in 1982. Other states in the compact are Arkansas, Louisiana, Nebraska and Oklahoma.
State/Local
Opposition to the compact has arisen because some state officials and residents have said they think Kansas has a good chance of becoming a host state for a regional dump. Because of a congressional deadline, host states for compacts must be selected by Jan. 1, 1988.
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The University of Kansas University Theatre 1987-88 Season
The Marriage of
Bette E
BOO
by Christopher Durang
Thursday, September 24, 1987
7:30 p.m
Friday, Saturday, September 25-26, 1987
8:00 p.m
Sunday, September 27, 1987
2:30 p.m
Hamlet
GETTING OUT
by William Shakespeare
Thursday, November 12, 1987
7:30
Friday & Saturday, November 13-14, 1987
Friday & Saturday, November 20-21, 1987
8:00 p.m.
hy Marsha Norman
by Marsha Norman
Friday & Saturday, February 26-27, 1988
Friday & Saturday, March 4-5, 1988
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Thursday, March 3, 1988
7:30 p.m.
CAROUSEL
by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein
Friday & Saturday, April 8-9, 1988
Friday & Saturday, April 15-16, 1988
8:00 p.m.
Sunday, April 10, 1988
2:30 p.m.
Thursday, April 14, 1988
7:30 p.m.
Amahl and the Night Visitors
by Gian Carlo Menotti
Friday & Saturday, December 18-19, 1987
8:00 p.m.
Sunday, December 20, 1987
2:30 p.m.
Special Holiday Production
Season Tickets Now on Sale
Contact the Murphy Hall Box Office 864-3982
Priority Seating Other Seating
Public $23.00 $16.00
KU Student with ID 11.50 8.00
Senior Citizen Other Student 19.60 12.80
Women Adults Children and Units $7.00 $10.00
Amahl and the Night Visitors
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(Amahi and the Night Visitors is not part of the season ticket package but subscriptions can reserve tickets to this production at the AMC Theatres.)
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We're .out.to.win.you.over.
6
Fridav. September 4. 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Reunion
Continued from p. 1
leave, like you usually do in high school.
"We were treated as adults, but we were expected to act like adults," he said.
But the students did not really associate with University students. "We were very much a high school group," Cooper said.
Cooper attended the University High School during the first two years after World War II, years in
which many U.S. servicemen were beginning their college careers. "During those years, the University was swarming with sailors. I was more apt to see a serviceman on campus than a regular college student." she said.
dent, she said.
Cooper said many of the students who attended University High School ended up going to KU. "It was an easy way to move into KU. We felt completely at home there," she said.
In 1960, the education school closed the high school and began sending education majors into public schools.
"There wasn't enough financial help from the University to keep it going," said Lotta Houk Keefover, a Berryton resident and a former student. In addition, because University High School enrolled only high school students, it did not allow KU students to teach younger children.
Ambassador from Indonesia will speak here this weekend
By KIRK ADAMS
Staff writer
The Indonesian ambassador to the United States, Sesilo Soedarman, will visit the University of Kansas this weekend for a two-day seminar for Indonesian students from KU and 27 other midwestern colleges.
Indonesia is an archipelago of 13,500 islands in Southeast Asia. Its citizens speak a variety of languages, but the majority is Bahasa or Malay Indonesian
The seminar will begin at 8:30 a.m. in 100 Smith Hall.
About 100 Indonesian students and delegates are expected to attend the event, said seminar coordinator Suwaliid Martodihardjo, a graduate student in pharmaceutical chemistry.
The event is sponsored by the KU chapter of PERMIAS, an Indonesian student association with the purpose of uniting Indonesians and introducing their culture to other nations
Students will hear delegates speak on such issues as economics, rural development, history, natural resources and the transfer of technology to Indonesia.
outer Indonesian officials from the Washington embassy will speak, including the Indonesian consulate general, the vice consul, the cultural and educational attache, the industrial attache and the agriculture attache.
After the speeches, students will present papers to the delegates on various Indonesian issues that they think are significant. The results of the seminar will be sent back to Indonesia.
The president of the KU chapter of PERMIAS, Kasihani K bosaloh, a graduate student in English, said the seminars were started so that Indonesian students in the United States could participate in the workings of their country by talking to the ambassadors.
Kasbolah said that more than 90 Indonesian students had enrolled at KU this fall.
Ann Willner, professor of political science, who had been an adviser to the foreign ministry of Indonesia during the '50s and has also worked for the Indonesian national planning bureau, said hat Indonesia had a democratic government since the late '50s.
late '50s. Willner said that many of the Indonesian islands, especially Java, were densely populated. She said that Java was one of the most densely populated places in the world.
From the KU Weather Service
179 population places. She said that about 80 percent of the population was Muslim but that a variety of religions were practiced.
"They are a people who are extremely friendly, sort of outgoing and hospitable." Willner said.
Stephan issues seat belt opinion
People in accidents can be cited, attorney general says
TOPEKA - Attorney General Robert T. Stephan wrote in an opinion issued publicly yesterday that law enforcement officers could issue tickets to people involved in traffic accidents who were found not to be wearing safety belts, even when they weren't cited for other violations.
Jones wanted an interpretation of that provision, which says, "Law enforcement officers shall not stop drivers for violations of this act in the absence of another violation of law. A citation for violation of this act shall not be issued without citing the violation that initially caused the officer to effect the enforcement stop."
The Associated Press
In response to an inquiry by Thomas County Sheriff Thomas W. Jones, Stephan said a provision in the 1986 state law requiring drivers and passengers riding in the front seats of vehicles to wear safety belts did not restrict offices to issuing belt violations only in cases where they issue citations for other offenses.
stop.
Stephan, noting that section was not part of the original bill but was added as an amendment during the legislative process, said it was intended to be an exception, rather than the rule in enforcing the seat belt law.
den law. The provision restricts the enforcement of the law only in those situations in which an officer stops somebody on suspicion of violating some other law but doesn't issue a ticket for that other violation, Stephan said.
"A person involved in a vehicular accident who is not cited for any other violation may be cited for failure to use a safety belt if that person was not wearing one at the time of the accident," the attorney general wrote.
general wrist.
In Kansas, an attorney general's opinion is advisory and does not carry the weight of law. A binding interpretation can only be made by the courts.
WEATHER
5.DAY Mostly Cloudy
HIGH: 90°
LOW: 66°
Today there will be variable cloudiness with a chance of a thunderstorm in the evening. The high will be about 90 and the low will be in the mid- to upper-60s.
5.DAY SAT Scattered Storms 90/68 HIGH LOW
SUN A.M. Storms P.M. Sun 82/60
MON Partly Sunny 83/58
TUE Partly Sunny 85/60
WED Mostly Sunny 87/62
North Platte 82/55 Thundershowers
Omaha 87/62 Mostly Cloudy
Goodland 84/57 Thundershowers
Hays 89/60 Mostly Cloudy
Salina 92/63 Partly Cloudy
Topeka 90/64 Partly Sunny
Trif
Dodge City 95/66 Partly Cloudy
Wichita 95/65 Mostly Sunny
Chanute 96/67 Partly Sunny
Kansas City 90/65 Partly Sunny
Columbia 89/66 Partly Sunny
St. Louis 85/66 Partly Cloudy
Springfield 89/67 Partly Sunny
Forecast by Scott Dergan and John Dolusic.
Temperatures are today’s high and tonight’s overnight low.
Conditions are forecasted for this afternoon.
WEATHER Lawrence Forecast
Bottle defect spurs sauce recall
The Associated Press
PURCHASE, N.Y. - Nestle Foods Corp. announced yesterday a recall of 600,000 bottles of cocktail sauce because of a defect that could cause some of the glass bottles to break.
Nothing was wrong with the sauce, the company said.
defect that could cause the bottle to break when it is first opened, possibly causing hand injuries, Nestle said in a statement.
Nestle said the affected bottles were Crosse and Blackwell Seafood Cocktail Sauce with seven-digit codes on the cap that begin with G7077, G7078 or G7079.
The company said the recall was voluntary and the defect had been reported to the federal Consumer Products Safety Commission. No other Crosse and Blackwell products were involved.
Nestle said consumers were asked to return the recalled bottles to local markets for a refund or replacement.
The defect affected only a small percentage of the 600,000 bottles, which were distributed nationally and were believed to be in warehouses, on supermarket shelves and in homes, the company said.
The company discovered a glass
House thinks Hayden's plan too expensive
For information, consumers can call 1-800-553-5303.
On the Record
Clothes and other personal items valued at $315 were taken Aug. 22 or Aug. 23 from a fraternity house in the 1900 block of Stewart Avenue, Lawrence police reported.
prehensive highway plan that can garner just enough votes to pass.
Special Session '07
Hayden's
Highway Plan
A 13-year-old girl reported to Lawrence police that she had been raped Tuesday. She told police that a friend took her on his motorcycle to a secluded place and then forced her to have intercourse. Police are investigating.
for $1.71 billion in new construction over the next nine years.
■ An estimated $200 in damage was done between Sunday and Tuesday to a house on the 2000 block of Kasold Drive, Lawrence police reported. Someone had broken into the house and damaged two doors.
As the House committee's bill stands, the state would increase its gasoline and diesel fuel taxes by 3 cents a gallon and its vehicle registration fees by 25 percent for trucks, and to $32 for passenger cars.
TOPEKA — The House struggled yesterday to find the magic alternative to Gov. Mike Hayden's com-
The chamber worked from a barebones maintenance plan the House Transportation Committee put together, one that called for far less spending than Hayden's proposal. In fact, the House overwhelmingly rejected Hayden's plan, which calls
The increases would raise $545 million over the 8½- year life of the program and spend $519 million, for improved maintenance and aid to cities and counties.
Under the amendment which fail
cities and county Some lawmakers hoped to use the bill as a starting point and build a more expensive program, but the House turned down the first attempt to increase the size of the proposal.
SAVE YOUR MONEY,
CLIP A COUPON!
The Associated Press
ed, the motor fuels taxes would have increased 4 cents and vehicle registration fees by between 25 percent and 100 percent. The fuel taxes would be indexed annually for inflation, except that the gasoline tax could not increase by more than 1 cent a year after the initial increase. The increases would raise $1.13 billion.
In addition, the state would issue $873 million in bonds. The plan would have financed all the roads listed in Hayden's plan, except that three projects would be downgraded to "Super Twos," two lane highways with 12-foot-wide driving lanes, wide shoulders and occasional passing lanes.
Those projects would have been a proposed four-lane highway along the U.S. 81 corridor north of Salina to the Nebraska border, a four-lane highway from Wichita to Hutchinson along the Kansas 96 corridor, and a Super Two on four lanes of right way through southeast Kansas from Wichita to the Missouri border.
Rep. Rex Crowell, R-Longton, chairman of the House Transportation Committee, said the proposal was a way to please those who supported Hayden's plan and some of those who thought the governor's proposal was too large.
However, some House members criticized the plan as too large and too much of a burden on taxpayers.
STADIUM BARBER SHOP
Mass. Downton
QANVID
Quality Haircuts at Reasonable Prices
No appt. necessary. Kenny & Earl
LIBERTY HALL
A FILM BY ALEX COX
STRAIGHT TO
HELL
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7.30 & 9.30 nightly
3.30 & 5.30 matinees on the 6th
"'exhilarating live performances'"
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ATHENS, GA.
STARRING R.E.M.A THE B-521*
11:30 Fri. & Sat.
9:30 Sun.
KATHERINE DIECKMANN, VILLAGE VOICE
ATHENS, GA.
CONFIDENCE IN YOUR DREAMS
Commonwealth
AUTO TRADING
Groupe d'autoroute 126, 75008, France
phone: (02) 394 8100 www.commonwealthauto.com
Granada 1020 Macauquontte 843-5788
Granada
843-7578
HOUSE II
DAILY 7:15, 9:10
Mat. Fri., 15:18
Mat. Sat, Sun. Mon.
Varsity
CAN'T BUY ME
LOVE
DAILY 7.30-9.30
Mai Sat, Sun Mon.
Mai Sat, Sun Mon.
'3:00, '5:00
Hillcrest
TOO MUCH DAILY 4:55 ONLY!
PATRICK SARTRE JENNER GUT
DAILY
5:00, 7:30, 9:40
Daily Darling
Mat. Sat. Sun. Mon.
2-25
CHEECH MARIN
BORN IN
EAST L.A. ➔ DAILY 7:40, 9:30
Mat. Sat. Sun. Mon.
13:00
THE FAT BOYS are...
DAILY
4:30, 7:35, 9:35
DISORDERLIES
Mat. Sat. Sun Mon
KENNY CUSTER
ROBERT MACKAHAN
DAILY
*4:50, 7:20, 9:35
Mat. Sat. Sun. Mon.
NO WAY OUT
*2:40
THE
FOURTH
PROTOCOL
DAILY
*4:45, 7:15, 9:30
Mat Sat. Sun. Mon
R 2:30
AMERICAN NATION 2
DAILY 7:00; 9:00
Mat. Fri. *4:45
Mat. Sat. Sun. Mon.
*2:30* *4:45*
STAKEOUT
DAILY 7:15, 9:30
Mat. Fr. 5:00
Mat. Sat. Sun. Mon.
*2:45, 5:00*
FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY SKILLS PROGRAM
Techniques to help students of any foreign language with...
* reading * writing * testing
* listening * speaking * mental blocks
FREE!
THE STRONG HOME
SAC
MA 647-2055
Tuesday, September 8
7:00 to 9:00 p.m.
300 Strong Hall
ROCK CHALK ADVISORY BOARD
Applications can be picked up at the Organization and Activities Office in the Burge Union.
will be interviewing for the 1987-88 at-large positions.
Applications must be submitted by 5:00 to the Organization and Activities Office.
Tuesday, September 8.
PAY DAY
$
Everyday can be payday at Entertel Excellent base wages, cash bonuses and flexible hours make your part-time position with Entertel one of the most rewarding in Lawrence.
Earn more for your valuable time.
---
Apply in person today
ENTERTEL
A SUBSIDIARY OF ENTERTAINMENT PUBLICATIONS. INC.
LAURENCE KANSAS 0044
619 MASSACHUSETTS LAWRENCE KANSAS 60044
E.O.E. m/f/1h
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LIBRARY
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SUNDAY THRU THURSDAY
WITH RENTAL OF ANY TWO TAPES
YES EVEN 99¢ TAPES
$2.50
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MOVIE RENTALS REG. $2.50
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POPINGO VIDEO: YOUR HOME OF THE HITS!!!
popingo videos
600 LAWRENCE AVE.
PH.842-9715
8060 ENVEWRIES
ACROSS FROM DILLONS NEW SUPER STORE
KU AND LAWRENCE EVENTS CALENDAR Friday 4
KIL AND LAWRENCE EVENTS
7 p.m. — "Opera Is My Hobby," with James Seaver, will be broadcast on
8 p.m. — KU International Folk Dance Club will meet at St. John's Gymnasium, 12th and Kentucky streets.
2
Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. at no charge.
Saturday
9 a.m. — "The Vintage Jazz Show" with Michael Maher will be broadcast on THERS
MIAMI FLORIDA CITY UNION
PIZZA
KU
3/10/87
Get Involved In Making Both Better
"An education is more than classwork; A university is more than mere buildings"
Student Senate Committees
Kansas Union, SUA 8:00-5:00 Burge Union, 8:00-5:00
uppercut
"Our Success Goes to Your Head"
841-4894
9th & Mississippi
LAST DAY
Make Student Representation Effective
ESQUIRE
BARBER SERVICE
FOR MEN
AND WOMEN
FOR APPTS. CALL
842-3699
2323 RIDGE CT.
Honor to Baker's Fall 1977
Lawrence Book
A Reference Pressure
Welcome to Lawrence
Sub&Snuff
Sandwich Shop
5 p.m.-Midnight
We Deliver!
841-DELI
Independent
LAUNDROMAT
Open 24 hours
9th & Mississippi
Angels
TANNING and Hair Salon
Special Tan 1 Month For Only
$49.00
Louisiana Purchase Visa or Mastercard
Shopping Center 843-4070
All women interested in participating in OPEN RUSH should call the Panhellenic Office at 864-4643
12th and Indiana
THE at ROCK CHALK BAR
Explore New Ideas, Happenings, and Events
Fri., Sept. 4 Special Edition of Open Mic
Sat., Sept. 5 Mahoots
$1 cover
842.9469
ClassifiedAds
"As God is my witness, I'll never be uninvolved again." Maybe there isn't always tomorrow. Join a Student Senate Committee. Kansas and Burge Unions. 864-3710
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Attend the first meeting of the Travis MeeGan Fee
Call; Kiteh Call; 841-8626; George, 841-9723.
Heading home for the holidays? FLY CHEAP.
Call us now. Carpenters Travel. 845-3608.
"I do believe in Senate-ob. I do. I do believe in
Senate." Don’t be afraid to get involved. Join a
Student Senate Committee. Kansas and Burge
Universities. 864-3710.
A Group Bash at the Royals Baseball Game Don't Miss the Fun on Thurs., Sept. 17 Watch the Kansan for more info, or call the SAU office at 864-3477
University Daily Kansan / Friday, September 4, 1987
15
Just starting and you're already stressed out? Get the kinks out at Lawrence Massage Therapy. Get the certificates available! Tell your family, "You're on call" Call Bruce and Alice at 814-602-666 or its knots to you!
Research Paper Workshop. Examine topic selection, taking notes, organization, writing style. September 15, 7: 4 p.m. 649 Westeson. Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong. 844-4044
The Transcendental Meditation Program is a simple, natural, effortless mental technique which allows the mind and body to experience a deep sense of M is the foundation of Maharihiy Ayurveda, a system for achieving perfect health (as seen on the Donnahe show Sept. 1, 1987). Come hear a free, public introductory presentation WEDNESDAY 9 p.m., *300 F.O.M.* in the PINE ROOM, KANSAS UNION
ENTERTAINMENT
At your request is Lawrence's Best and Most Affordable D.J. Sound and Lighting for Any Occasion. 841-1405
Rock with The Maboots Saturday night at the ROCK CHALK.
WANTED: LEAD SINGER (or established rock band). We play a variety of music including REM.
ULIMATEM ENTERTAINMENT
ULTIMATE DJ System For All Occasions
Phil at 842-503 JD
FOR RENT
1 bedroom apt. sub-rent, $200/mo. Close to cam-
pus. furnished. water naid. no beets. 864-4211
BRAND NEW completely furnished 4 bedroom
apts available immediately. On the bus route and
in walking distance of KU. Call 749-4232 or
8 4 2 4 4 5 5 5
Ever tried cooperative living? It's convenient and a lot of fun. Sunflower Student Cooperative. Call or blog: 140 Tennessee at 749-0871, ask for Dobbie
Glenhaven Apartments walk to class
2% blocks from Union 1135 Ohio. Bedroom and bedroom 4½, 1½ bath. Exciting energy efficient design. All appliance systems included. Wired for cable.
841-5797
Excellent location! Walk to campus. Newer 2-bedroom apt. Washers/Dryer hookups, low utilities. Call 841-2662
Village square
FREE MICROWAVE
call by 9/4/87
Spacious 2 bedroom
Waterbed fine
Swimming pool
9th & Avalon
842-3040
Female roommate needed. Non-smoker.
Campus location. Call for 090-749-2068.
Place: Call for 090-749-2068.
For sublet 1 b br apt with microwave,
for hotel 2 b apt with bus route,
for facilities. Call 842 90f9 after.
Furnished room with shared kitchen and bath. One block from University. With off-street parking. No pets. please. 841-5060.
NAISMITH PLACE
OUSDAHL & 25th Ct.
841-1815
2 bdr., jacuzzi
water pd.
GUARANTEEED SPACE at Nassim Hall for '78
GRANTING SPACE at Nassim Hall for '78
LIMIT LIST: Caitl M.442, 823210 for details now
Furnished two bedroom apt. one block from the University with off-street parking. No pets.
Hillview Apartments
1733 W. 24th
841-5797
NOW LEASEING
Starting at $250/mo.
- laundry facilities
- rental furniture available from Thompson Crawley
- on bus route
- water paid
HOUSE FOR RENT Share large 5 bdrm/2 bath
HOME OFFICE Share large 5 bdrm/2 bath
BASEMENT and 6th bdm or study. Two fun-
fultown and responsible arch, design student
archs at 14h and Kentucky. Contact Darryl at
baths at 14h and Kentucky. Contact Darryl at
Topika, Wksia, KS 67214. daytime 1217
TOPika, Wksia, KS 67214.
SUNRISE PLACE
Sunrise Apartment
Offering luxurious townhouses
and apartment living.
byp to see our
show unit at
9th and Michigan
or call . . .
841-1287
for an appointment.
Office hours are 1-5 M-F
Need a roommate to cut rent Close to campus-$150 with utilities Call 845-1813
Need to subdue nise 2 bedroom apt at Aspen West. Water is included on monthly rate. With deposit and 1/2 rent of September paid! Available: Call now at 749-6066.
Rooms for Rm: Suburban House, Private RM, bath, DW, FF, Deck. Trees, Clean, mature, non-smokers, children, pets. Room 1 - blem, apa, close to campus. Summer & Winter leave. No Pets. #82-8971.
NAISMITH PLACE
OUSDAH & 251st Ct.
841-1815
BRAND NEW
2 BEDROOM APTS.
- water paid
- fully equipped kitchen
- satellite television
- 1 blk. to KU bus route
- private balconies
- satellite television
- basketball court
- on-site management
- on-site management
- rental furniture available
FOR SALE
13. ' Sylvania remote control color TV and stand Call 841-7987 after 6 p.m.
1975 Honda 125 motorcycle. Dirt bike. Low mileage. Only $250. Call 749-8452 after 3 o'clock. 1985 Honda Elite 150 Deluxe. Excellent condition 2000 miles. Scouter scooter and helmet included.
1855 Honda Elite Deluxe 105cc. Pcd $170, asked
$1250. Perfect condition ! Call 749-3525.
$1250 condition perfect !! Call 749-3252
1966 MOPED sale-HDONSPREE. Great condi-
26 inch Cambridge ten-speed bicycle. Like new.
$90 or best offer. Bike 844-4138.
5 piece white pearl drum set. Excellent condition.
Best offer over $600. 4 concert trombones 10", 10*",
16"-white. Excellent condition. Best offer over
$725. Call Clark: 841-1481.
79 Honda Accord-parts for sale or entire car.
Call 723-289-1298 for info.
V2.0 RW. Vabbit Convertible, Sony stereo, A/C,
22,000 miles excellent condition, $7,000. Joe-
see.
AIRLINE TICKET FOR SALE. Round trp, Kansas City to Los Angeles. Weekday Day Job weekend, September 4-8, 1987 $160 Must sell. Call 843-8160 or 842-5554
An Absolutely Awesome Array of Antiques, collectibles and neat stuff we have; hardback and 1/2 price paper bookbills, full line of new comic books, special editions, art deco furniture, indian, and costume jewelry (glitter and good staff), the right vintage clothes for any occasion, antique toys, fine art glass, bill house furniture, antique desk, antique furniture of antique furniture in the area. Quantrillas Flea Market, 11 New Hampshire, Open Sat & Sun.
Apple Ic Monitor/stand. Plus power supply.
Makes home to office commute easy. $75.
941,605
Brand new color television for sale, great condition.
Call 843-4945
CHEAP SF 40 classics-Asimov to Zelazny. Call Deh AF 8312 2732 after 5.
Dog Day Factory overrun specials, Sofa, love,
chair, dress $97, servet sectionals $93, sleeper
sofas 50% of furniture, furniture public daily, Mark & Quan
Furniture Warehouse, 738 New Hampshire
Dog Days Mattress & box sets. 32 closeouts.
New Furniture Mattress. 42 New Furniture
Mattress. 1 New Hampshire.
Dog Days Waterbed sale. K size $9, Q bookcase
bid $137, IR sheets $1, mat pats $7, cond 2/$1
much more. M & Q Furniture Warehouse, 738
New Hampshire.
Enlarger for sale: Omega DIV3, dv3, w/variable
switch. Mail resume to:
flash equipment. Leave message at 841-5988.
1200-800 phone number Great soap
Great location $500 - 800 934 - 814
Great soap
For Sale: Homo-Rotus Toms '6'8" '10" Good con-
ductive tape for the most advanced
tapes.
Fa Sale: Takara 21" 12 speed men's bike Great
蓝色 Blue 810 B.O.B 841-6855
For Sale: Technics SLP1J programmable CD
player. Never used. $180. Call 841-2896
FULLY IBM PC/XT COMPATIBLE fontainte
MODERN MODEM $800. 8412-125 after 7 p.m.
Garage Sale - 124 Waght Wheel Road, Saturday.
Prices range from $80-$150. The mature end tables, picture wall hangings,
end tables, pictures, wall hangings, end tables, pictures, wall hangings.
GREAT BOOKS OF THE WESTERN WORLD, 52 vol complete set, excellent condition, with bookcase. New set is $300. mine is $895. Call 913-441-4100 after 5 p.m.
set tab, fully equipped, pump, heater, blower.
some assembly required. 1973 Chrysler, runs great, new transmission, battery and more. Ask for Kurt, 749-0662
R
Kapo 2000 i2.1B. Laptop IBM compatible, 720 KB, 3.5 disks, battery or A/C powered. $600. 884-3259
KORG. Digital drums, digital percussion units.
Professional sound, all accessories, only $100.
Gran Sport Bike, Backpack & Canoe
Do everything in 'em—Run, Climb, Hike, Raft—the Ultimate in Footwear
MAX'S COMICS Comic Books, Playbots, Penshoe,
etc. 811 New Hampstead
Multi-family garage sale September 4, 8 a.m. to 4 m.p. September 5, 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. 1839 B 27th Titer. 2 Mopeds. stereo, TV, antique cake stands. Bedroom furniture, clothing, bedding, bedroom toys, misc.
AUTOSALES
7th F Arkansas 843-3328
Pentax Plan Plus 5mm w/8-28 mm zoom,
70-200 mm zoom, Pentax AF-200T flash unit,
tripod, and tundra carrying case. Retail $750.
Asking K451. Call 641-1497.
Large desk $60. Living room chair $20. Old
stereo $20. After 5:00 - Snoop, 794-2148
Racing Bicycle 22 pounds $800 one year ago,
sacrifice at $100. 941-948-948
MOTHIBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE
MOTHIBALL 05:00 10:00 USED FURNITURE
10:00 10:00
Pioneer stereo (receiver, cassette, furnishable,
HPM to speakers). Recent albums, tapes-all
Mountain bike 19,225仁 Biancio. Like new. Have fun on M: Oread. 19,225-1.631-2128
MUST SELL. 191 Suzuki 400GS+ excellent condition, low miles. 843-277 or 843-258.
Suzuki G59 450 E. Must sell for $750. OBO. Will
will call. Call 841-787-6677.
Tandy 1000 *128K*, memory expansion optional. One disk drive, second disk drive optional. Dot matrix printer, built-in modem, and green keyboard or 3890 or best offer. Call collect 1-268 3190
Twin mattress, box springs, and frame. Like new.
asking $100. 841-9491.
1972 Honda S350 only 16,000 miles, new battery,
good condition. Best off. B41-9623. Paul
Hampton. (800) 254-7081.
Totala review course for all four parts of CPA exam for $200. (A new one is $50). Used once to pass the CPA exam on the first try. Call after 5 p.m. at 316-326-5694.
1981 Chevrolet Impala 2-door sedan. Concord seats. PS, A/C, excellent condition. 840-694-3058.
Mountain hike. Specialized Stumpjumper Sport.
Golf ball. #890. #749. #2302.
WATERPROOF SALE* Super single-headboard
shelving unit; comes with delivery
delivered by phone or mail # 760-9160 or
www.waterproof.com
(982 Mazda GLC new paint, new muffler, $232 or
offer. Call 841-896-306.
1974 Mercury Montego, runc great, A/C, F/M/AM
cassette stereo, $50 and negotiable. Call
67 Mustun convertible-$4500 841-3760 First come, first served!
1973 Pontiac Catalina PB, PS, A/C, radio extra,
cell phone 641-7897 6 p.m.
74 VA Super-Bitee new parts. Good condition.
$100 or best offer. 841-8752
70 VW Beetle, excellent condition, no rust, host works, radio, white. N. W. Lawrence. $800
76 Chevette for sale. Runs well, cheap transportation.
$250. 841-2243
78 Datson 2802-7250 running condition. Needs some body work or best offer. Call 841-1421.
Bertone 3963, leather interior, loaded. 31K,
1984, another interior, 31K or 814-7250.
FUN SPORTS CAR-197 TR7, great condition,
$150.00, Call: 641-864-6741 (Jenexa).
CARS SELL for $155 (average!) Also jeeps, trucks, etc. Now available. 805-687-6099 Ext. S 735 for details.
BUY NEW CARS, NEW TRUCKS $250 &Osp;400
CBUY DELBERT, D BILTON THOMAS 843-8449
LOST-FOUND
Found keys in Frazer, 1st floor on 8/27; 2 car and others.
Call 849-6435.
Tune up your import car, $35. Parts and labor included,
satisfaction guaranteed. Call Aaron,
841-4629
Gold ring with one pearl and two small diamonds
of white gold. This ring was worn
week ago. Strong sentimental value. $$20 reward
Lost! organize/appartment book–has business cards (D design), pen, personal items and notes. Probably lost in Snow Hall or Stauffer. Please call 841-9607.
Lost cat-$100 reward. Yellow neutered male, thin with scars. Call 841-2296.
LOSM-STen's class ring. St. Johns High School, B洛森, KS Royal blue stone, Grad date 1966, inside on insite BGE. If found, PLEASE return to McColm Hall, room 522 or call 64718 and ask
Lost! Teal green Janetanz swater. Left in 400
rooms of La Salle University.
Please return 10 language lab, 5th Floor.
$10-660 weekly up mail circulating. Rush itself addressed stamped envelope. Opportunity, 9018 Wilshire Blvd, Box 225, Dept. Q, Beverly Hills, CA
90211
ATTENTION: STUDENTS! *Nurse first preparing for Fall/Winter work.* $7.75 to start. If you have a student with special needs, hubs are postpaid and may earn 2, 3, 4 credits/qtr or semester. Must apply now.
Available immediately part-time position (12-20 hours per week) as research assistant with social media analytics, knowledge of computerized statistics analysis, perferably SPSZ, Knowledge of mainframe architecture, and knowledge of job duties for hour. Send resumes to Director of Evaluation Services, DCCCCA, 220 W. 25th St., Lawrence, by mail.
Bakery sale/cleaning. One for Tuesday, Thursday, Sunday, and six for Wednesday, from 10 a.m., to 6 p.m., vacation after 1 year. KU grad student preferred. 34 per hour after trained. Apply at Munchers
Bike mechanic with Shop Experience. Call Gary at 843-6033.
Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse and Mass. Street Deli now hiring food service and table service staff, including barware, kitchenware, tour table service $2.01 plan tips. Must have ex-commute to Buffalo Bob's. Visit at 718 Mass. above Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse.
Bucky's Drive-in, a KU tradition for 26 years, opens for the noon-hour shift, weekend shift, and night shift. Apply in person between to a m. and 5 p.m. THANK YOU! BUCKY'S DRIVE-IN.
Checkers Pizza has an immediate opening for 5 pizza orders on Sundays. Must be willing to work at a restaurant or take on a Saturday night, $4/hour to start and $3.50/hr after 2 weeks. Apply in person. Apply to Checkers Pizza.
Computer Service Agency is looking for a part-time computer operator in job entitlements with an IT background and support devices. Applicant must be experienced in the operation of the above equipment and have demonstrated proficiency. Apply at Computer Service Agency, 2017 Lousiana, LAWRENCE KS 845-643-8629, 2017 Lousiana, LAWRENCE KS 845-643-8629.
DESPERATELY SEEKING._WORK STUDY
STUDENTS for 3 positions at Spencer Art
Assistant. Inquire with Spencer Art
Assistant, and Information Dept.Telephone Assistant.
Inquire at the 5th floor of Spencer Art Museum.
H A S T R E A N B L E W H I M E LITTLE E H A T
Come join the fun of working on the turpike! Hardee new accepting applications for all shifts.
Good pay, flexible hours, meal discounts, free toll allowance, and a pleasant atmosphere can all be yours by applying to our job. Or if you had did it yourself, please anyways.
Kansas and Burge Union Food Service Departments need part-time help: room dancers 11 a.m.-2 p.m. or 1 p.m.-4 p.30 m. line workers 11 a.m.-m.1 p.m. dishwashing 10 a.m.-2.30 m. All jobs Monday through Friday: 8.16 a.m. Apply to the Office of the Fifth Level Main Building. EOE 835
Dependable, mature person to assist with personal care for my disabled (former professor) husband in exchange for rent in pleasant separate apartment. Please contact us on hourly basis weekly. 7:30 a.m; 8:00 a.m. Only students interested in, or experienced with handicapped, please call 842-3370.
Female for assistance with my care. Mornings or evenings. Call 749-4395.
GOVERNMENT JOBS $10,000 $14,000 $25,000 yr. Now
GOVERNMENT JOBS 100,670 600,670 600,670
Now the federal list,
$10,000 $14,000 $25,000 yr. Now
the federal list,
SALES- I need 12 salespersons to help sell a great line of over 250 gift items in this area. P/T / or F/T Flexible hours. This is a great general operable position. Call or email us at john.mcgrath@aironet.com your own call! Boast Mr. Navon at 843-9430
Need help with fall harvest and wheat planting
Prefer experise combine operator. Call after
response.
Now hiring experienced line cooks and prep cooks. Wage commensurate with experience. Must have some daytime availability. Apply at 179 Mass, above Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse.
assist with general office duties; working on special administrative and budgetary projects as a consultant. Req's bachelor's degree or good mathematical skills, some familiarity with bookkeeping procedures & microcomputers
STUDENT MONTHLY POSITION AVAILABLE
12-10 HOURS (JOURNAL) Duties include: processing student appointments for the College of LAHS and maintaining records on microcomputer
New hire for part-time video route position.
Will maintain, repair, and collect video games.
Must have experience and creditable references.
Available in Ruffin's Rocky Mountain 719 Mass,
above Ruffin's Rocky Mountain.
Runza needs part-time morning help 9 a.m.-
Person to sit with 8 year-old after school
Atlanta area 24hrs after school and Saturday's
payroll and accounting procedures and knowledge of microcomputer database management systems. Application Deadline: 09.14. 1997; Apply in person in Rm. 210 Strong Hall Tentative fee: $300.
RUNZA
WINE PAIR
RESTAURANT
2 p.m., Monday through Friday and evenings
5 p.m.-10 p.m., Monday through Friday.
Runza Drive-Inn
2700 Iowa St.
749-2615
St. Lawrence Campus Center needs church nursery assistance, Sundays 9 and/or 10 a.m. to $5 per session. Call Diana at 749-1633 or Karla at 814-1548.
Now accepting applications from energetic, hardworking, responsible individuals. Openings available on all shifts.
Teacher's aides needed for childcare program, 12:5-30 for infant room and 11:30-30 for five year-olds. Classroom experience and or study in an adult classroom. Children Learning Center, 331 Main, weekdays. Waterbathal Representative-National company seeks college reps to sell waterbathal launcher. "Lunar Launcher" (TM) Send name, address, email, and contact information to P.O. Box 2542, Shawnee Mission, KS 62501. P. O. Box 2542, Shawnee Mission, KS 62501.
Sub & Stuff
Sandwich Shop
Attention!!
Delivery!!
Now accepting applicants for drivers.
20-40 hours, hourly wage plus CASH
PAID NIGHTLY. Please apply at
cwr@uqi.com, 51-871-8371, W-23rd
MISCELLANEOUS
$103-$380 Weekly/P, mailing circulars! "Quietas/bosses" information: RUSH self-addressed address: CM/MA-CDQ POLB 7730, Rockford, IL 61126.
"And sometimes, in my dreams, I remember Student Senate. but we don't talk about Manderly anymore. But you can always remember your past. You can also apply now. Kansas and Burge Unions. 864-3710."
SKI KEYSTONE for Thanksgiving, November
transfers/transfer lift tickets Call 843-5696
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**Plans for Lawrence Westley Church. One hour Sunday morning, two hours during week for rehearsal with solos. Compensation is use of church and piano for personal rehearsal).
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119 Stuffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
16
Friday, September 4, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Simon says, go for a world record
By MICHAEL HORAK
Staff writer
Tom Shuffie of Northwich, England, has a world record for charming earthworms. John Juranitch, of Ely, Minn., has one for shaving his head with an ax.
Now, members of the Chi Omega sorority, 1345 W. Campus Rd., and Alpha KappaLambda fraternity, 2021 Stewart Ave., hope to be able to join the team, said Carrie Bloo, a Chi Omega member.
The two greek houses will try to impress the editors of the Guinness Book of World Records by getting as many KU students as possible. In a play, a children's mimicking game on Spy,
Organizers say they expect more than 2,000 people to participate in the game, which will begin at 3 p.m. in front of Allen Field House.
Officials with the Guinness Book of World Records in New York City said yesterday that they had never heard of massive Simon Says games, but that they would take the results of the event for possible inclusion in their annual record book.
"We've had all kinds of activities like this that people do," said Cyd Smith, assistant editor for the book. "I've got calls from people claiming to have the longest conga line, the biggest 'twister' game and the largest musical chairs game. Nothing ever surprises me."
Participants in the game will pay $2 in advance or $2.50 on the day of the game. Tickets will be available next week at Alpha KappaLambda and Chi Omega and on Wescoe Beach. The $5,000 expected to be raised from the game will be donated to the Cancer Research Center at the University
of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan.
In Simon Says, a leader tells a group of people to do certain tasks such as touching their toes. The group follows the leaders command only if he says, "Simon Says" before the command. If anyone in the group follows a command and "Simon Says" is not mentioned, he or she is eliminated from the game.
The last person left in the game will win a round trip for two to Chicago. Several prizes donated by local merchants will be given to the final 20 contestants.
given to the Kappa The Simon Says game will replace the fall Wheat Meet parties that Chi Omega and Alpha Kappa Lambda have sponsored in the past. The higher drinking age made large campus parties unfeasible.
Area runners ready for race season
By IULIE McMAHON
Staff writer
It's fall again. The air is crisp, the leaves are turning and runners are training for road races.
There are many 10-kilometer and shorter road races in the Lawrence and Kansas City areas that runners are gearing up for this fall. How do runners decide which races to run?
"This might sound silly, but a lot of runners look at the T-shirt," said Dave Williams, Overland Park senior. "If it's a chinty T-shirt, then a lot of runners won't come back."
Williams, who runs in 10-kilometer races,
said the reputation of the race is important to runners. A low-quality T-shirt given by a race is a sign of a race without a high-
reputation.
replied. Also, he said runners considered what the weather would be like when the race was run, and the time of day. In addition, they look for a course that isn't hilly if they are trying for a personal best.
"A lot of people think it's crazy to roll out of bed at 8 a.m. to run, but it can be kind of a social thing." Williams said.
San Francisco, manager of the Athlete's Foot, 942 Massachusetts St., said he liked the social aspect of running, too.
"It's fun to get to know people who put the race on," he said. "Most of the people are pretty friendly during the race and after."
Schaffer said that when he used to run races, he ran four to six miles every other day to prepare.
coach, said the recreational runner who ran in 10-kilometer races should run 35 miles a week, but running competitively for longer distances required from 70 to 100 miles a week.
to prepare
Al Ferehesetian, KU assistant men's track
To avoid injuries, runners should stretch properly, buy good shoes designed for their style of running and not run on hard surfaces every day, Fereshetian said.
Races coming soon:
■ Tomorrow: Pomona Lake Fun Festival Dam Run, four miles, Pomona Lake.
■ Monday: The Phidippides 8-Kilometer Classic Roadrace and One-Mile Fun Run, Westport, Kansas City, Mo.
Sept. 13: HPMA Decade Run-Off, 10 kilometer run and five-kilometer walk, two-mile jog, Overland Park.
Sept. 20: five-kilometer run, Mission.
two-mile pog. via Aerial tram
Sept. 20, five-kilometer run, Mission
Dormant psych honor group re-forms
Staff writer
By VALOREE ARMSTRONG
The KU chapter of Psi Chi, which 65 years ago became the first chapter of the national honor society in psychology, is regrouping after four years of inactivity.
Patricia Schoenrade, the society's faculty sponsor, said yesterday that she had received letters and phone calls from about 30 interested students. An organizational meeting is scheduled for 4:30 p.m., Sept. 16 in 547 Fraser Hall.
Schoenrade, assistant professor of psychology, said revitalizing Psi Chi was a positive move.
"Students feel a need to communicate with others in their major," she said.
wHiR Psi Chi members must either have completed eight hours in psychology, or six hours if they currently are enrolled in two hours. Also, they must be in the top 35 percent of their class and have a 3.0 grade point average or better in psychology courses.
The one-time membership fee is $25.
The one-time membership fee is $25.
At the national level, Psi Chi sponsors research competitions, recognition programs and conventions.
Stephanie White, Humboldt junior,
agreed. "I'm interested because I want to
meet more people interested in the same field." White said.
Brian Hobbs, Shawnee junior, said that other groups, such as engineers, had clubs where they could socialize and share ideas, and he agreed that psychology enthusiasts needed one, too.
"We psychology students don't really have time to get together and talk." Hobbs said. "I know there are a lot of people in psychology classes, but it doesn't make an influence. It's a good thing when you get a lot of people together to brainstorm."
In 1922, the University of Kansas became the national society's first charter member.
TOMMY HOLLIS
Lisa Jones/KANSAN
It's a toss-up
Gregg Myer, Topeka senior, balances one pin on his head while jugging several others. Myer was practicing in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall yesterday morning.
TELL THE TOWN-CALL THE KANSAN 864-4358
WELCOME TO K.U.
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Details page 6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday September 8,1987 Vol.98,No.12
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Reagan praises Landon at party
Staff writer
by JENNIFER ROWLAND
TOPEKA — Prominent Kansas Republicans and local and national politicians gathered in Topeka on Sunday to see President and Nancy Reagan pay tribute to former Gov. Alf Landon, three days before his 100th birthday.
before his foot fall.
The Reagans stopped in Topeka to honor Kansas' elder statesman on their way back to the White House after a three-and-a-half week vacation in California.
week vacation in California.
Landon graduated from the KU law school in 1908 and 24 years later became governor of Kansas. In 1936 he was the Republican party's nominee for president, but he lost in a landslide to Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Reagan spoke briefly to guests, including dignitaries, members of the media and the KU Band, at Landon's home.
"Governor, you preceded me by a bit as our party's nominee for president, and I had a little better luck, but I also had better years and an easier field," Reagan said. "But no one ever did prouder as a candidate by his party or the nation than you."
See related stories p. 8
Guests included Landon's daughter, U.S. Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R.Kan.; Kansas Gov. Mike Hayden and U.S. Sen. Robert Dole, R.Kan. They sat next to the house, facing about 100 prominent Kansas Republicans and friends of the Landon family who watched Reagan from the lawn of the eight-pilar mansion. Family members looked on from the porch.
About an hour before the president arrived, KU band members trickled in by two and three to the lawn through a tree-lined driveway. Wooden stakes with white ropes divided the guests from the local and national press, which included Wall Street Journal correspondent and KU graduate Gerald Seib, and CBS White House correspondent Bill Plante.
FUNNY
The threat of rain turned into a sprinkle as the presidential motorcade pulled up to the residence, and the president, dressed in a dark suit and maroon tie, and escorted by his wife, walked to the porch and entered the house through the front door. Reagan paused a few moments to smile and wave as the KU band played "Hail to the Chief."
Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for academic affairs, was one of the guests at the Landon celebration. Brinkman said he was a friend of Landon's.
"I thought the governor rose to the occasion," Brinkman said. "He's kind of a living perspective, if you think about it. You've got somebody who has lived 100 years and can still comment on current events."
After a brief private conversation in the Landon home, Reagan escorted Landon to the porch. Standing in front of a red, white and blue sign that read "Happy 100th Governor Land," Landon introduced the president
The crowd greeted Reagan with laughter as he joked about Landon's age.
See REAGAN, p. 6, col. 1
Fred Sadowski/KANSAN
WASHINGTON — A man in a suit gestures while speaking at a podium. A woman stands beside him, looking on.
Top, Nancy Patton, Huntsville, Mo. junior, enjoys a piece of cake at former Governor Alf Landon's 100th birthday party. Bottom, President Reagan speaks to guests at the party. The Kansas University Marching Jayhawks played for Reagan; Landon, center; and U.S. Sen. Nancy Kassebaum at Landon's residence in Topeka on Sunday afternoon.
Strange crowds turn out for president
Staff writer
TOPEKA - People sure do funny things when the president comes to town.
By KIRK ADAMS
Thousands of people lined West-
chester Road on the east side of
Gage Park in Topeka on Sunday
afternoon to see President Reagan's
motorcade. Reagan was visiting
former Kansas Gov. Alof Landon in honor of Landon's 100th birthday.
See related stories p. 8.
One woman dressed as a fairy princess to greet the U.S. head of state.
Children climbed trees hoping to get a glimpse of him. Each time the crowd roared, parents held their kids up so they could see.
Local schools brought out their entire marching bands just for a couple of songs.
People do silly things when the president comes to town.
One man filled a large orange hot-air balloon, the "Spirit of Topeka," behind the yellow police ribbon in the center of Gage Park.
The balloonist, Paul Costello,
Topeka resident, said the city of
Topeka had asked the owner of the
balloon to lift it up in the balloon for the president.
"I thought this would be a good medium for him to understand the message we're trying to send," Anderson said. He wanted to make sure that somebody at the parade spoke for U.S. farmers, he said.
Stephen Anderson, a farmer from Alma, pushed a wheelbarrow full of manure to the parade route. A sign on top said, "U.S. Farm Policy."
"We're just putting it up for the president, and right after that we'll take it down," Costello said.
There were other protestors, too, but most people were just trying to see the president.
Automobile noises and rumors that the president's car was coming prompted false alarms from one end of the crowd, which repeatedly burst into applause.
we'll take it down.
People do weird things when the president comes to town.
Two people who were excited about seeing the president were Reggie and Kellen Hunt, 8- and 69-years-old, of Holton. Their mother, Jackie Hunt, a 1974 graduate of the University of Kansas, said she brought the boys to the park to see the president. They had to wait a while. Hunt said, but they did get a good view of him as he drove by.
As he passed, Reagan waved with a happy, laughing smile.
When asked if Reagan looked the same as he did on television, both Reggie and Kellen said yes. But later Kellen admitted that he had never seen the president on television. The two were not aware that Reagan was in town to celebrate
When the president did drive by, the crowd roared and jumped in a wave of sound and movement that followed the car down the street.
"He had a horse called Old Red." Fisher said. "You used to see him from time to time riding on his grounds."
An Lenton's on duty. Robert Fisher, 63, of Topeka, was more aware of Landon.
rister said he, too, had come to the park to get a glimpse of the president.
Alf Landon's birthday
Kathy Williams, Topeka resident, came to see the president, but she had other things on her mind. too.
Williams held a sign reading, "Justice, Not Bad Old Boys," which referred to Reagan's power to appoint judges to the United States Supreme Court.
Williams said she decided to carry a sign at the parade because she didn't think many people would be protesting.
would be president.
"The president needs to know that there are people in this part of the country who'll oppose his poli-
See CROWD, p. 6, col. 1
Commission may discuss parking at Colony Woods
By VALOREE ARMSTRONG
Staff writer
Lawrence city commissioners tonight are expected to discuss about 100 overflow parking spaces built last week without the city's approval at Colony Woods apartments, 1301 W. 24th St.
The parking lots were built because of a misunderstanding between the city and complex-owner Randall Davis, said Linda Finger, city planner.
city park. Colony Woods added the additional parking spaces last Wednesday and Thursday to accommodate the almost 900 KU students who live there. Parking shortages quickly developed at the complex during the first week of classes at the University of Kansas. Some of the 100 spaces are near the area designated as a flood plain in the original city-approved site plan for the complex.
Geaid Burkhardt, Colony Woods manager, said he thought city officials had given the go-ahead for the additional spaces.
But Finger said Friday that there was a misunderstanding between Colony Woods and City Hall. The complex should have received city approval before beginning construction.
Finger said the city would not file suit against Colony Woods.
"We're approaching it from the standpoint that it was a misunderstanding and let's resolve the issue," she said.
the said. Colony Woods could have faced
fines from $10 to $100 for each zoning code offense. The City Commission still must approve a revised site plan, although the changes already have been made.
But commissioners might bring up the issue soon. City Commissioner Sandra Praeger said yesterday that she expected the issue to be discussed at tonight's commission meeting, which begins at 7 p.m.
If commissioners don't approve the new spaces, Colony Woods must make changes accordingly — even if it means tearing out what's already been built. The city is scheduled to consider the plan at its Sept. 15 meeting.
Praeger said that she hadn't talked to all the people involved, but that she thought Colony Woods officials had tried to be responsive to the parking problems they were having.
"But they should have known any alterations to the site plan would have to be approved," she said. "Any change would have required flood plain changes. That area is so sensitive because of flooding concerns downstream — we'll be very concerned."
Colony Woods is adjacent to a main drainage viaduct that has caused flooding to the south of the complex, Praeger said.
She said city officials would not consider inconvenience to Colony Woods' owner and manager.
You park; you pay
"We have to look at the best interests of the community," Prager said.
Staff writer
Rv IAVAN OWENS
Lot near stadium receiving meters
Some students who regularly park in lot 91 by Memorial Stadium may soon have to pay an additional 25 cents an hour to park there.
the installation of 500 parking meters for the yellow-zoned parking area southeast of Memorial Stadium will be completed some time this month, said Donna Hultine, assistant director of parking services. The lot has about 1,100 spaces.
in the past, visitors who paid 75 cents a day and students with yellow-zone permits shared the lot. Access to the lot was controlled by a booth at each of the two entrances.
Ray Moore, chairman of the parking board, said the board had changed the lot because the University of Kansas needed to accommodate visitors.
"We wanted to eliminate the expense of booths but continue to have the same flexibility of who could come in and out of the lot," Moore said.
Huline said the meters were not designed for the students who pay $40 annually to park in the lot. But students may want to pay the 25 cents an hour because the meters will take about half the spots in lot 91, which is the yellow-zoned lot closest to the Union.
"Anyone with a yellow sticker can park at the meters, but they will have to pay the meters," Hultine said. "It will be just like lot 90, down by Robinson."
Yellow-zoned lots 92, 93 and 94, which are all adjacent to lot 91, will not have meters.
Hultine said students who parked at the meters would have to abide by the meter's time limit of ten hours. Violators are subject to multiple ticketing at $2 a ticket for every additional hour over the limit.
Hultine said the number of meters was not arbitrary. From calculations
at the booths last spring, parking services estimated that an average of 500 visitors a day used lot 91.
Moore said setting aside an area just for visitors would force more students into lots farther from campus. But the plan will alleviate the competition between visitors and students for parking space, he said.
"Parking is tight, and everyone is in the same boat." Moore said. "We haven't gotten to the point where we can guarantee everyone a parking spot."
Hultine said the new policy was a part of a parking overhaul plan that the parking board adopted in the spring to increase parking availability. As part of the plan, lots 91 and 94 were resurfaced and redrawn this summer, adding 150 spaces.
The change in lot 91, which is listed in the Parking Regulations 1987-1988 pamphlet, will go into effect after the meters are installed.
Area where yellow parking spaces will become metered spaces
LOT 91
Spencer Museum of Art
Kansas Union Dyche He
N
BUILT IN KANSAS
Inside
Today is the first day of the Tuesday Forum, a weekly opinion-editorial page. This week's page will feature a graduate student's summer experiences in the Soviet Union. See page 5.
Inside
greek houses must meet stricter city fire code
By BRAD ADDINGTON
Many KU fraternities and sororites will have to make changes in coming months to comply with a stricter interpretation of the city fire code, Lawrence Fire Chief Jim McSwain said Friday.
Staff writer
The new interpretation of the code coincides with a fire prevention program that officials began after an April 26 fire at the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity, 1645 Tennessee St. The blaze caused about $300,000 damage.
As part of the program, the fire department conducted inspections of all KU Greek houses this summer. In the coming months, the department will check up on violations that were found
According to the fire code, so-called "grand
father clause" violations are allowed only "if, in the opinion of the chief, they do not constitute a distinct hazard to life and property."
a distinct hazard to humans. McSwain said he had adopted a more stringent view of what violations presented a distinct hazard because of serious fires in the past. Therefore, many Greek houses will have to make changes.
to make changes. McSwain would not specify the changes required in individual houses. He said the city attorney's office had advised him that those records would not be public until officials had completed their efforts to get houses to comply.
Changes that might be made include the installation of smoke detectors and enclosing stairwells
Fire officials have informed each of the houses' corporation boards of the required
able, McSwainman,
Joelle Gleim, Dearfield, IL, senior and
president of the Sigma Delta Tau sorority, 1625
Erehill Road, said she doubted the house
would have to make many changes. She said
the house had been renovated over the summer
in compliance with the city fire code.
changes. The corporation boards, which consist of alumni members, will submit schedules for making the changes. Fire officials will then determine whether the schedules are reasonable. McSwain said.
Pete Owens, Omaha, Neb., senior and vice president of Sigma Phi Epsilon, said his fraternity had worked closely with the fire department this summer during the house's renovation.
"The fire detector we have in the house right now ran about $20,000," he said. "We tried to
exceed the code in every way we could."
As another part of the program, the fire department will present a 10-minute videotape to all Greek houses this semester on how to prevent and respond to fires.
McSwain said that the department was aware that the program could be costly but that the elimination of life-threatening hazards would justify its cost.
"This is the most important life-saving program, in my opinion, that has ever been enforced in Lawrence," McSwain said.
Only two houses now have sprinkler systems — the Alpha Chi Omega sorority, 1500 Sigma Nu Place, and the Sigma Chi fraternity, 1439 Tennessee St. However, many houses have decided that they want sprinkler systems, McSwain said.
---
2
Tuesday, September 8, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Shiite Muslims free West German after keeping him seven months
DAMASCUS, Syria — Shiite Muslim kidnappers in Lebanon yesterday freed one of their two West German hostages from seven months of captivity, and the Bonn government said Iran and Syria played a role in the release.
Syrian army officers drove 47-year-old engineer Alfred Schmidt to Damascus and turned L.m over to West German diplomats.
'It' s wonderful to be a free man
again," Schmidt said before he was taken to the airport for the flight home.
Protests of Berlin Wall mark Honecker visit
"They didn't mistreat me. The treatment was all right. I'm OK. I want to see my family and friends."
Schmidt was released at 4 a.m. in the slums of south Beirut, a stronghold of Iranian-backed Shiite militants.
BONN, West Germany — Erich Honecker, the first leader of East Germany to visit West Germany, was greeted Monday with a demand that his security forces stop shooting people who try to flee the communist nation.
At a banquet Monday evening, Chancellor Helmut Kohl also con-
denied the Berlin Wall. Honecke, who supervised the wall's construction in 1961, saw motionless at his side and stared straight ahead.
As Kohl spoke, about 150 people stood outside the banquet hall chanting "Down with the wall!" and "Scrap the shoot-to-kill orders!"
Jesse Jackson says his chances are good
PITTSBURGH — Jesse Jackson, declaring he has a good chance of becoming the United States' first black president, said yesterday he would announce his candidacy for the Democratic nomination on Oct. 10 and pledged to campaign for "jobs, jobs, jobs, peace and justice."
"In a real sense, I'm trying to fulfill the best dimension of the Constitution," he said. "If I can in fact become president, . . . every woman can, every man, boy and woman and girl can," he said on ABC-TV's "Good Morning America."
Garbage barge brings fame to Long Island
NEW YORK — Long Island's real claim to fame is not its beaches, the Long Island Expressway or even "Jaws." Long Island is most famous for the wandering garbage barge.
sion of a poll taken last month of 100 guests at a Long Island hotel.
A majority of those who participated chose the garbage barge, gained fame when it was rejected by six states and three countries
That, at least, was the conclu From The Associated Press.
Officials see end to contras
WASHINGTON — A consensus has formed in the Reagan administration that the 6-year-old U.S. struggle against Nicaragua's leftist government will be lost by the end of the year unless present trends are reversed, officials have said.
The Associated Press
According to a number of administration experts on Central America, a sense of alarm exists, based on the perception that the regional peace agreement signed last month heavily favors the Sandinista government.
Leading Democrats are more optimistic. House Speaker Jim Wright, D-Texas, for example, said the Sandistas had made an impressive start toward complying with the terms of the agreement, which requires democratic reform.
"All they (the Sandinistas) have to do is wait until December," said one official, speaking on condition that he not be identified. Another said, "Time is on the Sandinists' side."
The agreement also calls for an end to U.S. aid to the rebel movement.
One administration official said the administration was working on new ideas to head off what they saw as a potential major strategic defeat for the United States. President Reagan said the contrast would not be abandoned. But he has not specified how that goal would be accomplished.
The current U.S. aid allocation to the contraas expires Sept. 30. The Sandinistas are not required under the agreement to show a good-faith effort to make democratic reforms until Nov. 7.
The officials think the Sandistas need only maintain a democratic facade until late fall to achieve final victory.
As the officials see it, the mood in Congress is such that virtually any token democratic gesture by the Sandinistas will be seized on by the Democrat-controlled Congress and guarantee defeat of any contra aid
Congress seems no longer willing to go along with the administration's view that the Sandinistas will reform only under relentless military pressure from the contras.
Wright has said, "I'm going to wait just as long as the peace process is working — as long as there is any peace in Iraq — and I'm peace before I start talking war."
Once the contras realize they cannot get any more aid from Washington, the rebels will become demoralized and be forced to disband, these officials have said.
request.
The officials predicted that the Sandinistas would dismantle the democratic trappings now in place once the contra threat was removed and the government is under a lifestyle system and resume efforts to subvert their neighbors.
While maintaining a confident public posture, contra leaders privately are worried that the end may be near.
Siamese twins making progress
The Associated Press
BALTIMORE (AP) — Doctors were slightly encouraged yesterday by the progress of infant twins born joined at the head and separated in a 22-hour operation, and they plan to keep the infants unconscious for up to a week as they recover from the trauma of surgery.
Patrick and Benjamin Binder, of Ulm, West Germany, were in critical but stable condition at Johns Hopkins Children's Center a full day after their operation, which ended at 5:15 a.m. Sunday.
Doctors were upbeat but cautious Monday, saying no particularly troublesome problems had arisen.
"We didn't know how much bleeding or respiratory difficulty there would be," said Dr. Mark Rogers, who coordinated the surgery. "It appears they have developed a stable pattern in both, and we are able at this point to cope with problems."
"We're slightly encouraged they're doing well this morning," Rogers
But he also said, "We will not know how this turns out for several
weeks."
weeks.
Doctors are controlling virtually all the 7-month-old twins' bodily functions as they remain in the drug-induced comas, or prolonged anesthetic sleep, Rogers said.
Two major risks are bleeding and swelling of the brain tissue.
"We would hope that it would take no more than five or seven drug-induced days to allow their brains to recover from the stress of surgery." he said.
Soviets grant visa to Begun
The Associated Press
Successfully emerging from this state is their first big hurdle, Rogers
MOSCOW (AP) — Jewish activist Josef Begun and more than a half-dozen other "refusenks" were told yesterday they could emigrate to Israel after years of waiting for permission to leave the Soviet Union.
Begun, who first applied for an exit visa 16 years ago, was released from prison in February.
"This morning someone from the Moscow visa office called father by telephone and told him that they were giving their permission to go to Israel." Begun's son, Boris, said by telephone.
The elder Begun told Western reporters that he went to the Moscow visa office to fill out papers Monday and speculated that granting of the exit visas could be connected to a summit between Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev and President Reagan.
In a telephone interview with Israeli Television, Begun said: "We are very happy. We feel like we were born again. We were waiting too long, but this is wonderful, and we feel exalted. All our feelings are at meeting other people soon on our land, in our country, in Jerusalem."
Begun, 55, is one of the best-known Jewish "witnesses," the name given to those refused permission to leave the Soviet Union. He had taught Hebrew and Jewish culture in Moscow, which is illegal, and was a leader in efforts for Jewish emigration.
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Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, September 8, 1987
3
Local Briefs
BSU chooses new officers for 1987-88 year
The Black Student Union has announced its officers for the 1987- 88 school year.
Caution urged near children's crossings
Brian Dougherty, Leavenworth senior, was elected president. Vice president is Morton Wayne Webb, Lenexa junior; treasurer is Julia Eklund, Kansas City, Kan, sophomore; and secretary is Melinda Grace, Kansas City, Mo, senior
Lawrence public schools open today, so KU students should be aware of mph school zones near campus. Areas to watch for with the flashing signs during public school hours include Sunset Street, Indiana Street, Howard Road and Kentucky streets.
Whizzo the Clown in critical condition
The man known for years as Whizzo the Clown to Lawrence and Kansas City-area residents remained in critical condition yesterday at St. Luke's Hospital, a hospital spokesman said.
Frank Wiziarella, 71, a Prairie Village resident, has been in intensive care for several weeks. He entered the hospital in July for surgery on a stomach tumor and has had complications since, said his wife, Kitty Wiziarella.
"They're certainly doing all they can do," she said. "It's just between the patient and God."
Frank Wiziarella created the Whizzo character for KMBC-TV and also appeared on KCMO-TV, which is now KCTV.
Engineering group offering awards
Minority students in engineering may apply before Dec. 1 for 130 fellowship awards available through the National Consortium for Graduate Degrees for Minorities in Engineering, Inc.
Each GEM award pays tuition,
fees and a stipend of $5,000 per
academic year and provides summer
employment with one of $2
employees. The value of the
between $20,000 and
$30,000 each.
Corrections
Because of a copy editor's error, the Pyramid Pizza providing food for the canoe race between the University of Kansas and Kansas State University was misidentified in Friday's Kansan. The Pyramid Pizza is at 707 N. 12th St. in Manhattan.
because of an editor's error, the name of Glen Marotz, professor of geography, was misspelled in Friday's Kansan.
Jeff Klein/KANSAI
50s-era poetry club is part of River City Reunion
From staff and wire reports.
BERT G. LEMMER AND BERNARD M. CASELL
By JULIE McMAHON
Poet Allen Ginsberg, left, talks with Tim Miller, KU lecturer in religious studies. The River City Reunion opened last night with a party at the Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St.
Staff writer
There's a club on campus that got its name from a '50s television show and is reminiscent of the '50s era.
Club Babaloe, whose name came from the television show "I Love Lucy," is dedicated to poetry and the memory of the beat era, in which bohemian youths voiced discontent with post World War II U.S. values.
The club, which is three years old, consists of poets who read their works to each other. In the past, they've met in homes and at the Glass Onion, 624 W. 12th St. But this week they will meet in a back room of the City Museum of City Reunion. The room has become Club Babaloo West.
Bill Volmut, Topea senior, said "Dharma Bums" by K Jacker奥蔼, a beat author, had influenced him and given him the idea for the readings.
"I came up with the idea of reading at people's houses to promote community poetry, drink wine and have a good time," he said.
Mike Mader, Great Bend graduate
who is just kind of do it
when we feel like.
Five students organized the club's contribution to the River City Reunion. Along with Voltmot and Mader, the core of the group includes Bill Hoag, Wichita graduate student; Alison Dishinger, Lawrence freshman; and John Gardner, Lincoln, Neb., graduate student.
"It's not a classroom environment at all," Mader said. "It's just straight appreciation of people getting up and reading."
Volmut said, "We haven't had people take their clothes off. It's just a celebration of life basically. Even the professors there are really
One of those professors helped Club Babaloo become involved with the River City Reunion.
George Wedge, associate professor of English, teaches a class on works by William S. Burroughs, Allen Ginsberg and Jack Kerouac. Wedge met Burroughs when Burroughs visited his class.
So when James Grauerholz, Burroughs' secretary, suggested bringing nationally known and local poets to Lawrence, Wedge became involved. And through Wedge, Club Babaloo became involved.
Grauerholz and Bill Rich, a
Lawrence promoter, are River City Productions. They will produce the reunion's off-campus events. Student Union Activities and the department of English have organized the oncampus events.
Club Babaloo and the reunion organizers said they were looking forward to this week.
"I'm looking forward to the moments when one thinking person speaking causes another to enter a part of their mind they haven't been
in for awhile and answer back,"
Wedge said.
Rich said Jello Biafra of the band, The Dead Kennedys, and Timothy Leary were both scheduled to speak at 2 p.m. Saturday at Liberty Hall. Biafra, who will arrive in Lawrence on Thursday, is a late addition to the River City Reunion because he was acquitted just last week in an obscenities trial.
Although readings won't begin until today, the River City Reunion
RIVER CITY
REUNION
The River City Reunion book signing will be at noon today at the Oread Book Shop in the Kaneland Union building from noon to 1:30 p.m. through Saturday.
The River City Reunion showing of poetry videotapes by William Knief is scheduled for 1 p.m. today through Aug. 12, showing Room of the Kansas Union.
■ The River City Reunion art display exhibit of works by S. Clay Wilson and other alumni artists and current students is scheduled for 2 p.m. today and tomorrow in the Browsing Room of the Kansas Union.
■ The River City Reunion group fiction reading will be at 2 p.m. today in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union, and the group poetry reading will be at the same time in the Pine Room.
The River City Reunion reading with Anne Waldman and Andrei Codrescu will be at 7 p.m. today in the Union Ball Room in the Kansas
At Club Babaloo West, behind Hoch Auditorium, open mike readings and performances by students and guests are scheduled for 9 p.m. today through Friday.
The Beatle's "Revolution" blasted as smoke and anticipation got thicker. Allen Ginsberg, supported by his cane, entered at 10 p.m. As he made his way through the crowd, he was followed by stares.
started with the Labor Day Ful
Moon Kick-Off Party last night at
the Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire
St. The bar started getting crowded
45 minutes after the 9 a.m. start.
Public opposes highway plan
Voters' protests bring end to Hayden's special session
The Associated Press
Public opposition to the high cost of Gov Mike Hayden's highway plans cut short the special legislative session, state legislators said.
"Most had stacks and stacks of letters telling them not to vote for the indexing plan," said state Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence.
Special Session 07
Hayden's
Highway Plan
Hayden wanted to pay for his $1.7 billion highway proposal with an index plan to raise motor fuel and fees at the same rate as inflation
House Minority Leader Marvin Barkis, D-Louisburg, said, "The people defeated his program. I think the people of Kansas had too many questions about it, and that was reflected in the votes."
Hayden called the special legislative session, the first in 21 years, to consider his high school plan. The session broke up Saturday afternoon after
the house overwhelmingly rejected a scaled-down compromise by a House-Senate committee.
Hayden accused Barkis and the House Democrats of failing to rise above narrow partisan politics to address the state's need for safer highways and for economic development in depressed areas.
But Barkis said the House Democrats' response to the highway proposal mirrored what Kansans were saying "in the barbershops, the cafes, the restaurants, out at the county fairs."
Hayden accused Democrats of coming to Topeka for the special session determined not to allow any program to pass, hoping the Republican majorities in the two houses would pass a program heavy in tax issues and lobbying legislation in next year's legislative election when all 165 seats are up.
But Senate Minority Leader Michael Johnston, D-Parsons, said Hayden's attempt to blame House Democrats was simply an effort to divert attention from shortcomings in the proposals and from the fact that public support just did not
materialize.
Democratic leaders noted Hayden's own plan attracted only a small minority of Republicans' votes and said the governor hadn't made his case with voters. Several GOP lawmakers agreed.
Branson said the program never had a chance.
"I really think that it was flawed from the beginning," she said. "There was just not enough preparation. That there was a good, solid proposal."
House Speaker James Braden, RClay Center, said, "We just couldn't reach a consensus of 63 votes on any one plan. What went wrong with the program is that people perceived it as being too large."
Branson said she couldn't support a multi-billion dollar highway plan when other programs just as important were being developed were going to be cut.
She said she hoped the governor learned that legislators in both parties felt strongly about programs besides highways. Those would have to be considered if another highway plan were proposed, she said.
Two scholarship halls on KU's building list
By MARK TILFORD Staff writer
Two new scholarship halls may be built at the University of Kansas by the end of the decade, the director of student housing said last week.
"It's on the agenda for future construction," said Ken Stoner, director of student housing.
Stoner requested the new scholarship halls in a list submitted a year ago to the Kansas University Endowment Association for its Campaign Kansas fund-raising drive.
Although KU's eight residence halls are full, Stoner did not request any new residence halls. He said that the demand for residence hall rooms is increasing in the future but it might not be great enough to fill a new residence hall.
Campaign Kansas is a fund-raising drive for the University with a goal of $100 million. It will be conducted over five years.
The University now has eight scholarship halls on campus, four for men and four for women. Each hall houses about 50 residents.
Stoner said the demand for housing and the popularity of the scholarship
halls in the last few years were two reasons to build new halls.
"There is a high interest in that type of housing at the University." Stoner said. "I think we've done a better job of marketing them."
Jim Martin, senior vice president of the Endowment Association and executive director for Campaign Kansas, confirmed that the scholarships list but said the request for halls would not get special treatment.
"The Endowment Association does not set priorities on any element in the campaign," Martin said. "Every project to be funded will receive equal attention."
Stoner said the halls could also be financed by a private individual or family donation.
"Typically the scholarship halls have been built by funds from private families," Stoner said.
Stoner said he had confidence in Campaign Kansas.
"I'm positive that they're going to meet the goals that they set," he said.
ANNE WYALDMAN
ANDREICODRESCU
Poetry Reading
UNION BALLROOM
Tues - Sept 8 - 7:00
SUA contribution to The River City Rai
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4
Tuesday, September 8, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The only thing that remains constant is change, to coin a phrase.
Loose change
The federal Commission of Fine Arts, however, would like to change change. One member complains that after 78 years, the penny, bearing the bearded face of Abraham Lincoln, is outdated.
So the commission has voted unanimously in favor of redesigning all five U.S. coins now being minted, from the penny to the half dollar. The new designs have not been decided, and artists may be invited to submit ideas to a design competition.
Conversely, the Franklin Delano Roosevelt "New Deal" nickel would hit the streets in abundance. Unfortunately, the sheer volume of these nickels would render them worthless.
The Ronald Reagan $100 coin could be minted and distributed much like the American Express Platinum card. Only a select few could carry the coin, with eligibility determined upon submission of tax and financial records.
Current-events buffs would be pleased with the Oliver North dollar. The same dollar bills that are in circulation now would be used, but they would be shredded into half-inch strips.
Of course the commission could just drop the issue — or pass the buck — and let the U.S. Treasury Department continue to mint the same Washington quarter, introduced in 1932, the Jefferson nickel, in 1938, and the Roosevelt dime, in 1946.
Nations must compete for economic gain and world attention, teams must compete for titles and honors, students must compete for grades and class standing and states must compete for financing and federal projects that affect their economies.
It's a competitive world out there.
Kansas has placed a bid to be the site for the superconducting super collider, an underground racetrack-shaped tunnel 52 miles in circumference used for physics research.
But don't bank on it.
A super idea
So we are glad that Kansas is in there competing.
It would be the most technologically advanced physics laboratory in the world. Indeed, it would be the largest machine ever built.
However, there is another side to the story . . . 24 other states have indicated a desire to become the host site for the superconducting super collider. Kansas by no means has it in the bag...
Kansas could definitely use the tremendous boost — both in economy and image — that a technological project would provide.
bag.
The other states have made extensive efforts, with considerable price tags, to come on top. Illinois has spent $4.5 million and California $4 million. And Kansas . . . $250,000.
Competition means assessing the opponents, gathering all your resources and giving it your best.
source is $250,000 our best? It's a start.
A child's colorful Crayola drawing belongs on display. And teachers and parents often decorate the walls or bulletin boards of classrooms and the refrigerators of homes with these precious pictures.
Dropping a bomb
But a child's drawing on the nose of a B-1B strategic bomber?
That's absurd. Unfortunately, it's no joke.
It's absurd. On foundation of recently, officials in Wichita and Derby suggested that elementary and secondary schoolchildren enter their creations in a contest to find a nose decoration for a B-1B. The contest is sponsored by the B-1 Bomber Arrival Steering Committee, which includes the chambers of commerce in Wichita and Derby.
The bomber, the state's first, will arrive at McConnell Air Force Base near Wichita in February 1988. Obviously, adult involvement in the event was not enough for the officials.
An outcry from critics, mainly parents, who thought the contest would be inappropriate for children convinced the sponsors to change their minds. Now the contest is open to all Kansans. The award for finalists of $100 in savings bonds still stands.
The fighter planes represent violence and war, and in some cases, destruction. Children could misinterpret the significance of the planes.
Children should invest their Crayolas and their time in more peaceful pursuits. Let's leave the bombing to the adults and send the children back to the drawing board.
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
News staff
Jennifer Benjamin ... Editor
Jull Warren ... Managing editor
John Benner ... News editor
Beth Copeland ... Editorial editor
Sally Streff ... Campus editor
Brian Kabertine ... Sports editor
Dun Riettlinman ... Photo editor
Bill Sket ... Graphics editor
Tom Eblen ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Bonnie J. Hardy...Business manager
Robert Hughes...Advertising manager
Kelly Scherer...Retail sales manager
Kurt Messersmith...Campus sales manager
Greg Knipp...Production manager
David Delfeff...National sales manager
Angela Clark...Classified manager
Jon Wesma...Director of marketing
Jeannie Hones...Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and less than 200 words and must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University of Kansas, please include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
Guest shots should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
can be mailed or brought to the Letters, guest shots and columns are the opinion of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University Daily Kansan. Editorials are the opinion of the Kansan editorial board.
writer will be presented. The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest shots. They are invited or brought to the Kansasan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stairwater Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60405, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 60404. Annual subscriptions by mail are $40 in Douglas County and $50 outside the county. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through
the student at POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansl, 118 Stauffer-Knall Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
JIM BERGMAN 1987
1988: RONALD REAGAN LEAVES THE PRESIDENCY WITH A $200 BILLION DEFICIT, $2 TRILLION NATIONAL DEBT AND 13697 CORDS OF FIREWOOD
Coach revered upon the Mount
It is now clear to me why Larry Brown is frustrated with college coaching. In the pros, winning coaches stay and losing coaches go. That's it. The fans don't care about religion, marital status or choice of lucky ties. And they don't even notice when the coach accepts big money to promote his favorite beer or bank.
Coach Brown has said before, on national television, that he coached in college because that's where the money is, not because he loved it. That is something the loyal fans in Lawrence just don't understand.
"Why would anyone as beloved as our Larry even consider leaving Mount Oread?" they ask. "Everyone in Lawrence thinks he's such a swell guy."
But last spring something happened to our humble, quiet father-figure. He let it slip that he was passively shopping for another basketball family. We'd all seen the scenario before: We were coming away from those who love him in the Midwest. The excitement of the coast was beckoning.
So all of Lawrence rallied to "Keep Larry in Kansas!" The University realized it had a mandate to do whatever it took to prevent the divorce from going through, even if that meant taking out a second mortgage on the football
Dan Houston Staff Columnist
program
prog am.
KU asked Coach Brown what he wanted, and he asked for lots of money and total freedom. His wishes were granted, and he agreed to stay another five years, or maybe just a week. Nobody really knows, so each morning we should thank God and the New York Knicks that he is with us another day.
Jayhawk fans have begun to see that our beloved coach isn't interested in becoming an institution in Lawrence as we had all secretly hoped. Instead, he wants to be a great basketball coach wherever the situation is most rewarding. While we find ourselves fans of fans isn't reward enough, Larry Brown has shown us that KU basketball is as much a business as a sport.
Suddenly Brown has become less than the
world's greatest sportsman. Though no one is calling him the Antichrist, he seems to have fallen from his pillar.
What a relief that must be. He will now be judged by coaching standards, not as a role model.
Larry Brown can now become whatever type of coach he chooses, perhaps in the Barry Switzer mold. Oklahoma fans worship Switzer as a winning coach and ignore his less-than-model private life. He could promote Japanese cars, Russian vodka and Gary Hart without losing the respect of an Oklahoma fan. He's an American hero because he wins. As long as he continues to do that, he can promote anyone or anything he chooses.
If Kansans expect Larry Brown to stay in Lawrence, they need to give him that kind of freedom. The University has given him total freedom in his contract; he can stay as long as he wants or leave whenever he chooses. Now the fans and media need to give him total freedom in his off-court pursuits.
Besides, I see nothing wrong with Larry Brown promoting Lawrence National Bank while he's still here. When he does leave and take all of his money to New York, Lawrence National Bank may find the vaults empty.
KU policy sends the smokers outside
Bothered by my smoke? If you don't like it, you can leave.
This is the attitude many smokers have. And until this summer the attitude was accepted. If the non-smokers didn't like it, they left to find nosmoking areas.
But now the ball is in the smoke-free court. A state law that took effect July 1 says smokers have to find a designated "smoking" area before lighting up.
It's about time. Too many times I have quietly gathered my books or my food after being smoked out by a human chimney. Too often, I have been sung by the cigarette of an oblivious smoker. For three years I have found ashes on the toilet seats in campus buildings. Now it's my turn to make the smoker take his butts outside.
That's one place where smoking will be permitted, according to a new campus policy outlined in a July 7 memorandum from Del Shankel, then acting executive vice chancellor.
The new policy is, in part, a response to the new state law that requires the proprietors of public places to post signs that show where smoking is permitted, as well as where it is prohibited. The proprietor decides where smoking is prohibited, other than in passenger elevators, school buses and public transportation vehicles, where smoking is already prohibited by state law.
Jerri Niebaum Staff Columnist
but concern for the health of faculty and students is as much a part of the new policy as the new state law is. Shankel is encouraging faculty members to kick the habit by offering smoking cessation classes.
In order to comply with the new law, the University has begun posting signs that mark smoking and non-smoking areas.
Quitting will certainly be more convenient than continuing to smoke under the new policy. The smoking areas will be few and far between—the largest and best option being outside. There probably will be at least one smoking area in each building and in some cases one on each floor, according to Shankel.
But non-smokers can get away from these fog-filled rooms. According to the memorandum, smoking is prohibited in confined areas such as cashier waiting lines, elevators, restrooms, locker rooms, hallways, stairways, copy rooms and
employee lounges.
Non-smokers: You no longer have to share a cigarette with the person next to you while waiting to pay for your food, while walking down the hall to class, while getting dressed for gym class or while relaxing in the lounge. If someone lights up near you in one of these places, remind them of the new law. It's your right.
Smokers: you no longer get to share your smoke with your non-smoking neighbors. Find a sign that says you can before lighting up. It's a privilege, not a right.
Non-smokers have become more vocal since susceptibility to lung cancer and other illnesses from someone else's cigarettes have been clearly proved.
procedures. Smokers have become less vocal as they see the obvious harm in smoking. The American Cancer Society reported that cigarette smoking was responsible for 85 percent of lung cancer cases among men and 75 percent among women. It also reported that smoking accounted for about 30 percent of all cancer deaths.
How can you defend such a habit, especially when it is not only annoying but also dangerous to
Thanks, KU, for no longer defending the habit. Jerri Niebaum is a Lawrence senior majoring in journalism.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Drop 'shopping'
I disagree with your editorial of Aug. 31,
"Shop 'til they drop," protecting the shortened
add /drop period. In the present enrollment system, shortening the period is the only way of keeping a bad situation from getting wholly out of hand.
Students already do sign up for courses they won't keep and they aren't always seriously shopping, since many don't ever show up, even the first day. Though this defensive measure is understandable, it makes first-day rosters meaningless.
*readings.* Drop / add printouts come too late to be
useful, and departments cannot call up whole rosters on their computer terminals but only individual students' schedules, which is a laborious process. Therefore, instructors in high-demand courses that are short on space or supplies (including textbooks), or that require enough writing to make class size crucial, have too little idea of the real class size.
William O. Scott, professor of English
BLOOM COUNTY
NO. AND NEITHER
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"NEW" DOESN'T
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CLASSIC
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---
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, September 8, 1987
5
Tuesday Forum Soviet health care
Bribes, infection and waiting lists plague medical industry
Editor's Note: Howard Solomon is an Overland Park graduate student who traveled to the Soviet Union with other members of the KU Slavic languages department. The trip was part of the Council on International Education Exchange program.
This summer I had the unique opportunity to spend two months in the Soviet Union as a student. I was a participant in an intensive Russian language program at Leningrad State University for six weeks and a tourist for the remaining period of time. I traveled through cities such as Moscow, Novgorod, Baku, Krasnodar and Riga.
To be honest, I had more than just Russian language on my mind. In May I completed the master's degree program in Soviet and Eastern European Studies at the University of Kansas. During the course of this program I did a great deal of research on the Soviet health-care system.
Throughout my stay in the Soviet Union, I kept my eyes open for any sort of tubits of information related to Soviet health care. By fortune coincidence, I became acquainted with various Soviet citizens who were connected to the health-care system at different levels.
To the best of my ability, I have tried to recall my conversations with these people and give some description of what they had to say. The names that I have used are fictitious.
A student
A most interesting and intelligent person with whom I became acquainted was Sasha. Sasha was an extraordinarily resourceful and charismatic individual. When I met him, he was studying in his third year at a medical institute in Leningrad. He had in some way managed to avoid being drafted into the military by receiving a certificate that stated he had a heart condition.
When I asked him how it was possible for a healthy young man to receive such a certificate, he smiled and answered elusively that he had made some sort of agreement with a doctor.
Sasha provided some interesting insights into the system of medical institutes where future Soviet doctors are trained. The institute where Sasha studied has an excellent reputation. Students from all over the Soviet Union apply to the institute, with only a small percentage actually being accepted.
Sasha described the system of selection in terms of two possible ways for a student to be accepted by the institute. The first is to perform brilliantly on the entrance exams and have excellent recommendations. The second way is through "that." This is a Russian word that has many connotations. It can range from having an important or highly placed relative, who can exercise influence on the institute's administration, to an outright bribe. Sasha had utilized the latter. He paid the head of the institute 2,000 rubles (approximately $3,125) in order to enter into the academic program. Sasha went on to explain that this phenomenon was not only limited to the selection process but was also found in the grading system of the institute. A high grade can be earned with a well-paid gift to the instructor, as well as by traditional methods such as hard work.
A physician
Another fascinating person with whom I spent many hours discussing the Soviet health-care system was Kolya. Kolya was a physician of general practice who had a great compassion for his fellow man. He was immediately evident from our discussions that Kolya took his work seriously and considered his profession to be a distinguished one. The day we met, he was very concerned about an epidemic among young teenagers of sniffing glue to get high. He commented that he was seeing more and more of this type of phenomenon.
Despite this pride and seriousness, Kolya was a deeply frustrated individual. He informed me that even though he was married and had one child, his monthly salary was only 130 rubles (approximately $200). By official Soviet standards, this is a little below the average salary of
Howard Solomon
Soviet citizens. But taking into account the actual cost of living in the USSR, it is virtually nothing.
A pair of men's trousers might cost 60 to 100 rubles, while a woman's dress would cost about 100 rubles. Food can run about 50 rubles a month, although that means eating a very limited diet without a lot of fruits and vegetables. One bottle of vodka can run up to 20 rubles in a state store. Since Kolya's wife could not work, the family lived in virtual poverty.
Kolya's apartment was sparsely furnished. A kitchen table provided the central attraction. A piece of foam thrown on the floor and covered by a blanket served as the couch. The bedroom was furnished with a bed designed much like the couch, and a homemade crib. Kolya asked me to excuse the condition in which he lived. He explained that he was an honest doctor, and refused to accept bribs and "gifts" as most of his colleagues regularly did to earn extra income.
This bribe-taking and gift-giving in the healthcare system was a topic that I often came across while in the Soviet Union. In a system that is more modern, it is no longer a source of irritation for many Soviet citizens.
Health care recipients
Rena and Volodya, a married couple living in Moscow, told me of the case of their aunt who recently was in need of an operation. The aunt was admitted into the hospital after waiting for some period until she received her turn. There is a waiting list for certain types of operations that are not life-threatening. A doctor soon came to see her and told her he would perform the operation for a fee of 200 rubles (approximately $130). The aunt reluctantly complied with the doctor and paid him his fee for an operation that should not have cost her a single ruble.
When I asked Rena and Volodya why their aunt did not simply refuse to pay the doctor and report him to the authorities, they gave me a funny smile. They explained that two things could have happened if their aunt had not paid. The first would have been that the hospital immediately discharged her on the doctor's orders, and she would have lost her turn to have the operation. It would have taken a long time before her turn came up again. If she complained to the authorities, the doctor would have been reprimanded and been forced to do the operation free of charge. In that case, the patient would have been at the mercy of an angry doctor.
Medicine, clinics
The difficulty in obtaining good quality medicine in the Soviet Union was a topic that frequently came up in all my conversations. One of my acquaintances, Ivan, who worked in a pharmaceutical enterprise, described how the system worked.
Ivan explained that most Soviet-made medicines were of extremely poor quality. Many educated people are simply afraid to take Soviet-made medicines. Most prefer those that are foreign-made. These foreign medicines are often in short supply and difficult to find. It should be noted that many Soviet pharmaceutical products are also in short supply. These deficits allow those, such as workers in medical institutes, laboratories and pharmacies, who have access to various pharmaceutical products to become unofficial businessmen.
In Leningrad and Moscow, a large black market of Soviet manufactured and foreign manufactured medicines is in operation. Soviet citizens who need special medicines often have to go through a chain of acquaintances that leads to one of these privileged persons who have access
to pharmaceutical products. I remember a conversation with one of our hotel maids about how she had managed to obtain medicine for her son's illness by going through a friend of a friend of a friend who had an acquaintance who worked in a medical institute.
A well-placed bribe or gift is often necessary in order to obtain certain medicines from a drug store. During the course of our stay in Leningrad, several Americans in our group became sick with some sort of virus. In order to obtain the necessary medicine, our American group leader was forced to pay a bribe to a clerk who worked in a drug store. One of the Soviet hotel employees also used her connections to find medicine for the sick Americans.
Many problems in the Soviet health-care system have no connection to the quality or honesty of personnel. The allocation of financial support depends on the shortage of facilities to a shortage of personnel.
Ira, a very intelligent and educated woman, told me about a visit she made to a friend who was in a state home for the disabled. She described filthy corridors with unused medicines, food scraps and human waste products strewn about the floor. The sound of human cries rang throughout the building, as patients waited for hours to be fed by a small, overworked staff.
Ira explained that there was only one doctor assigned to the home. He was a caring and capable man who could not be faulted for the environment he was working in. In a discussion with Ira, the doctor explained that he did his best to treat the patients in the institution, but there were many times that he just did not have the knowledge to treat illnesses that were not his specialty. There were not enough specialists to go around, and the institution was understaffed due to a lack of money.
Sanitation
The high rate of infection in Soviet health-care facilities was another topic that frequently came up in my discussions. This occurrence in Soviet health-care is due to a variety of factors. The poor training and practices of health-care personnel one factor. While in Leningrad, one of our group leaders who was sick went to a polyclinic, a type of out-patient hospital, for an examination. During the course of the examination, the doctor used a metal tongue depressor. When the exam was completed, the doctor's son the depressor at the examination, another doctor came into use with another patient and proceeded to use the same depressor without any sort of cleansing or sterilization.
voooya told me he came down with hepatitis after a trip to a dentist who didn't wash his hands or dental instruments. Health-care personnel are not the only ones to blame. Health-care facilities are presently lacking sterile disposable items, such as plastic syringes, catheters and intravenous tubing. Sterilizers using boiling water operate around the clock in hospitals.
Throughout the course of my stay in the Soviet Union, I met countless people who were frustrated with the quality of health care that they received. I also met many health-care professionals who were dedicated to improving the system they worked within. Despite much attention by the Soviet media on the various problems of the health-care system, little has changed over the last few years.
On the day before I left the Soviet Union, Prava, the official newspaper of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, announced a special project undertaken by the Central Committee and the USSR Ministries to improve the state of Soviet health care. There was nothing extraordinary about this appearing in the Soviet press except for the word "perestroika" or reconstruction was used. Whether the health-care system will in fact be improved is dependent on the Soviet leadership. More resources must be allocated to this sector of the economy before this process can take place.
Rod.
Andrew Pavich/KANSAN
Vladimir Lenin
THE FAR SIDE
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841-DELI
wild
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GREEK WEEK SCHEDULE Tuesday, September 8th
wild Week to
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I Banner Contest Judging
Theme: "What a Week to be Greek"
Time: 12:00 noon at Houses
II Walk to the Campanile
Time: 4:00 p.m.
Speaker: Bob Fredrick, Athletic Director
Note: Wear Greek Letters and Bring Banner
III Leadership Dinner
Time: 6:30 p.m.
Where: Adams Alumni Center
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IV Class Parties
Time: 8:00 p.m
Freshman - ATΩ House Theme: Luau
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6
tuesday, September 8, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Reagan
Continued from p. 1
honesty call me 'kid,''' Reagan said.
"But you know," he said, "it seems right to me that AIF Landon was born in the centennial year of his bicentennial now part of its bicentennial year.
"In 100 years, Alf Landon has chased many dreams and caught most of them.
"Along the way he's found time to stand for the American values of liberty, democracy and opportunity. And no one is more the living soul of Kansas, which to me means quiet strength and the simple dexency of all America, than Alf Landon."
Reagan also praised Landon's political views.
'When it was out of fashion, you warned of the dangers of too much government and too much government spending.
"Recently I was reminded that on your 90th birthday you said that credit cards are the worst thing that could've happened to our country. They encourage people to spend money they don't have. You don't spend money you don't have."
"I just wish I could get you to come back to Washington and help me drum that message into the Congress," Reagan said to an amplifying audience.
"So this is my birthday message; it is that all Americans are thankful for what you have meant to our country."
Reagan, glancing at Landon,
said, "Aff, happy birthday and
God bless you."
GOD bless you!
Reagan also praised Kasse-
baum, calling her a "chip off the
old block."
on box. He the brief speech, the KU band played "Home on the Range," and Reagan sat on the porch eating birthday cake and talking to Landon, who had his cane between his knees.
Another Landon birthday celebration will be sponsored by the Kansas Republican Party and the Shawnee County Republican Party from noon to 2 p.m. Wednesday in Topeka's Gage Park.
Crowd
Continued from p.1
cies"she said.
Seven members of the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity at KU drove cars in the president's motorcade.
Jeff Cleveland, St. Louis junior,
said that Landon had been a member of
the fraternity, "so he
made sure that some of us ride in
the motorcade."
Cleveland said that security was tight and that each member had to be frisked for weapons. Dogs were used to sniff the cars.
The men drove to the end of the parade route at Landon's home, where they had been invited to have their picture taken with Landon.
"But he was asleep, so we got a picture with Nancy Landon Kassbeum," Cleveland said. U.S. S. Kassbeum, R Kan., is Landon's Kassbeum, R Kan., is Landon's
"It was a once-in-a-lifetime experience," Cleveland said.
On the Record
A yellow, four-wheel-drive vehicle valued at $1,600 was taken Friday from the 400 block of West 12th street. Lawrence police reported.
A pickup truck valued at $700 was taken Friday 4 while it was parked outside a scholarship hall in the 1400 block of Alumni Place, Lawrence
A 1981 yellow Honda moped valued
$600 was taken Saturday from the
Santa Monica Police Department.
3000 block of West Sixth Street, Lawrence police reported.
An antique wrought iron corner post valued at $300 was taken between Sept. 1 and Sept. 5 from a fence in the 300 block of Indiana Street, Lawrence police reported.
Golf clubs valued at $275 were taken between Aug. 29 and Sept. 5 from an apartment in the 1400 block of Eddingham Drive, Lawrence
police reported.
Four chrome wheel rings valued at $200 were taken Friday from a car parked in the 300 block of Stockade Street, Lawrence police reported.
■ An estimated $450 in damage was done Sunday to a house in the 2600 block of Belle Haven Drive, Lawrence police reported. Someone broke a glass door between 2 a.m. and 3 p.m.
On Campus
- "Introduction to dBase III," a microcomputer workshop, is scheduled at 9 a.m. today at the Computer Center. Call 864-0120 to register.
- Intermediate IBM VM/CMS," a mainframe seminar, is scheduled at
- "Introduction to Data Analysis," a mainframe seminar, is scheduled at 10 a.m. today at the Computer Center. Call 864-9100.
- "Introduction to IBM VM/CMS," a mainframe seminar, is scheduled at 1 p.m. today at the Computer Center. Call 684-0100 to register.
3 p.m. today at the Computer Center.
Call 864-0100.
- Tryouts and practice for the KU Men's Soccer Club are scheduled at 5 p.m. today at Shenk Complex, 23rd and Iowa streets.
■ Sigma Psi (personnel majors) meeting and elections are scheduled at 6:15 p.m. today at 112 Blake Hall.
■ Hispanic-American Leadership Organization meeting is scheduled at 6:30 p.m. today at international International Human Rights Organization
"In the Haskell Language."
"Learning a Foreign Language."
a Student Assistance Center workshop, is scheduled at 7 p.m. today at 300 Strong Hall.
- "The Ukraine in World War II," a history lecture by John A. Armstrong of the University of Wisconsin, is scheduled at 7:30 p.m. today at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union.
- "Sleep Apea," a sleep disorder program presented by Dr. Lida Osbern, is scheduled at 7:30 p.m. today at the Visiting Nurses Conference Room, Missouri St.
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77/62
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North Platte
79/59
Partly Sunny
Omaha
77/57
Partly Sunny
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Goodland
78/57
Showers
Hays
78/60
Cloudy
Salina
79/60
Mostly Cloudy
Topeka
78/62
Mostly Cloudy
Columbia
80/62
Showers
St. Louis
82/65
Showers
Dodge City
80/60
Cloudy
Wichita
80/63
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81/63
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Springfield
84/63
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TOPEKA — Nancy Reagan waves good-bye to people gathered at Forbes Field as President Reagan holds the USS Topeka hat given to him by Topeka Mayor Doug Wright.
Landon events on tap
By a Kansan reporter
The University of Kansas is planning several activities to celebrate the 100th birthday on Wednesday of former AIF Landon.
A public ceremony and reception will take place at 9 a.m. today in the Kansas Union lobby to an exhibit titled "Alfred M. Landon: Governor; Presidential Candidate; Elder Statesman." The exhibit consists of photos and memorabilia that trace Landon's life from his childhood through his KU years, political career and retirement.
Several of the exhibit items concern Landon's 1938 presidential campaign against President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Landon, a 1908 KU graduate from the School of Law, ran on the Republican ticket.
the republican tribes
Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for
academic affairs, and Donald R. McCoy, University distinguished professor of history, will speak at the reception. The exhibit will be open until late September.
Landon and members of the Landon family, including Landon's daughter, Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan., will be honored as this year's KU Parents Day family Sept. 19.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers.
The family members will be recognized during pre-game ceremonies at the Parents Day Football game between the Jayhawks and Kent State University in Memorial Stadium.
Kansas State University also will honor Landon on his birthday with its annual Landon Lecture Series. Kasebaum will speak at 10:30 a.m. tomorrow at McCain Auditorium in Manhattan.
By MICHAEL MERSCHEL Staff writer
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KU band members fail to see Reagan
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TOPEKA — The KU Marching Band saw to it that President Ronald Reagan was properly hailed on his arrival at Alf Aldon's home sunday with "Hail to the Chief," but band members said that they wished they could have seen the president themselves.
Reagan and the band were only about 100 feet apart, but even band members in the front ranks had a hard time seeing through the columns on Landon's porch, members of the Secret Service, White House communications staff, the White House press corps and the rows of guests that stood between them and the president.
"All I could see was a bush and a Secret Service man," said Christine Long. Overland Park freshman.
Many band members were upset that they hadn't gotten a better view.
"I think all we expected we'd be able to see, and there's a lot of disappointed people," said Mike Wetter, Topeka senior and head drum
Regardless of the poor view, the band's performance went off well, said James Barnes, assistant to the director of bands.
During the speech, Barnes was perched on a ladder at the front of the band, patched in to the White House
communications officials by headphones.
barnes said the White House, which required split-second timing and last-minute changes such as asking the band to play "Home on the Range" twice, was no more difficult to work with than the television crews at some basketball games.
Although the president did wave in the band's direction during "Hail to the Chief," he had only the briefest of comments about the band, said U.S. Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan. Kassebaum is Landon's daughter.
"I told him that it was the University of Kansas band that was playing and that they were going to be playing the fight song as he left, and he just said 'good,'" Kassebaum said.
The band arrived at the Landon residence about 45 minutes ahead of the president. Their instruments, loaded on a truck after Friday's practice, arrived two hours ahead of them for a security inspection.
Before band members got their instruments Sunday, each case was sniffed by Secret Service guard dogs, said Rinnert. Longmont, a junior.
Band members had to pass through an airport-style metal detector before entering the grounds of Landon's home.
Weather dampens weekend
By MICHAEL HORAK Staff writer
Doug Meserve sat at his desk yesterday afternoon and pointed to a pile of video movies.
"That's what I did all weekend," said Meserve, Apple Valley, Calif., senior. "I had planned to go out to the lake, but I ended up buying some Michelon, eating Chee-tos and renting these movies."
Meresive, like many students who spent the three-day Labor Day weekend in Lawrence, found that periodic rain showers and drizzly weather throughout the weekend made many outdoor activities nearly impossible.
Local libraries and movie theaters replaced area lakes and parks as Labor Day retreats for many students.
Pacific Ocean.
Steve Schurr, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Topeka, said the weekend showers could be part of a moist air mass from Tropical Storm Lydia, which formed last week in the southern
Patricia Green.
"The moist air parked here for a couple of days, causing scattered showers and thunderstorms," Schurr said. Rainfall amounts in the area were minimal.
Weekend temperatures, however, were close to normal, Schurr said. High temperatures all three days were in the 80s.
students who had to spend the weekend on campus, instead of going home, seemed upset about the weekend drizzle.
"I just sat inside and was bored," said Kevin Tilly, St. Louis sophomore.
Judd McKeen, Clay Center sophomore, said he had planned to play golf or miniature golf but called off his plans when it started to rain.
John Dollisc, a student meteorologist with the KU Weather Service, said skies should turn sunny by this afternoon. The high should be 85.
An early evening thunderstorm yesterday brought. 64 inches of rain to the Lawrence area, he said
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, September 8.1987
Campus/Area
9
Regents rule forces KU to begin class in August
By AMBER STENGER Staff writes
Staff writer
KU students might have neglected their homework over Labor Day, their last break before Thanksgiving. But students at the State University of New York-Albany didn't even have homework to worry about.
Students at SUNY-Albany will start classes Wednesday. Other schools, such as the University of do not start classes until Sept. 28.
For many years, the University of Kansas Calendar Committee has tried unsuccessfully to find a way to start classes after Labor Day.
KU is required by the Board of Regents to have 80 days of class instruction each semester, said James Drury, professor of political science and chairman of the calendar committee.
For us the critical point is that we have to have 80 days of class instruction and there is all kinds of pressure to get out before Christmas," Drury said. "I can assure you that the students trying to figure out a way of starting after Labor Day and getting through before Christmas."
Drury, who has served on the committee for three years, said that if KU condensed its examination period and had a shorter Thanksgiving break, classes possibly could start after Labor Day.
"I have always pushed for a shorter examination period. I would be willing to have four examinations a day — I might even be willing to have five examinations a day," he said. "But most other people who need them might not like that. People aren't willing to pay those prices."
Drury said that when he started teaching at KU in 1947, classes started after Labor Day, but the semester didn't end until after Christmas break.
In the past, harvest was important in determining when school began and ended in Kansas. But in other states, harvest was not as important.
Christmas has a week of classes after Christmas, and then you muddled into an examination period. The next semester started essentially the first of February," Drury said. He said he preferred finishing classes before Christmas break because it was difficult to motivate students after the break.
Catherine Pietrzyk, associate registrar at the University of Iowa, said the Iowa Legislature required all public secondary schools to start after Sept. 1 to extend the tourism season.
"Starting school earlier affected the attendance at the state fair and
the state parks," Pietrzyk said.
Although higher education institutions in Iowa are not affected by the requirement, Pietrzyk said that the University of Iowa would try to follow it as closely as possible. Classes began Aug. 26 this year but will begin Aug. 30 next year, she said.
The University of Colorado also began classes Aug. 26 this year. Steve Paull, administration clerk in the office of registration, said classes began early to allow for a longer Christmas break. Christmas vacation begins Dec. 17 and ends Jan. 11 this year at the University of Colorado.
Schools that are on the quarter system instead of the semester system start later in the fall. However, those schools don't finish the academic year until June.
The University of Oregon will begin its fall quarter Sept. 28 and will finish Dec. 18. The winter quarter runs from Jan. 6 to March 19, and the spring quarter begins March 30 and ends June 11.
Tom North, statistician in the University of Oregon registrar's office, said the school would change to a semester system in 1990.
A not of faculty members favor a semester system, because more material can be covered in more depth." North said.
Greeks plan week of events
Staff writer
By NOEL GERDES
If you're greek, this is your week KU's first fall Greek Week begins today and runs through Sunday. Fourteen sororites and 24 fraternities will form 12 teams to compete for points earned through activities such as a bed race.
Greek Week traditionally has been in the spring — the last time in March 1986, said Bobby Jann, Interfraternity Council vice president for fraternity affairs. He said that this year's Greek Week was due to be a warrior because of better weather and the large number of new fraternity and sorority pledges.
"It's a good way to show pledges what the greek system is like and how they can be involved," Jann said.
Kim Campbell, Panhellenic Association vice president of campus affairs, said Greek Week provided an opportunity for greek houses to serve the community. For example, money
raised from a car wash and from T-shirt sales will be donated to local and national charities.
The week-long event begins with a banner contest at noon today. At 4 p.m., representatives from each house will carry their banners on a walk to the Campanile, where Bob Frederick, KU athletic director, will speak. The week ends after a lip sync contest at 7 p.m. Sunday in Hoch Auditorium. During the closing ceremony, the house that accumulated the most points will win the Greek Week trophy.
Other events include a greek leadership dinner at 6:30 p.m. today in the Adams Alumni Center and four fraternies' class parties at 8 p.m.
At noon tomorrow, each team will begin a 48-hour activity in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall. Campbell said one team planned a human checkers game and another would play croquet.
At 3 p.m. tomorrow, house members will wash cars in Kroger Super
store s parking lot at 23rd Street and Naismith Drive. Money raised, along with donations collected during the 48-hour activity, will be given to the Lawrence Warm Hearts Fund.
A softball tournament will start at 3 p.m. Friday at Holcom Sports Complex, Lawrence Avenue and 26th Street.
There will be a mixer at Gammons,
1601 W. 23rd St. Thursday night.
At 8 a.m. Saturday, greek volunteers will cook a pancake breakfast for Lawrence senior citizens at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent. On Sunday, the traditional bed race will be at 10 a.m. in the Memorial Stadium parking lot.
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Tuesday, September 8, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Many defectors struggling
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) - A few prominent defectors and emigres from the Soviet Union thrive in the United States, but thousands of others are having problems, and a Senate committee is trying to find ways to ease their lot.
Without help, they can end up like the Polish diplomat who had to take a job packing fish in New York or the Romanian economist who ran a laun-
"They fall between the cracks," says Jacob Kipp, a historian at the Soviet Army Studies Office, a U.S. army unit located at Fort Leavenworth, Kan. "Unless these people are celebrities, they have little access to their professions or academia after they reach the United States."
Since the mid-1970s, about 100,000 people have left the Soviet Union, and a large number of them have settled in this country. Although the U.S. government does not disclose how many Soviet defectors settle in the United States, author and defector
Vladislav Krasny has published a list of 470 Soviets who defected since World War II. Many are in this country, living under assumed identities.
The Army program is being held up as a model of what the government can do to harness the knowledge that emigres and defectors bring from the Soviet Union, while at the same time helping them find a place in American society.
Soviet emigres and defectors, especially professionals, have an expertise and feel for the way Russia works that cannot be obtained even by highly trained American scholars, Kipp said in a telephone interview
In addition to designated positions for 11 Americans, the center has fellowships for two Soviet emigres or defectors to conduct unclassified research on the Red Army. The first fellow, Natalie Gross, has completed a study on the military implications of "glassnost," Mihkail Gorbachev's policy of allowing more open discussion of some topics in the Soviet
press.
press.
Although it is still small, the program is likely to be highlighted at a Senate investigations subcommittee's hearings Sept. 16 and Oct. 8 by Sen. Sam Nunn, the Georgia Democrat who is chairman of the Armed Services Committee.
sewers which has expressed concern over the lot of the thousands of Soviet emigres and defectors in this country, similar to the Army's.
try, shall need for such programs is widely felt among those who study Soviet affairs. Krasnoy, in his book "Soviet Defectors," lamented the limited attention that the United States pays to Soviet emigres and urged detectors to come forward and share their knowledge, experience and ideas with both specialists and the general public.
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ALPINE • NAKAMICHI • DENON • YAMAHA • BOSTON ACOUSTICS
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Lawrence, Kansas September 1987
TODAY: Andre Codrescu, Noon to 1:30
WEDNESDAY: Anne Waldman and Diane diPrima,
Noon to 1:30
THURSDAY: Allen Ginsberg, William S. Burroughs,and
Edith Parker Kerouac, Noon to 1:30
FRIDAY: Micahel McClure, Danny Sugerman,and
Ed Sanders, Noon to 1:30
John Kessel and Brad Denton, 4:30 to
5:00.
SATURDAY: John Giorno, Ed Dorn, Jim Carroll, and
Craig Carroll, Noon to 1:30
*Schedule subject to change
OREAD BOOK SHOP
Nation/World
Telethon raises $39 million
The Associated Press
LAS VEGAS, Nev. — The 22nd annual Jerry Lewis Labor Day Telethon raised a record $39,021,723 yesterday, and workers tossed confetti as the entertainer declared the effort a good day for mankind.
"As corny as it may sound, my God, what a good day for mankind," Lewis told a national audience.
The show surpassed last year's record of $34,966,773 by almost $5 million. A long list of corporate sponsors presented Lewis with an additional $34,306,197 in pledges above the $39 million raised in the
United States and Canada.
Celebrities sang and danced through the 21½-hour event, and muscular dystrophy victims and their family members made poignant pleas for funds to help fight 12 different diseases and 24 neuromuscular disorders targeted by the New York-based Muscular Dystrophy Association.
Donations soared past last year's record in the 20th hour of the telethon, bringing cheers from a crowd jammed into a sports pavilion at Caesars Palace where the telethon was produced.
Spectators stood in line for hours in the hot desert sun or throughout the night waiting to spend an hour watching the telonem.
ing the collection.
One of the most touching moments came when Bob Sampson, former vice president of United Airlines, told of his long battle against the crippling disease.
piling disease.
"These lungs are going fast," the wheelchair-bound Sampson said in an emotional speech. "You don't die of muscular dystrophy, you die of pneumonia, or something else. If not, ultimately you will die of strangulation.
Hawklet Hours:
Wed.-Sat.
6p.m.-10p.m.
Sun.
11a.m.-3p.m.
...offering beverages,
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11
level 5 of
The Kansas Union
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, September 8, 1987
$1.00 VALUE
FOR MEN
AND WOMEN
FOR APPTS, CALL
842-3699
2323 RIDGE CT.
Honex et Ulster's Fult 1987
Lawrence Book
A Novel (Dutton Publishing)
$1.00 off Evening Buffet (7 days a week)
50¢ off Luncheon Buffet (7 days a week)
Welcome to Lawrence
544 W. 23RD
749-424
FREE DELIVERY
Valentino's
PIZZA LASAGNA SALADS
SPAGHETTI MANICOTTI
Features 9:23-87
Ristorante
---
Explore New Ideas, Happenings, and Events
THE ROCK CHALK BAG
Tues, Sept. 8 Open Mic
Wed., Sept. 9
Jayhawk Jazz Quartet
12th and Indiana
Thurs., Sept. 10 Parlor Frogs
Panoor Progs
Fri., Sept. 11
Lonesome Hounddogs
Sat., Sept. 12 Architech's Office
Architech's Office 842-9469
LOOKING FOR A PART-TIME JOB? Find It At
UNITED PARCEL SERVICE
Wanted: Loader/Unloaders
Wanted: Loader/Unloaders to work 3-5 hr. shifts Mon-Fri.
at Lenaxa, Ks. facility (30 min. east of Lawrence).
Shifts begin at approx.
4 a.m., 11 a.m., 11 p.m.
$R^{00}$hr.
ups
UPS Representatives
UPS Representatives will be on campus Friday, Sept. 11, 1987 9-4 room 110 Burge Union
eoe/m/f $8.00/hr.
Experience The Real World!
Consider applying for one of the following University Senate/Council Boards Committees.
Deadline Friday, Sept. 11
Parking Board
Judicial Board
Calendar
Human Relations
Foreign Students
Events
Libraries
Academic Computing
Financial Aid
Transportation Board
(Applications available in 105 Burge Union of the Sen-Ex Office : grads can apply also!)
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843-8222 1516 W.23rd St.
12
Tuesday, September 8, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Summer film profits could break record
The Associated Press
HOLLYWOOD (AP) — With the final returns coming in from Hollywood's hottest-ever summer movie season, studio executives are banking on an unusually long string of fall releases to make 1987 a record year at the box office.
The returns were on record track as the official summer box-office season headed for a close Monday.
"This summer should reach about $1.6 billion, just a smidgemen over 1984's record $1.58 billion," said analyst Art Murphy of the industry trade paper Daily Variety. "And 1987 is going to be a record box office year."
Lured by such hits as "The Touchables," "Secret of My Success" and "Lethal Weapon," movie buffs have spent $2.7 billion for tickets thus far in 1987, compared with $2.3 billion spent during the period last year. Grosses are 16 percent ahead of last year.
Last weekend, the box office take was $89 million, compared with $83 million for the period in 1986. But rather than a few blockbusters that usually carry the industry, the 1987
summer season has featured a large group of films.
"The summer pictures this year didn't perform as well as the top ones last year, but there were more films," exhibitor relations president John Krier said. "Business was spread out and attendance was up."
The wider choice of films obviously drew people into theaters more often, Krier said, but the burgeoning video cassette sales and rental market, once feared by the studios, may be responsible for the box office increase.
"Video cassettes have worked to the good of the industry," Krier said. "They have created more interest in motion pictures and have been responsible for more financing of motion pictures."
motor pictures.
After a record $1 billion spring season, the studios hurried with a batch of new releases to coincide with the traditional warm-wear weather explosion of moviegoing. The same strategy is being used to keep up the momentum this fall.
WORLD WRESTLING FEDERATION PRESENTS
FRI, SEPT. 11 8PM
EXPOCENTRE
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STEEL CAGE
MATCH!
WORLD WRESTLING
FRI., SEPT. 11 8PM
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EXPOCENTRE
SPECIAL RETURN
STEEL CAGE MATCH!
INTERCONTINENTAL CHAMPIONSHIP
HONKY vs.
TONK MAN
JAKE
"THE SNAKE"
ROBERTS
TAG TEAM ACTION!
KILLEP RFES VS. KAMALA & SIKA
INTERCONTINENTAL CHAMPIONSHIP
HONKY VS. JAKE
TONK MAN "THE SNAKE"
ROBERTS
TAG TEAM ACTION!
KILLED BEEVS KAMALA & SIKA
vs. JAKE
"THE SNAKE"
ROBERTS
PARKER & KING
MATTHEW HAYES
WWF WOMENS CHAMPIONSHIP
SENSATIONAL SHERRI MARTELL vs.
VELVET McINTYRE
DANGEROUS DANNY DAVIS vs. KOKO B. WARE
PLUS MUCH, MUCH MORE!
Card is subject to change
KTPK COUNTRY 107
Presented by KTPK Country 100
Tickets available online
Lewis West and
Urbana North Budget Tickets and Records. Lewis West,
Hollywood Lights and
Houston Books are
Grass
Onion
Lawrence's
most sensational coffeehouse wants
your eyes, ears, nose and mouth! We have something for all your senses. We have the work of local artists on display. We have live music,both local and imported. We have the delicious smells and tastes of fresh baked goods.
We have freshly ground and brewed coffees, and other libation, both cold and hot. We have waffles, granola, and fresh fruit for breakfast at any time of day. We have open faced bagel sandwiches deep dish quiche and seven fresh salads.
Dan Bliss, acoustic folk
Chris Hickey, new folk
Jim Krause, folk & old time country
Alonzo Berdshear, blues & folk
Packed Fruit, ethno-funk
Stop by and let us
fill up your senses.
624 West 12th Street
August 22
August 24
August 29
September 5
September 11
841-2310
The
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PILOT MAKES NOTE-TAKING ACADEMIC.
The perfect teammate to the Better Ball Point Pen is Pilot's Peniller 0.5mm mechanical penail. It has a continuous lead feed system and a cushion tip that helps eliminate the friction between the penail and the brushed grip. It can be worn entirely while the grip offers the same comfort as the Better Ball Point Pen.
Pilot's Better Ball Point Pen, in medium and fine points, lets you breeze through long note-taking sessions. In fact, we've made writer's fatigue a thing of the past! This crystal balanced veteran of the campus has a ribbed finger grip for continuous comfort and is perfectly balanced for effortless writing. Best of all, you'll never throw it out because it's reflillable.
Whatever the assignment, Pilot has the formula for writing comfort and precision.
Pick up the Pilot Team at your campus bookstore today... The Better Ball Point Pen and The Penciler.
Month to Month Rentals • Rent to Own
Sofas • Sleepers • Dintettes • Desks
Beds • Chairs • Tables • Bunk Beds • Televisions
Book Shelves • Lamps • Dressers • Recliners
Entertainment Centers • VCRs • Stereos
Quality Furnishings at Affordable prices
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ENTREES
BEET POLYNESIAN $4.95
Beet tips sautéed with fresh vegetables in a
sauce and sherry wine sauce and served over
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LUNCHEN STEAK 5.25
K.C. Strip served with herbed garlic butter,
trench fries, and salad
BURRECKS $4.75
Triangular shaped straddle dough titled with
rice and cheese, deep fried and topped with
nannar sauce. Served with rice and salad.
VEAL MUSHROOM $5.95
Sauteed with a mushroom sauce. Served with rice
and salad
Salad with white wine, lemon and cream
Served with rice and salad. $5.95
FLEET OF SOLE 49
Sauced and toasted with herbed garlic butter and
SEAFOOD PASTA 6.25
shrimp, crabails, and mushrooms sautéed
with herbed garlic butter and cream, served over
linguin soup.
CHICKEN ASAPARAGUS 4.75
* Brest of chicken appied with ham, cheese, and
CHICKEN ZSCHWANESE 475
paste the chicken with vegetables in
pan, mix and serve over rice.
fifi's NABIL'S
SPECIALS OF THE DAY
Your attention will describe our chef's
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SANDWICHES served with french fries and salad
HAMBURGER $4.25
With your choice of Swiss, cheddar or blue cheese
and mushroom, bacon or avocado
BACON, LETTUCE AND
TOMATO SANDWICH 4.25
A triple-bread BIL served on whole wheat or
white toast
MONI CRISTO 4.50
The Cheese and Swiss cheese sandwich
is served in a gourmet fries to a golden color and
housed with cream cheese.
Fruit bread stuffed with spiced beef and lamb,
leftover, tomato, and onion
GCLUB SANDWICH 4.50
A triple-deck sandwich with ham, turkey, swiss
A trip to each kind of ham with turkey, Swiss and chestnut leavens, lentils and kernn
SALADS
CHICKEN SALAD $4.25
Served with vinaigrette cheese and fresh fruit
COBB SALAD 4.50
brownies, kettle beans, avocado, chicken
and white cheese with french dressing
GREEK SALAD 4.25
Romaine lettuce topped with feta cheese, eggs,
olives, garbanzo beans, anchovy heart and
salted grape leaves
SHRIMP AND CRAB SALAD 4.95
Chopped lettuce topped with shrimp, crab
nails, and tortillas with a Lemon dressing
SPINACH SALAD 4.95
Fresh spinach with mushrooms, bacon, cornstraw,
and egg hubs, served with a sweet herb dressing.
SOUP SALAD AND WINE 4.75
SOUR SALAD AND WINE 4.75
LARGE HOUSE SALAD 2.95
SOUF OF THE DAY cup 1.50
bowl 1.95
DESSERTS
Your appointment will describe itself's flexible made desserts
A 15% gratuity is added to parties of $5 people or more.
Fifth is an affordable for catering for any size party.
Call us at 841-726 or arrange your next destination.
T E C H N O L O G Y F O R A N E W A G E
---
TRW Inc. 1987
Soccer
TRW will be on campus Oct. 2 See your college placement office to sign-up.
Who Do You Call When You Want To Identify A Soccer Ball From 22,300 Miles In Space?
If your answer is Ghost Busters, we want to wish you all the best and have a nice day. If you answered "TRW", here's the rest of the story.
The U.S. Air Force asked us to build a ground-based electro-optical surveillance system that could identify an object the size of a soccer ball from 22,300 miles in space. We did it, utilizing 3 telescopes and a large computer system. Then they asked us to build four more. Quite an achievement, but it's just one example of TRW's impact on the future of opportune freedom to move around a wide variety of oppor-tion microelectronics, high energy lasers, large software systems, communications, and scientific spacecraft.
If you're majoring in engineering, computer science, math, or physics, and want to be with a company that's driving technology into the next century, it's not too soon to talk. Tomorrow is taking shape at a company called TRW.
For employment consideration, please send your letter of inquiry to TRW, 81/1227B. One Space Park.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, September 8, 1987
Sports
13
KU women capture second in tourney for season opener
By ROBERT WHITMAN
Staff writer
Jodi Oelschlager had only 10 minutes warning Friday night that she'd be in the starting lineup for the Kansas volleyball team's first match of the season.
Volleyball
But Oelschlager and the rest of the team exceeded their coach's expectations with their second-place finish at the Southwest Missouri State tournament in Springfield, Mo.
The Jayhawks defeated Southwest Missouri State 15-9, 6-15, 11-15, 8-15, 16-14 Friday night and came back Saturday afternoon to defeat Memphis State 15-3, 15-7, 15-13.
pals State 10-5, 19-7, 14-8
Nationally ranked Texas defeated
Kansas 10-15, 5-15, 9-15 Saturday
night to give the Jayhawks a 2-1
record and second place in the round
robin tournament.
"They surpassed me again. I hope they do it all season." Kansas coach Frankie Albizt said, "I thought we'd be ready for that game. We could we could beat Southwest Missouri."
Albitz said the victory over Southwest Missouri State was particularly satisfying because it was her first over the Bears in her 11-year coaching career.
ing career.
Olelschlag, a sophomore outside-hitter, started all three matches. She also played a new position, one filled by All-Big Eight performer Catalina Suarez last year.
Source has year Oelschlager, who played on three state championship volleyball teams at Lawrence High School, has been getting into the middle of the action. She is passing more than last year when she played to the right of the setter.
seller:
"I didn't pass much last year at all," Oelschlager said. "I was kind of scared at first."
Albitz said she decided to start Oelschlager after she had two good days of practice just before the team left for Springfield.
Oelschlager had a meeting with Albitz last week to discuss her role on the team. Albitz said.
"She came into my office and said, 'What do you want out of me?'" Albitz said, "I told her, 'I need more out of you in practice.'
"It I can keep her working hard in practice she can fill one of (Suarez) roles. I wasn't sure who I needed there, but (Oelschlager) did a good job."
Oelschler said, "She said my head hadn't been in practice. I decided to get more into practice. My overall game improved Thursday, don't miss a confession, my passing until that day. I felt more confident in Springfield."
Albitz said Kansas blew a big lead in the final game against Southwest Missouri State. Then, a service ace by Shannon Ridgeway gave Kansas new momentum.
Ridgway's ace came directly after a timeout called to re-position Kansas's tallest blockers in front of where Albitz guessed the Bears might try to set the ball. The Bears had been spiking successively, foot 8 setter Monica Spencer, the Jawkows' shortest player on the court.
"I told Shannon just before we went back out, 'If you ace them, I won't have to find out where they're going to set it,' " Albitz said.
The ace moved Kansas off 13 points, where Albitz said they had been throughout the Bears' rally in the fifth game.
Against Memphis State, the Jayhawks found each of the three games in the match becoming progressively closer.
"Sometimes when you beat a team really easily, you have a tendency to let down. And (Memphis State) played better each game," Albitz said.
Albitz said the Jayhawks simply ran up against a bigger and stronger team in Texas, which made it to the semifinals of the NCAA tournament
"We were competitive except for the one game," Albizt said. "We did everything well except hit. Their block was strong, and I think it compliments us."
Albitz said the team was quiet after the Texas match and she couldn't tell what the team's mood was, but Oelschlager said she thought the team was pleased with the weekend's results.
"It always hurts to lose, but Texas is about eighth in the nation," Oelschlager said. "But I think everyone is pleased it went so well."
KU rugby team effort highlights fall opener
Staff writer
By CRAIG ANDERSON
A strong team effort highlighted the Kansas varsity rugby season opener, Coach Ken Renfo said.
The Jayhawks varsity defeated Nebraska 24-9. The KU club team beat the Cornhuskers 17-6. The Senior Reserves lost 12-0.
The Jayhawk varsity had such an overall good team performance that he couldn't name any individual standouts. Renfo said.
sahbous. Renfro said,
"All of the trys we scored were by players who were pushed over the line by the rest of our team," Renfro said. "Everyone was working well together."
together.
Senior Paul King led the Jawhays in scoring with a try and three penalty kicks. Senior Jim Laurie scored two trys. Senior Pat Roberts added a try.
Roberts said he was happy the way the team stuck together after a rough first half. The Jayhawks led only 10-9 at halftime before pulling away in the second forty-minute period.
"We had a fairly inexperienced backline, but they played incredible," he said. "Jason Elder did a great job at second row."
The loose ball play was not as good,迅rofa said. He said the ball handling and outside play needed to be worked on this week during practice.
The Kansas play on the inside pleased Renfo. He said the set plays worked well when the team was able to get the ball outside quickly.
The physical conditioning of the Kansas varsity was also a weak spot, Renfo said.
The Kansas varsity will play in its home opener this Saturday against Garden City. Renfro said he expected the Jayhawks to do well.
"They (Garden City) don't have much of a team," he said. "They just started playing four years ago and don't have many players on the team vet."
"It's not where it needs to be," he said of the physical conditioning. "We'll work on it this week in practice."
The KU club team and Senior Reserves will play games Saturday against the Johnson County "A" and "B" teams. All games will be played at Shenk Complex, 23rd and Iowa streets, and begin at 1:30 p.m. Admission is free of charge.
MIDDLE DAY
The Football Club
James Larson/KANSAN
Robbed!
catch. The informal football game was played yesterday afternoon behind Oliver Hall.
Sean Shire, Independence junior, right, slaps the ball away at the last second to keep Bob Edler, St. Louis, Mo., sophomore, from making a
Two pitchers are planted on KU team
By DARRIN STINEMAN
Staff writer
Coach Dave Bingham has found two winners of this fall's Kansas baseball lottery, but their payments may be deferred for a couple of years.
Derek Chatterton, Wilmette, Ill., freshman, and Curtis Sharp, Bartlesville, Okla., freshman, were the only two players to come out of the pre-season walk-on tryouts with a spot on the team.
"There were 80 people out there, and I knew they wouldn't take many," said Chatterton, a left-handed pitcher. "I was really surprised."
Shaw, who is also a left-handed pitcher, said he was equally surprised to be chosen.
"I had heard that they'd signed two freshman left-handers," he said, "and I didn't think I'd make it when I found that out. I had a pretty decent trovul, but I still didn't think I made it."
gained some experience.
Bingham said he didn't expect either pitcher to contribute much this season, but he said he hoped the investment would pay dividends after they
"We were mainly looking for young guys." Bingham said. "We were looking for the freshmen we missed recruiting who could come in and develop."
They seem to have found two players who are content to do just that. Neither Chatterton nor Shaw have aspirations of setting the Big Eight Conference afire just yet.
contest and I want to get bigger, stronger, and increase my strength," Chatterton said. "I've still got a long way to go. I'm smaller than most."
"I really don't expect to play much this year," Shaw said. "If I do play, it would be a bonus. I'd just like to go through the fall and spring seasons and learn about college baseball."
Talented left-handed pitchers can be hard to find and are almost necessities to having a successful baseball team. Bingham said that he was comfortable with the present pitching staff and that he was hopeful Chatterton and Shaw would be a part of it.
in the future.
"They did okay (in the tryout), but more than anything else they filled a need for us," he said. "I feel these are two young kids who could come along and help us."
The fall baseball season, a preparation for the all-out competition of the spring season, begins Sept. 13 when Kansas City Kansas Community College comes to Quigley Field. All of the Jayahawks' fall games will be at home against junior college opponents.
"I like to use fall ball as an evaluation time," Bingham said. "I don't like in the fall to play against people we have to compete against in the spring. We play junior colleges because it helps recruiting. We can show kids the campus and our program. We don't want to travel in the fall and take kids out of class, and the junior colleges are more than willing to come out to our program and play. To me, there's just one championship season, and that's the springtime."
Runners to fill gaps as part of strategy
Staff writer
By MIKE CONSIDINE
In cross country, closeness is important — closeness as in very little time passing between finishers.
Based on the results of last Friday's intrasquad meet at Rim Rock Farm, the KU men's team is close and can be expected to get closer.
Only 29 seconds separated junior winner Craig Watcke and fourthplace junior finisher Matt Bell.
Student assistant Ashley Benjamin, who is sharing coaching duties
with fellow student assistant Ben Welch while Coach Bob Timmons is on a Mediterranean cruise, called the spread the most pleasant surprise of the meet.
the meet.
"That's something we haven't had here in a while," Benjamin said. "Last year the gap was 1:10."
The principle is this: the tighter the pack, the less room for opponents to finish in the middle of it and take valuable points.
The main purpose of the meet was to determine the seven runners
who'll compete in Friday's dual meet at Southern Illinois. Those seven, in order of finish, are: Watchee, Steve Hefferman, sophomore (27:26), Sean Sheridan, freshman (27:34), Bell, Mike Spielman, junior (28:07), Sam Froese, freshman (28:14) and Andy Pritchard, freshman (28:40).
"The times were slow, but the weather was over 90 and it's a tough course." Benjamin said. "Plus it's early in the season, and we haven't done any speed work. I think we're in good shape."
Spielman's status for the meet is uncertain, due to a class conflict. Benjamin said junior Dan Schneider would fill in if Spielman couldn't compete.
computer Watcke and Heffernan have been running extremely close in practice, Beniamin said.
("They) ran up front as expected. We didn't know who would win." Benjamin said. "Throughout the year, they are pushing each other. It's real healthy for the team."
Top seeds reach quarterfinals at U.S. Open
Fourth-seeded Mandlikova faces penalties after loss as Graf, Lendl advance
NEW YORK — Top seeds Ivan Lendl and Steff Graf advanced to the quarterfinals of the U.S. women's seed championships yesterday, but No. 4 women's seed Hana Mandikova lost after penalized a game for smashing her rocket against a scoreboard.
The Associated Press
a scoreboard.
Sixth-seeded Jimmy Connors and No. 8 John McEnroe also moved into the quarterfinals at the National Tennis Center.
Connors, habbling on an injured right foot, beat No. 11 Henri Lecerce 6-7 (0/7), 6-4, 6-4, 6-3.
McEnroe, who faces fines and a two-month suspension for a tirade during his third-round victory, was relatively calm as he defeated No. 9 Andres Gomez 6-4, 7-6 (72), 6-3.
Andres Gonzalez 8-4, 7-4. Connors said his injury, which doctors have been unable to diagnose, wouldn't force him out of the tournament.
hourmistress.
"I'd play out there on a peg leg if I had to," he said. "It's the U.S. Open. It only happens once a year."
Mandikova, who lost to No. 9 Claudia Kohde-Kilsch 6-7 (4-7), 6-4, 6-1, was the second player to be played a game for poor behavior at the tournament. In his victory over Slobodan Zivojnovic Saturday, McEnroe was penalized for cursing and yelling.
Other women advancing to the quarterfinals were second-seeded Martina Navratilova, No. 3 Chris Evert, No. 6 Helena Sukova, No. 8 Gabriela Sabatini and No. 11 Lori McNeil.
Lendl, the two-time defending champion, beat No. 16 Anders Jarryd 2-6, 7-2 (7-2), 6-4, and Graf downed No. 13 Svila Hanika 7-5, 6-2.
In men's play, 14th-seeded Emilio Sanchez lost to unseeded Ken Flach in a third-round match delayed by rain.
Her temper flared again after she lost the second game of the third set by hitting a shot wide. When she cursed at the line official, Mandilikova was given a point penalty that forced her to start the next game down 0-15.
Mandikova got her first warning after cursing at an official who had just called a foot fault on her in the fifth game of the first set.
Mandikova lost that game to fall behind 2-1 in the set. During the changeover, the 25-year-old Czechoslovakian slammed her rocket against the scoreboard, prompting head referee Georgina
Clark to penalize her a game
Kohde-Kilsch won the next three games to come out the match. After shaking hands with Kohde-Kilsch, Mandikilla again smacked the scoreboard with her racket before leaving the court.
After the match, Clark said Mandlikova would be fined $500. Mandlikova could be fined up to $10,000 after further review by a disciplinary committee made up of players and a representative of the Women's International Tennis Association.
Clark said Mandilika would not be suspended. "I'm very disappointed, because the women usually behave very well." Clark said. "This kind of behavior is very rare."
Very Palmer is Game pennant have been issued only twice before in the tennis, to Pompea at the 1986 French Open and to Patricia Tarabini at a 1987 tournament in Sweden.
before, she said.
"I could never act like that," Kohde-Kilsch said.
Kohde-Kilsch, who won the women's doubles title at the 1885 Open with Sukova, said she wasn't surprised by Mandikola's behavior. "She's done that before," she said.
Women's golf team finishes in 3rd place
Tinn Gnewchw and Sue Pekar led the Kansas women's golf team to a thirdplace finish in the Cyclone Golf Classic at Ames, Iowa, this weekend.
By a Kansan reporter
The five-woman team finished with a total score of 890 for the 54-hole tournament, 29 strokes behind the Iowa State and Missouri teams, which tied for first place.
Gewuch carded an 80 on Thursday and followed with a 79 and a 78 in the three-day tournament to claim fifth place. Pekar shot the low 18-hole round for the Jayhawks on Thursday with a 77, and followed with an 80 and an 81 to take seventh.
"I think Tina and Sue did great," said Kent Weiser, Kansas women's golf coach. "They played really hard."
Although the weather was cooperative during the tournament, spotty greens made putting difficult, Pekar said. Considering it was the first tournament of the year, she said she was content with her score.
"It could have been worse, and it could have been better," she said. "The second day I really had trouble with my putting."
The rest of the team didn't fare as well as Gnewuch and Pekar. Michelle Mulvihill, Suzanne Mossberg, and Donna Lowen all turned in scores of 256.
*e* mushing fourth in the tournament was Nebraska with a 993 total, followed by Northern Illinois with 1011, Illinois State with 1034, Southwest Missouri State with 1075 and Kansas State with 1104.
State warrior the Jahawks return to the Hawkeye State next weekend to play in Iowa's tournament.
---
14
Tuesday, September 8, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
sports
CIRCA 1980'S
Scott Carpenter/KANSAN
Brian Berg, Mission sophomore, tosses Kelly Glauser, Overland Park freshman into the air. The junior varsity cheerleaders were practicing in front of Allen Field House on Wednesday in preparation for the first home football game Sept. 19.
Varsity cheerleaders practice for Auburn game on Saturday
By DAVID BOYCE Assistant sports editor
At times they are practicing inside Robinson Center to the sound of top forty music. At other times they are forming pyramids in front of Allen Field House to the sounds of cars and students.
Assistant sports editor
They are the KU cheerleaders, and they have been working out about 10 hours a week since early August in preparation for Kansas' first football game against the Auburn Tigers.
Eight varsity cheerleaders will travel by car this Friday to Auburn, Ala. and will try to cheer the Jayhawks past the Tigers.
"On away games we try to settle the crowd down and keep them from harassing our team," said varsity co-captain Cran Chase.
Generally the cheerleaders must pay for away games, but on this occasion the athletic department will pay for the trip.
In early August, the KU cheerleaders qualified for nationals at Knoxville, Tenn., by finishing second in the fight song category. Nationals will be held Jan. 3 and 4 in Dallas.
Although some fans see cheerleading as insignificant or just a sport, some basketball leaders view this activity as a sport such as basketball or football.
"Seven of eight guys on the varsity squad competed in high school sports," Chase said. "If you want to win, you're not wont be able to do what we do."
The cheerleaders must perform lifts and tumbling routines to maintain fan interest in the game.
Cheerleaders' muscles also become sore after strenuous workouts, said Staci Baty, Lee's Summit, Mo., junior.
"It's a lot of hard work and you have to push yourself, but it's worth it when you are cheering your home team to victory.
"A lot of people think it’s bouncing around and looking cutie. People don’t realize how hard it is to build up stamina."
Spirit squad director Elaine Brady said the biggest misconception was in not considering cheerleaders as athletes.
"They are all athletes," she said. "In order to perform lifts and pyramids, they need to be in good condition."
It's a lot of hard work and you have to push yourself, but it's worth it when you are cheering your home team to victory. A lot of people think it's bouncing around and looking cute. People don't realize how hard it is to build up stamina.'
Staci Baty KU varsity cheerleader
- Staci Baty
Beginning this year, the male members are required to take a strength test once a month, and if they fail in two consecutive months they will be placed on cheerleading probation. They will not be able to perform until they pass the test.
"In order to be competitive and look good, we need strength," Brady said.
Like football and basketball, team cohesion is necessary in cheerleading to perform high-quality routines, Brad said.
"When I came here five years ago there was no cohesion," she
said. "Each squad viewed the other squad as a threat."
Brady said now all the squads were together and supportive of each other.
Every Monday, Wednesday and Friday the cheerleaders work two hours a day on lifts, pyramids and yells. Three times a week the male members must lift weights for an hour, and twice the female members practice aerobics. In addition, every member must take an advance gymnastic class.
The varsity cheerleaders' talents will be utilized by the football team starting Sept. 13 when the cheerleaders will lead the team in aerobic exercises, Brady said.
Besides the football team, Chase thinks the Kansas fans also appreciate their talents.
"Sometimes they watch us just to see us mess up," he said, "but they would rather have us than not have us.
Chase, like several other cheerleaders, started cheerleading to be involved with a school activity.
Doug Martin, Pratt junior, said he started to meet other people and be involved with a group.
“Our job is to get people involved in the game,” he said. “We produce a winning atmosphere.”
Baty said a lot of the basketball players said that the cheerleaders did make a difference.
"They said,'when we are not there it's noticeable.' Baty said.
Body voiced the same opinion
Brady voiced the same. "I think they are essential to football and basketball games," Brady said. "I've been to games where we have spirit squads and to games without spirit squads and it makes a difference, especially in basketball.
Valesente says team lacks enthusiasm
"Sometimes people never take their eyes off of us."
Staff writer
By CRAIG ANDERSON
The Kansas football team may have been practicing on the Memorial Stadium field Saturday morning, but Kansas coach Bob Valente said he wondered whether they wanted to be playing football.
"We just weren't sharp at all," Valesente said. "It looked like we were going through the motions.
"The team should be excited just to be on the field and want to get after
it. I am glad we have another week to prepare ourselves."
The Jayhawks worked on gamelike situations during the scrimmage. Valesente described it as a kind of dress rehearsal for the team's opening game against Auburn. The practice emphasized getting the special teams on and off the field quickly. The team also practiced its two-minute hurry-up offense. During the drill, Kansas worked from the shotgun formation.
Valesente said good effort was missing from all the drills. He said the team was not near where it needed to be to compete with Auburn.
Valesente said some of the problems experienced Saturday could be a carryover from the dismal season of last year. The Jayhawks finished the 1986 season with a record of Conference games, scoring only 41 points in the process. During those same seven games, the Kansas defense surrendered 265
points.
The team will have to increase its motivation if it is to compete up to the level of Southeastern Conference football, Valesette said. Auburn opened its season with a 31-3 win over Texas in front of 80,000 fans at Jordan-Hare Stadium in Auburn, Ala.
"The 3-8 season is still not out of our systems," he said. "We need to realize that progress takes time. We need to build on the successes we have."
Royals turn Angels' fastballs into 5-2 victory
The Associated Press
ANAHEIM, Calif. — Frank White took a simple objective into yesterday's game against California ace Mike Witt.
And the Kansas City second base man followed through perfectly.
"Mike's usually very tough on us. My goal was to not let him get ahead of me on fastballs," said White, who jumped on a pair of first-pitch fastballs for the key hits in the Royals' 5-2 victory over the Angels.
In the fourth inning, he followed
walks to George Brett and Danny Tartabull with his 15th homer and a 3-0 lead. In the eighth, he doubled before scoring on Jamie Quirk's single for an insurance run.
"I didn't really hit the homer that well, but you don't have to in the
daytime here," White said of the drive that barely cleared the fence in the left-center.
Witt matched his season-high with 11 strikeouts in eight innings, but was doomed by the fourth-inning walks, two of the four he gave up.
Former Kansas linebacker Chris Toburen, 27, was reportedly among four Marines who were killed Thursday in a helicopter crash at Camp Pendleton Marine Corps Base in California. Toburen played at Kansas from 1978 to 1981. He was a four-year letterman. Toburen, a native of Pittsburg, Kan., is ranked sixth on the alltime Kansas tackling chart. He started for the Jayhawks at linebacker in the 1981 Hall of Fame Bowl against Mississippi State.
Ex-linebacker killed in crash
Running back gets player of the week
ly selected the Big Eight Conference offensive player of the week yesterday after he scored three touchdowns in a victory over Tulsa. Thomas, who was an All-Big Eight player last year despite being hobbled by an off-season knee injury, gained 164 yards on 25 carries in the 39-28 victory over Tulsa. He also caught three passes for 33 yards.
Oklahoma State running back Thurman Thomas was unanimous-
Sports Briefs
Scoreboard
American League
American League
Seattle 6, Cleveland 4
Minnesota 8, Chicago 1
Orlando 5, Milwaukee 3
Detroit 12, California 4
New York 12, Boston 4
Oakland 2, Texas 1
**National League**
Montreal 9, St. Louis 2
Cincinnati 3, Los Angeles 2
Pittsburgh 3, Chicago 2
San Diego 11, Atlanta 4
Philadelphia 5, New York 3
Houston 4, San Francisco 2
It's a Prize-Winning Opportunity to Have Fun . . .
Help the Arts . . . Meet Performers and
Win Free Gifts
The University of Kansas Performing Arts announces the 1987-88
USHER CORPS PERFOR AR
PERFOR
AR
MING TS
While compiling ushering hours, student ushers will also have the opportunity to meet artists, attend special receptions and support the arts.
Students selected for the Usher Corps will usher at various Performing Arts events including performances for the Concert Series, Chamber Music Series, New Directions Series and University Theatre.
At the end of the 1987-88 performance season, corps members will be eligible to win special prizes including:
*Free weekends for two at Kansas City a
Lawrence hotels
*Dinners for two at local restaurants
*Kansas City Royals tickets
*and much more
Get involved in the arts
An informational meeting and interviews will be held in early September.
Get involved in the arts
Join the Performing Arts Usher Corps
Applications are being taken in the Murphy Hall Box Office
V
I Have.
Because of my involvement with Entertet, I can now say, "Yes, I have professional sales experience." My position has given me the opportunity to develop communication skills, to demonstrate self-discipline, to prove my commitment, not only to my job, but to myself. And after graduation, my resume will reflect just that.
Have You Ever Been Experienced?
Earn an excellent base wage. Earn cash bonuses.
Apply in person today
ENTERTEL
A SUBSIDIARY OF ENTERTAINMENT PUBLICATIONS. INC
6104 MASSHUSETTSSES LAWRENCE KS 60044
www.massachusettses.edu
Cash Back NOW! $$$$$$$
Student Dividend Payments Begin
Bring in your receipts from last semester's cash purchases at the KU Bookstores and receive a 6% cash rebate.
Hedeem your period 81 receipts with your student I.D. at the customer service areas of either KU Bookstore location.
Always save your cash receipts from the KU Bookstores because they mean money in your pocket every semester.
Period 81 receipts renewable thru 12/31/87
KU
KUBookstores Kansas Union Burge Union
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, September 8, 1987
15
SUA.
as it's contribution to "The River City Reunion"
presents.
Allen Ginsberg
7:00 pm.
Wednesday
Center bar area
Kansas Union
Ballroom
Classified Ads
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Heading home for the holidays? FLY CHEAP
Call us now. Carpenters Travel, 843-6608
Just starting and you're already stressed
COMMUTERS: Self Serve Car Pool Exchange
Main Lobby, Kansas Union
starting and you’re there!
Gift the钥匙 or Massage Therapy
Gift the massage tool available (to) ‘Tell your roommate!’ Student discount. Call Bruce and at 814-693-2100 or it’s knocks to you!
MUSIHOORM Club! Free slide show at the Public
MUSIHOORM Club. Everyone welcome. 7:30 Wednesda-
ly.
NEED A RIDE/RIDER': Use the Self Serve CarPoll Exchange. Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
Are You A H.E.R.O.?
Research Paper Workshop. Examine topic selection, taking notes, organization, writing style Tuesday. September 15, 7 p.m. 405 West Freed. Free! Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong.
The Transcendental Meditation Program is a simple, natural, effortless mental technique which allows the mind and body to experience a deep state of rest. TM is the foundation of Mahayana Buddhism, a path for achieving perfect health (as seen on the Donauhour show Sept. 1, 1987). Come bear a free, public introductory presentation WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER sth. 6:00P.m. in the PINE
Travis McGee will be here tomorrow for the first meeting of his fan club: 841-9723
TUTORS: List your name with us. We refer student impurities to you. Student Assistance Center.
117 Stronge Hall
Volunteers needed. Headquarters Crisis Counseling Center. Training provided. Information meeting, Wednesday, September 9, or Sunday, September 13, 8-9 p.m., 419 Massachusetts.
Airline Tickets
Leaving Town?
See Maupintour Travel Service for:
At airline counter prices no extra service charge
Make your travel arrangements on campus
- The lowest airfares—Complete travel area tours—Air Train Raises Passes
* Car rental—Hotel confirmations
* Student insider break holidays
ON CAMPUS LOCATION in the Student Union and 900 Mass.
Maupintour travel service 749-0790
749-0700
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors Student Assistance Center, 141 N. Washburn Street, Chicago, IL 60611.
ENTERTAINMENT
At your request is Lawrence's Best and Most Affordable BJ. D'Sound and Lighting for Any Occasion. 841-1460
Stax of Wax
MOBILE MUSIC/DISC JOCKEY
SERVICE
SERVICE
KIP WALKER
Serving Lawrence, Topeka,
and Manhattan for
over 6 years!
P.O. BOX 1581
LAWRENCE, KS 66045
(913) 842 3112
ULIMITATE ENTERTAINMENT
Ultimate Mobile DJ System For All Occasion
WANTED: LEAD SINGER for established rock
worship. Send resume to:
Directive Stroh, U. C. Call Sr# at 841 9602.
FORRENT
1 bedroom apt. sub-rent. $200/mo. Close to campa-
nion, furnished, water paid, no pets, 864-1211
Feeling relaxed? For rent a large 3-bedroom house, living room, family room with fireplace, large kitchen with dining area, store, fridge, washer/dryer, garage, fenced yard $400/month.
*r*emale roommate needed Non-smoker,
student and 17-18 years Campus
campus call 409-263-5838
For sublet, I bri apt with microwave,
for non-bariatric patients has road
pool facilities. Call 842-079- after 5.
Farmed room with shared kitchen and bath.
One block from University. With off-street parking.
Accessible by car, bike or public transit.
Furnished two bedroom apt. one block from the University with off-street parking. No pets.
GRANTEDEEP 'SPACE at Nassim Hall for '88
Spring Semester
Room #249-8242 for details or
842-8241 for details
Glenhaven Apartments
walk to class
2% blocks from Union 1135 Ohio. 2 bed and room large, 1½' loft. 1/8' bath. Exciting energy efficient kitchen. All appliance heating; microwave heating. Wired for cable.
841-5797
An absolutely Awesome Array of Antiques, collectibles and neat stuff we have; hardback and 1/2 price paperback books, full line of new comic books, art nouveau and limited edition prints and continue jewelry (giltter and good stuff), the right vintage clothes for any occasion, antique toys, fine art canvas prints, and more. The best selection of antique furniture in the area. Quantilla Flea Market, 811 New Hampshire, Open Sat, & Sun
SUNRISE PLACE 9th & Michigan
HOUSE FOR RENT Rent share large 5 bath/2 bath house CLOSE TO CAMPUS with LAUNDRY IN BASEMENT and 3 bth or bdm room loving and easy to clean. Students need 2 more people to share reent and bills at 11th and Kentucky. Contact Darryl) at 316-264-8123 or 316-265-8125. 1217 N
Sunrise Apartment
Topeka, Weichla
Need to sublease nice 2 bedroom at apen at West West. Water is used on monthly rate. With deposit and rent in September paid! Available call at 749-6986
Elarage for sale: **Omega D2V**, w4, variable color. Also Nintendo FM2 and Ricoh KR64. Some flash equipment. Leave me message. For Sale 2-bedroom home . Great shape. 8500 OBO . UB0 . 843-0194 for
Offering luxurious townhomes and apartment living.
Stop by to see our show unit at 9th and Michigan or call . . .
841-1287 for an appointment.
CHEAP SF: 40 classics -Aimov to Zelazyin. Call DHP 148; A2772 after 5.
Sleeping rooms - 2-bdm. apts, close to campus.
& Winter leases. No Pets. 842-8971
appointed
Fisher CD player, AMS, one song and
cure $125-negotiation. #84-4594.
$25
FULLY IBM PC/XT COMPATIBLE fountain computer with internal MODEM 64129 after 1928.
1955 Honda 215 motorcycle. Dirt bike. Low mileage. Mileage $250. Call 749-3525 at 8:50 p.m.
1955 Honda Elite Deluxe 156cc. Paid $79,759 asking $129. Perfect condition! Call 749-3525
or sale 2-bedroom mobile home. Great shape
Great location $500 OBO. B43-019 for
phone.
933-441-400 after 6pm
Hot tub, hotly equipped, pump, heater, blower,
some assembly required, 1923 Chevler, carry-
ment, battery and more. Ask Ack.
724-780-693
Hillview Apartments
1733 W.24th
841-5797
FOR SALE
Introductory offer: PC compatible computer
mouse, mouse 1024, disk drives, 8MH
MBDOS, software, GEM, basic, 1 year warranty.
842-812) after 5 p.m.
Kapro 2000 ii. L2. Laptop IBM compatible, 79 KB,
3.5 disks, battery of A/C-powered. $600 - 842.99
KORG. Digital drums, digital percussion units.
Professional sound, all accessories. Only $100
Starting at $250/mo.
Large desk; $60 Living room chair; $20 Old
stereo; $20 3:30 - Sloe, 749 - 2148
piece white pearl drum set. Excellent condition.
Best offer over 400 four concert sets" 8", "10",
"8"-white. Excellent condition. Best offer over
MOTHBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE:
Monday Friday 10:00 p.m. Saturday 10:25 p.m.
Wednesday Thursday Saturday Sunday
Starting at $250/1mo
- laundry facility
- on bus route
1986 MOVED parole - HONDA 433-7841. Great condition,
$340. Call 843-7841.
AUST SELL. 1601 Surakul 965XL excellent condition,
low miles. 843-0727 or 843-2582
bike bike. 19 inch chair. Like new. Have
on mountain. Oread. 1.925-1.638 J
...
- rental furniture available from Thompson Crawley
- off street parking
- oil bus tour
- water paid
'noner stereo (receiver, cassette, turntable,
180 mpo speakers). Recent albums, tapes-all
26 inch Cambridge ten-speed bicycle. Like new
$50 or best offer. Call 843-4118.
- off street parking
Soraki GS 40 E.9. Must sell for $750, OBO. Will
commit. Call 841-7767
Racing Bicycle 22 paddles $500 one year ago,
sacrifice at $499
Racing Bicycle for £750 on Offer. Will
$ 13^{\mathrm{th}} $ Sylvania remote control color TV and stand.
Totalate test course for all four parts of CPA exam for $900. (A new one is $50). Used once to pass the CPA exam on the first try. Call after 5 p.m. at 316-326-5684.
Tandy 1000, 102K, memory expansion optional. One disk drive, second disk drive optional. Dot matrix printer, built-in modem, and green monitor. Price $1100 or best offer. Call collector.
AUTO SALES
goo connaissance
1973 Forma Catalina PB. PS, A/C, radio, extra
6 p.m.
4 alfaz 8 a.m.
1973 Honda 350 only 16,000 miles, new battery,
$2,499.00,
Twin mattress, box springs, and frame. Like new.
Asking $100, 841-849.
1974 Mercury Montego, runs great, A/C/F/MM
cassette storage $500 and callable. Call
Mercury Montego
1961 Chevrolet Impala 2-door sedan, Concord
1961 Chevrolet Impala PS, A/C, excellent condition
$200, 843-568-861
$290.00
Firema 4 door, 4 speed, A/C cruise,
ultibuy.AM/FM stereo. $824.97-0987
749.1837
74 VW Super Beetle new parts. Good condition.
020 020 020
70 VW Beetle, excellent condition, no rust, heat
works, radio, white. N. W. Lawrence 8500
67 Mustum convertible $4500 941-3700 First come, first served!!
I'll be there.
76 Chevrolet for sale. Run well, cheap transportation.
$250 841-2243
78 Datsun 300Z 200Z good conditioning condition Needs
16KW fuel pump 15KW water pump 35 MPG Honda Civic 4 door hatchback 35 MPG, MPV
16KW fuel pump 15KW water pump 35 MPG, MPV
Bertone X19/1-88, leather interior, loaded. 31K,
good condition. 416-409 or 381-474.
"84 Honda Civic 3-door hatchback, 35 MPG, A/C,
stereo, highway miles, make offer
424-3254
Xiaolun X100, 1998 leather, interior垫
31K.
FUN SPORTS CAR-197 TR, great condition,
$100.00, Call 184-6074 (Lenexa).
CARS SELL for $155 (average!) Also jeeps,
trucks, etc. Now available. 905-847-6000 Ext.
50758 for details
NEW CARS, NEW TRUCKS $250 &UPM
COST, DELBERT D. THOMAS 843-8419
ACORD LX, hattaback, IBM 8M2
blue, one owner, A/C, PS. Sony AK403
mech. excel, 100,000 miles hardy. Carefully
maintained and very reliable. $2900. Dan at
Found keys in Fraser. 1st floor on 8/27. 2 car and others.
Call 844-6935.
LOST-FOUND
Tune up your import car, $25. Parts and labor included, satisfaction guaranteed. Call Aaron, 414-6292.
Dependable, mature person to assist with per-
fessional activities, including travel and busi-
band in exchange for rent in pleasant seas-
hings living quarters. 10-15 hrs. a week. expected (30
hrs.) of work. Must be self-motivated and have
only students interested in, or experienced
with:
sold ring with one pearl and two small diamonds on either side. Lost in Union girls bathroom one week ago. Strong sentimental value $50 reward. Call 864-1412.
Brown leather wallet with sipper. Unit 651744.
sax for James at Grace Fellowship School. Hall
LOST-Men's class ring. St. John High School, Beloit, Ms. Royal blue stone, Grad. date 1986, insides on inake BF. If you, PLEASE return to McCollium Hall, room 522 or call 840-7487 and ask
- fragrance model-demonstrator available Saturdays. Approximately 14-16 hours total. Please apply to Weavers at cosmetics department.
River City Reunion Collector's Corner, 810 E.
13th. Books-Ephemera-Art. Call for appointment.
842-7858
ATTENTION: STUDENTS! Natl firm preparing for Fall/Winter work. you will need to be interested, awards internships are possible, & you may earn 2, 3, 4 credits/yr. or semester. Apply now!
Available immediately part-time position (12-20 hours per week) in a research assistant with social service agencies. Req. Bach degree or equivalent and computerized statistics analysis, perfebly SPSS. Knowledge of mainframes, eyesight, hearing, and travel required for hour. Send resumes to Director of Evaluation Services, DCCC2A, 520 W. 25th St., Lawrence, by mail.
Lost Thermodynamics book at 24th & Ridgecourt.
Please call Said at 864-3690 or 843-6517.
HELP WANTED
Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse and Mass. Street Deli now hiring, hire service service service startage working hour, table service $2.01 plan tip. Must have experience and some knowledge of Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse.
Lost: organizer/appointment book-has business
failure. Possible loss in job or position.
Possible loss in hotel Hall or Staffier. Please
contact us.
Female for assistance with my care. Mornings or evenings. Call 749-4395.
Bakery sales cleaning; One for Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday; and one for wednesday. Wednesdays and Saturdays are open daily, paid each day a year. KU grad student preferred. 14 per hour after training. Apply at Munchers
Need help with fall harvest and wheat planting
and combine operator. Call a
610-842-6593
DESPERATELY SEEKING. WORK STUDY STUDENTS for 3 positions at the Spencer Museum, including Teaching Assistant, and Information Dept/Tekhlemon Assistant. Inquire at the 8th floor of Spencer Art Museum.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $10,400-$59,250.yr. Now
Government Call 958-657-6000. R7 for current
contact.
Checkers Pizza has an immediate opening for 5 pizza order takers. Must be willing to take orders on Saturday or Friday or Saturday night. $4.90/hour to start and $3.90/hr after two. Apply in person. Checkers Pizza
Now hiring for part-time video route position. Will maintain, repair, and collect video games. Requires education and creditible references. Starts with Bachelor's degree in T13 Mass. above Buffalo Bob's Smoketown.
H A E R D W will wear him a little extra cash.
Come join the fun of working on the turpike! Harden's now accepting applications for all shifts.
Good pay, flexible hours, meal discounts, free telsav, and more. Apply today to applying today. You will be glad you did!
Applications accepted anytime.
810-669 Weekly/up mail circulating? Rush self-
addressed stamped envelope: Opportunity, 9016
Wilshire Blvd, Box 226, Dept. Q, Beverly Hills, CA
90211
11 a.m.-2 p.m. or 1 p.m-4:30 p.m. line workers
11 a.m.-m; dishwasher 10:30 a.m-2:30 p.m.
person through Friday; 8:30 a.rh. apply
person in person, Kendall Office,
Firce Level Main Union Building, EOE
HIRING! Government jobs--your area
$15,000-$68,000. Call (602) 338-8885. EXT. 4055.
Bike mechanic with Shop Experience. Call Gary
814-691-6811
Part-time graphic designer wanted. Apply at J-
Hawk Spirit from 10-1.
Now hire experienced line cooks and prep cooks. Wage commensurate with experience. Must have some daytime availability. Apply at 719 Mass. www.RufftAfton.SbSmithKatz.com
SALE5-1 need 2 salesperson to help sell a great line of over 2500 books in this area. P/O/T/F or T/F flexible hours. This is a great level ground access. I will also be your own best! Call Mr. Navat at 843-940
Part-time screen printer wanted. Work experience. Apply at Jayhawk交派 from experience.
Person to sit with 8 year-old after school
Alvamar area. 749-458 after 6 Saturdays
RESORT HOTEL
NO. 129. NO. 129. Accepting applications for
summer jobs, internships, and career positions.
For more information and an application; write
National College Recreation Service: P.O. Box
7310, New York, NY 10007.
St. Lawrence Campus Center needs church nursery assistants; Sundays and 9 or 10 a.m.; $5 per session. Call Diana at 749-1653 or Karla at 841-1548.
Sub&Stuff Sandwich Shop
Attention!!
Delivery!!
Now accepting applications for drivers,
20-40 hours, hourly wage plus CASH
PAID NIGHTLY. Please apply at
WORK STUDY position available in the Study Abroad Office. Must be able to work Monday and Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. or Friday from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Duties include: answering telephone, giving out general study abroad information to some typing, mail out, and sending reports to the Office at the Study Abroad, 23 Lippincott.
Waterballroom Representative--National company seeks college释教 to sell waterballroom launcher "Lunar Launcher" ("TM") Send name, address and phone number. LAUNCHER Lunar Launcher P. O Box 5021, Shawney Mission, KS, 65201
MISCELLANEOUS
14$1680 Weekly/Up, mail circulars! Quaes/bosses; Information: RUSH self-
addressed envelope. CM/NA-CDQ POLB 7730, Rockford, IL 61126.
SKI KEYSTONE, for thanksgiving, November 25. 29 Low package prices, includes air/ hotel/kis rental/transfers/lift tickets. Call 843-5608. Package available without air.
small established foreign car repair shop for sale
in Lawrence. Inquiries: 841-5496
We have a new store that you can get cash on almost anything of value. Also, good buys on cameras, tiffen, iTewery equipment (auto & camera repair), tiger cameras (Jawn Pawn & Jewelry, 1084 W. 6th, 749-1919).
Bi-WM attractive and athletic. Would like to
work with someone who is very
Send name, letter, phone and photo to: DC PG
Send name, letter, phone and photo to: DC PG
Happy B day JANE! you love you! The Gropers.
Help! I lost my organism now I'm lost! Please
help!
Intelligent, good-looking' guy who's interested in sports, music, dancin', nature, etc. is lookin' for intelligent, attractive, mature, single-gal-who never been married with same interest. But mail up to date picture and write the message about yourself or your boyfriend. Jay, P. Box KS 60441. KS 60442.
To the dry and scaly KNAVE 600 Complex
the duree club tree with, love the soft and appla
RULER
BUS. PERSONAL
Bike Workshops- Our mechanic will teach you how to change flats, true wheels, must-haves for bike maintenance, all 5 sessions. $8 each. Saturday, 10 a.m. begins September 19. Sunflower, 9/4, Massachusetts, September 20.
843-5000
HEADACHES, BACKCHAKE, ARM PAIN, LEG
HEADACHES and most insurance accepted.
For complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Mark
Johnson 843-3976
*******
Jonathan Jais says, "Come onto me, all ye that labor and
enjoy, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am
meek and lowly in heart; and they shall find rest unto your soul.
For my yoke is easy and my yoke light." Church of God (Holiness), 728 N th.
$25 per month
SEMESTER
MEMBERSHIP
FITNESS CLUB
- Exclusively For Women,
- Certified instructors
IDEA/RHYTHMIC AEROBICS
- Sauna
Mon 10-8
Monat 11-6
DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
844 739-4211
844 739-4211
- Shower Facilities
20 FREE AT VAILBEAVER CREEK! 4 day package, from $199/person includes luxury condo and free skiing. Add extra nights, just $18.50 per person. Call 1-800-8275-6755 today
- Hourly Classes
Tanning
LAWRENCE'S FINEST SELECTION OF RECORDED MUSIC
Sunflower Mt. Bike Workshop-Learn how to repair & adjust your Mt. Bike-thursday evening, 6-4 p.m., begins September 17. $5, 804 Massachusetts, Lawrence, 843-5000.
- Membership Transferable to 2500 Clubs
Pregnant and need help? Call Birightbrat at 843-821. Confidential help/help pregnancy
BodyShapes
Aging
Rare and Used Records Buy, Sell, or Trade
Hammersley, New Hampshire
PENNYLANE
ORGANIZATIONS • COMPUTY DISCOS • RECORDINGS • VIDEOS
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
Massachusetts
music musics "At Exile Records, we buy and sell LP's, CDs, & CD's. We also have new alternative sounds. Exile Records, 13 East 8th, 842-309-603
SERVICES OFFERED
Asexual? Support network, newsletters for you. WASE to Booth, Bostone, KS 60044
TUTORING - Tutoring and programming for: elementary computer science and math, elementary and advance civil engineering, projects and other works.
Reasonable prices for individuals and groups
**CRIMSON SUN PHOTO** is looking for young
artists to model the existing modeling port-
folio over cost. Call us at 1-800-267-9900.
DRIVEER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7748.
FLASHBACK PHOTO fast and dependable party service. Call 848-8770 to book your next visit.
Hare Dies-Will Travel. Mobile Sound Service.
Complete selection of dance music including
Progressive, Soul and Tailor 4D dance music. Experienced D.J. D.I. Quality Equipment, Affordable
Songwriting.
GRAF/X: Scientific and statistical illustration,
maps, drawings, slides, editing aid, also water-
colored. Phone 841-256).
JAM FAVORS for all your party favor needs.
hats, saddles, glasses. You have a匀 quen favor idea, call us and we'll find it for you.
JAM 7707
Gravstone Athletic Club
Graystone Athletic Club
Special Studies Program
FEE per semester
Raquetball, Tennis
Exercise Equipment
RK PHOTOGRAPH SERVICES: Ektachrome
processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W services.
PASSPORT $6.00. Art & Design Building.
Room 206, Room 864767.
2500 W. 6th Street 841-7230
Low Cost English Tutoring
If you have trouble with your English and need an English tutor, please call Shahab at 841-4758 after for further information.
8 p.m. on TU-103.
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $/hr, 843-9032
HARPER LAWYER
1101 Mass
Suite 201 749-0123
MATH TUTOR. Algebra through multivariate,
inverse quadratic equations for small
group. Rates negotiable. 841-044-69
**FREE**
MUSIC
MUSIC
MUSIC
MUSIC
MUSIC
MUSIC
MUSIC
MUSIC
MUSIC
MUSIC
MUSIC
MUSIC
MUSIC
MUSIC
MUSIC
MUSIC
MUSIC
MUSIC
MUSIC
MUSIC
MUSIC
MUSIC
MUSIC
MUSIC
MUSIC
MUSIC
MUSIC
P.A. and Lights, Maximum Audio Wizard,
Call Brd 749-1275.
Now in Lawrence: *inexpensive* 3-track demos,
Bass kits, bass lessons, Basic Productions: 854-2493
Five times (Overland Park) (913)-491-6878
Prompt contraception and abortion services in
Overland Park, PA.
Prompt construction:
SEWING-AUTERATIONS-hove to new for others,
PROMOTION-love to new for others.
SEWING ALTERNATORS - love to hear your driver's license number 84-45390-SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided
warm, caring car们 who like children ages three to five are needed every day for care for a baby or toddler on a day one. Between 7:30 and 3:00 Monday third Friday Daycare volunteers are needed in 3:00 to 13:00. Call 842-5815. www.heure.com
TYPING
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing.
809.7245 or Lisa. 841-1915
Very reasonable. Call Foster 749-2740.
A1-valid professional typing. Term papers.
Theses, Resumes, etc. Reasonable. IBM Electronic
Address: 847-2740
AAabsolutely Fast Typing Is Back! Dependable,
Reasonable Rates, Late Night Typing Available
Kathy 814-2400 days, 749-5284 eve.
FU SECRETARY Typing and word processing,
fastest, affordable, easy. Spelling corrected,
letter quality Pickup on campus Monica
Evensing-weekends
Kathy
NOW, New York
NOW, Desperst $1.50/ppg
Resumes $15.
LIFETIME LIFE 841-3469
Earnings
2 Smart Word Processing. Spelling Corrected.
Very Reasonable. Call Foster 749-2740.
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS
FROM AUSTRALIA
before 9 pm, please
from New York, please
Quality Typing includes excellent spelling, punctuation, grammar, editing. Fast reliable service. Delivery available. 843-0247
**Jody** says, "The word processing. Former editor will transform your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type." 864-203 or day 9.
For professional typing/word processing, call Myra. 841-4980. Fall special $1.20 page, double-space, pica
Jennna's Quality Typing and Word Processing Term papers, theories, dissertation letters, resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter quality printing, spelling corrected. 842.7477
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing, manuscript copies, theses, letter writing.
quality typing or word processing for theses,
dissertations, resumes, term papers, applications
Professional editing, composition available.
Have M.S. Degree.
WRIGHTS TYPING SERVICE: Term papers,
theses, miscellaneous. IBM Selectric. Spelling
corrected. 843-954.
WANTED
KU alumni want KU student to buy him season tickets to KU basketball games. Will make it worth your white. Call 1-800-821-5457. Ask for Dave Speh.
Housemate needed to share very nice 2-story,
2-bedroom house. $162.50 plus 1/2 utilities.
843.7765.
Female operability desired to share 2 BRAP at Harvard Square. $200 plus 1/2 electricity and phone. Pool, KU bus route. Available immediately. Call after 7:51. 841-3780.
new traditional, non-smoker, mature male graduate student to share in recent rent with female graduate student. Please call 843-560-ask for Fred. Ref. fred.fed.com. Request winder.
Pianist for Lawrence Wesleyan Church. One hour
pianist morning, two hours during week for
rehearsal with soloists. Compensation is use of
chair and piano for personal rehearsal. Call
Urgent! A non-smoking male roommate to a bedroom apartment. $165/month plus utilities. Call Cesar at 844-0499 (days) or 842-1522 (after 5:30 p.m.)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wanted 2 female roommates $170 and 1/3 utilities.
Trailridge. Call 842-6541.
Wanted: All Sports Ticket. Will pay well for it!! Call 842-7095.
- Policy
Wanted: a good home for a pure white female kitten, 4 months old, all shirts, devised box, Very cute and lovable. Must Give Awake!! Please call 749-5724.
Wanted: Female roommate $140/month plus 1/2
usions. Utility room. On bus route. Call 749-4379.
Wanted: four drawer file cabinet in good condition.
Steve 864-7042
Wanted: Roommate for 3 bedroom duplex, fully furnished except bedroom, $10 plus 7 us/hr accommodations.
Classified Information Mail-In Form
- Policy
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
set in BOLD Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words
Words set in based on consecutive day insertions only
Classified rates are based on consecutive day insertions only No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
insertion of any advertisement
No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising
Blind box ads-please add $4.00 service charge
Tearseats are NOT provided for classified advertisements.
Found ads are free for three days, no more than 15 words.
- Prep a Reorder Form form with the correct payment
Just MAIL in the classified order form and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Daily Kansan.
- Deadlines
- Is on Monday at 4:00pm 2 days prior to publication.
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
| Words | 1 Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | 10 days | 15 days | 1 month |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 0.15 | 2.85 | 4.20 | 6.00 | 10.00 | 14.95 | 18.90 |
| 16.20 | 3.35 | 5.00 | 7.05 | 11.30 | 16.55 | 20.75 |
| 21.25 | 3.90 | 5.80 | 8.10 | 12.60 | 18.10 | 22.60 |
| 26.30 | 4.40 | 6.55 | 9.15 | 13.90 | 19.70 | 24.40 |
| 31.35 | 4.95 | 7.35 | 10.20 | 15.25 | 21.25 | 26.25 |
Classifications
100 announcements 300 for sale 800 guaranteed 800 services offered
100 attentiation 310 auto sales 700 personal 900 tipping
100 delivery 250 deliveries 400 shipping
Classified Mail Order Form
Address ___
(phone number published only, if included below)
| | | | | |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| | | | | |
| | | | | |
| | | | | |
ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Date ad begins ___
Total days in paper ___
Amount paid ___
Classification ___
DLOLW KANSAN POLICY
Make checks payable to:
19 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
---
16
Tuesday, September 8, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
O
C
--get the second one BORDER BANDIDO
UPO
--get the second one BORDER BANDIDO
S
Sub & Stuff Sandwich Shop
All Body Building Products
FREE MEDIUM SOFT DRINK with the purchase of any sub 1618 W. 23rd St.
Fitness Factory*
A Cut Above
20% OFF with this coupon
*formerly Nature's Best and Factor-E Aerbics 23rd & Louisiana 842-1983
$10 Haircut, Shampoo and Blowdry with this coupon
--get the second one BORDER BANDIDO
711 West 23rd 842-1144
Graystone Athletic Club NUING SPECIAL
TANNING SPECIAL 10 Visits for $25
Buy your first Pyramid Pizza at our regular price and...
2500 W. 6th Street 841-7230
Raquetball Exercise Equipment
PYRAMID
PIZZA
...get your second
one tipping pizza
for only $1 small pizza
$2 medium pizza
$3 large pizza
CHECKERS
PIZZA
16 inch Deluxe
$7.99 + tax
expires 9-22-87
2214 YALE RD.
841-8010
"We Pile It On!"
LEADING EDGE®
"MODEL D"
$999 limited quantities
MICROTECH
STARIMAL.CRKT
TWO-TOPPING only
Authorized Sales & Repair Center
841-9513 Holiday Plaza
Leading Edge & Model D are trademarks of Leading
Education Products, Inc.
BETTER
PIZZAS
PYRAMID PIZZA
$ 1 0^{5 0} $
"We Pile It On"
The delivery is Fast,
Friendly, and FREE.
CHECKERS
PIZZA
2-12" TWO-TOPPING PIZZAS
$7.99 + tax expires 9-22-87
2214 YALE RD. 841-8010
--get the second one BORDER BANDIDO
TWO LARGE
TWO-TOPPING PIZZAS
2 for 1 MONEY SAVER Good for tanning, weights, sauna, or hot tub.
TWO-TO only
$13^{99}
PYRAMID
1975
"We Pile It On!" The delivery is Fast, Friendly, and FREE.
CHECKERS
PIZZA
16 inch Two-Toppings
$6.99 + tax
expires 9-22-87
2214 YALE RD.
841-8010
EUROPEAN HOLIDAY PLAZA
SUNTANNING 25th & IOWA
HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB expires September 11, 1987 841-6232
FREE.
--get the second one BORDER BANDIDO
Large
1
ZERCHER
PHOTO
$1.00 OFF
Film Developing & Processing
HILLCREST
919 IOWA
expires September 30, 1987
DOWNTOWN
1107 MASS
the King Tut
天气预报
THE Palace
Cards & Gifts
"We Pile It On!"
PYRAMID
PIZZA
"We Pile It On!" The delivery is Fast, Friendly, and FREE.
36
SELECTION OF
. However, the KAPRD pro is that kind of friend who would make it a little more challenging for you.
You won't find too many teaching centers and these come with two sweet penalties — especially as a 5.4 m². However, the KAYPRO PC is just that kind of friend and right now your KayPro dealer is offering the KAYPRO PC on hand drive PC, 50 with special student prices
FREE PRINTER*
Plus $100 Educational Discount
Faculty, Staff, & Students
23rd & IOWA
841-0094
Mon.-Thur. 10-7
Fri.-Sat. 10-5
KAYPRO
COMPUTERS
GREEK WEEK '87 Wednesday, Sept. 9
1 48 Hour Events Start
noon between Stauffer-Flint & Wescoe
II Car Wash
3 p.m.- 7 p.m.
at
Kroger on 23rd St.
$1 donation per car
III All Greek Dinner Exchange 5:30 p.m.
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, September 9, 1987
11
Nation/World
Siamese twins still in drug-induced coma and remain in critical but stable condition
The Associated Press
BALTIMORE — Siamese twins who were seated in a 22-hour operation over the weekend remained in critical but stable condition yesterday as doctors closely monitored their drug-induced comas.
The 7-month-old infants, Patrick and Benjamin Binder, were lying very still sleeping in separate cribs at Johns Hopkins Children's Center, hospital spokeswoman Joann Rodgers said yesterday.
At least one physician and two nurses were monitoring the babies around the clock, doctors said.
Doctors plan to keep the children in a phenobarbital coma at least until tomorrow, to give their brains a chance to heal from the surgery that ended Sunday morning. The pair had been attached at the head.
Following the operation, Dr. Mark Rogers, who coordinated the complicated surgery by a team of 70 nurses, doctors and medical technicians, said
the infants would be kept in the coma for a minimum of five to seven days.
Doctors are controlling virtually all the twins' body functions.
white the infants, from Ulm, West Germany, had separate brains, they shared a vein in the back of the head that helps drain the brain. Surgeons had to separate and then reconstruct the blood drainage system in each boy.
Two major risks doctors and nurses watched for were bleeding and swelling of the brain tissue. So far, there has been no excess bleeding, said the hospital spokeswoman.
insisted on speaking Surgery coordinator Rogers said that even when they were joined, the boys' demonstrated their separate personalities.
separate the doctor. "Patrick's head was turned . . . Benjamin was a little less active," he said. Before they were separated, the doctor said he once found one child crying for food while the other slept. "I couldn't believe it," Rogers said.
Siamese twins joined at the head occur in about 1 out of 2 million to 2.5 million births, and the survival rate of twins who have been separated is normally no greater than 50 percent, according to Dr. Ben Carson, chief of pediatric neurosurgery.
The operation required 60 pints of blood because the children bled more heavily than doctors had anticipated.
At one point in surgery, it appeared the supply of available blood for the twins might run out. At first, the operating room staff volunteered to donate their own, although the suggestion wasn't practical. The Red Cross came through with 10 additional units.
The twins' parents, Josef and Theresia Binder, were unavailable for interviews or photographs after selling exclusive rights to their story to Bunte, a West German magazine. The National Enquirer purchased North American rights to the story.
Ethiopian government predicts famine appeals for nearly 1 million tons of food
The Associated Press
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia — The Ethiopian government has made an appeal for nearly a million tons of emergency food aid for next year to offset an expected shortage, the top United States diplomat here said yesterday.
James Cheek, U.S. charge d'affaires, said the United States and other diplomatic missions in Addis Ababa, the Ethiopian capital, received letters yesterday from the government's Relief and Rehabilitation Commission asking for 950,000 metric tons of food aid.
the letter gave no figure for the
number of people affected by the potential food shortage, he said.
A relief official, who worked through the catastrophic Ethiopian drought and famine of 1984-85, calculated 5 million Ethiopians were threatened. The official spoke on condition of anonymity.
The United Nations Prevention and Preparedness Group in Ethiopia also issued an appeal urging immediate action to prevent a famine.
"The threatening situation makes such provisional planning estimates essential if widespread starvation and suffering are to be averted in 1988," wrote Michael Priestley, coordinator for the U.N. agency.
During the 1984-85 drought, more than one million Ethiopians were forced to leave their homes to seek food. Sprawling refugees camps were established overnight and many became breeding grounds for diseases like cholera.
disease cases in the country. In addition to food aid, Priestley said Ethiopia "will inevitably require further substantial investments in transport, port improvements and spare parts."
During the previous drought, it took five to seven months for food aid to be delivered to famine victims. Part of the problem was bottlenecks
created by poor facilities at Ethiopia's Red Sea ports, a shortage of vehicles and a lack of spare parts.
Donors nations and relief agencies pledged 500,000 metric tons of food aid for 1987. To date, no plaques have been made for 1988.
Cheek said there would have to be consultations in Washington before the United States responded to Ethiopia's latest appeal.
He said the United States was the largest individual donor during the 1984-85 drought, giving 500,000 metric tons of food worth $600 million.
This election a no-lose proposition Mexican president de la Madrid to pick successor from ruling party
The Associated Press
MEXICO CITY — President Miguel de la Madrid will reveal the name of his successor any day now. It is done in Mexico by choosing the candidate of the governing party, which has never lost a presidential race.
The election is scheduled for next July. Whoever de la Madrid chooses to represent the Institutional Revolutionary Party in what is popularly called "el desaté" (the unveiling), is sure to be sworn in for a six-year term on Dec. 1, 1988.
There is a difference this year, but only a slight one.
So powerful is the party's grassroots control that it has won every contest for president, senator or state governor since its founding in 1929
Previous incumbents have announced the names of those who will follow with no prior indication of
who would be anointed, but de la Madrid will choose from among six men who have presented their views publicly.
They appeared over a two-week period, in alphabetical order, at breakfast meetings of the party leadership that were broadcast nationally.
Potential presidents in previous years avoided admitting even privately that they might be chosen.
De la Madrid's innovation is widely interpreted as an attempt to counter growing disenchantment with the current political system. In Mexico, where small steps sometimes are called milestones, his action has prompted both applause and denunciation.
One thing on which critics and supporters agree is that many Mexicans are unhappy with the system and its secrecy. That has been made
clear by declining voter participation, especially in state and local elections.
Lorenzo Meyer of the Colegio de Mexico, a respected graduate and research institution, called the innovation a small step that would lead Mexicans to press for more reforms and that showed the system was willing to change.
All six potential candidates are Cabinet members, in keeping with the party's tradition of choosing the next president from the incumbent government.
government
They are Ramon Aguirre, mayor of Mexico City; Sergio Garcia Ramirez, the attorney general; Manuel Bartlett, interior secretary; Alfredo del Mazo, secretary of energy and mines; Miguel Gonzalez Avelar, public education secretary, and Carlos Salinas de Gortari, secretary of budget and planning.
Bartlett, del Mazo and Salinas de Gortari are considered the front-runners.
Because of the revolution of 1910-21, which nearly tire Mexico apart and cost 1 million lives, the party's founders sought political stability above all else — even at the cost of corruption, repression and election fraud to stay in power.
A top official of the party, which is known as the PRI for its initials in Spanish, was asked in a private conversation recently about the possibility of choosing a candidate in open convention. His response was a picture of armed factions shooting it out on the convention floor.
Pressure to liberalize the system began increasing this year. A small but influential party group that calls itself the Democratic Current demanded more open selection of candidates.
The Kansas Relays Are Coming!!
KU
KU
Applications are now being accepted for the Student Relays Committee.
This committee is instrumental to the organization and administration of one of the nation's oldest and most prestigious Track and Field Meets.
BECOME PART OF THE TRADITION! Working with the Kansas Relays can be an exciting and rewarding experience. Applications will be accepted through FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25. Interviews will be conducted the following two weeks. Stop by the Kansas Track Office, Room 143 Allen Field House today and fill out an application
PRE-MED STUDENTS The Annual Junior/Senior Pre-Med Meeting is:
Thursday, Sept. 10 at 7:00 p.m.
Alderson Auditorium - KS Union
- Application Information
- Video - "The AMCAS Story"
- Video : "Passage To Physicianhood"
- KU Med representatives in attendance
ALL PRE-MEDS WELCOME!
Representatives from KU Med will be on campus to meet with students individually on:
Sept. 28
Oct. 5
Oct.12
Oct.19
To make an appointment, see the Pre-Med Secretary in Room 106, Strong Hall, 864-3667.
$24,000 FOR COLLEGE
NAVY OFFICER
BACCALAUREATE DEGREE COMPLETION PROGRAM (BDCP)
BENEFITS -
- $20,000 ANNUAL STARTING SALARY
* SUPERVISORY POSITIONS
* OPPORTUNITY FOR ADVANCEMENT
* FREE MEDICAL AND DENTAL CARE
* 30 DAYS PAID VACATION YEARLY
NORTH INDIA SAILWAY CORPORATION
1
TO QUALIFY -
- U.S. CITIZEN IN GOOD PHYSICAL CONDITION
- COLLEGE JUNIOR
- AGE 18 TO 25
OFFICER REPRESENTATIVES WILL BE ON CAMPUS AT THE CAREER FAIR SEPTEMBER 15, 16, 17, 1987. COME BY OR CALL THE NUMBER LISTED BELOW FOR FURTHER INFO.
APPLY NOW!
800-821-5110
PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST FREE DELIVERY
1601 W 23rd Southern Hills Mall
842-1212
MENU WE FEATURE THE UNIVERSAL SIZE PIZZA 10 INCHES. 6 Slices, FEEDS ONE TO TWO PEOPLE 1 PIZZA Our Small 2 PIZZAS Our Medium 3 PIZZAS Our Large
STANDARD CHEESE A HAND FASHIONED CRUST WITH A GENEROUS TURNING OF TOMATO SAUCE AND CHEESES. THE STARTING POINT FOR YOUR FAVORITE COMBINATION $400 $700 $900 EACH ADDITIONAL PIZZA $2^{00}
Mon - Thursday 11 a.m - 2 a.m
Fri - Sat 11 a.m - 3 a.m
Sunday - 11 a.m - 1 a.m
ALL TOPPINGS 50C PER TOPPING PER PIZZ "NO COUPON SPECIALS"
Prime Time Special
3—Pizzas
1—Topping
4—Cokes
$10.00
Everyday
Two-Fers
2—Pizzas
2—Toppings
2—Cokes
$8.00
WE ACCEPT CHECKS (25¢ Service Charge)
Valuable Coupons
Sunday
Super Special
2—Super Shuttles
2—Cokes
$10.00
PIZZA SHORTYLE
FROZEN & DELICIOUS
Valuable Coupons
PIZZA SHORTLINE
842-1212
$2.00 OFF
Any Three Pizzas
PIZZA SHORTLINE
842-1212
$1.00 OFF
Any Pizza Ordered
11 a.m. - 4 p.m.
PIZZA SHORTLINE
842-1212
50c OFF
Any Pizza
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPIRES 12-31-87
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPIRES 12-31-87
LIMITED DELIVERY AREA
WE DELIVER DURING LUNCH!
PIZZA SHUTTLE
MILK CAFE
PIZZA STUDIO
STUDIO
DELIVERY
WE DELIVER DURING LUNCH!
---
12
Wednesday, September 9, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Hart admits to adultery; won't re-enter race
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Former Democratic presidential front-runner Gary Hart, grappling with the issue that drove him from the 1988 campaign, admits he has committed adultery and says he doesn't plan to re-enter the race although he still wants to be "part of this debate" over the country's future.
"I'm not running for president," Hart said in a 60-minute appearance on ABC-TV's "Nightline" program last night. "I have no plans to run for president."
The former Colorado senator was contrite and defiant by turns during the question and answer session, which he concluded with an emotional apology to his children, Andrea and John.
"I just want to say to one very
special young woman and young man how sorry I am for letting them down for many others like them. Have courage, we are not defeated and we will not be. I will find some way, I promise you, to continue on," he said.
Thus ended an extraordinary late-night television session in which Hart took full responsibility for the serious mistake of keeping company with Miami model Donna Rice. Questions about his relationship with Rice led to Hart's withdrawal last May 8, at a time when he was the prohibitive front-runner for the Democratic presidential nomination.
"I made a serious mistake. I should not have been in the company of any woman who was not a friend of mine or my wife," Hart said. "I should not have been with Miss
"I am totally and fully responsible for my own actions and I want to say to everyone how sorry I am. I want to apologize to you for those actions," Hart said.
Rice."
Hart sat. Hart has stayed out of the public spotlight since his withdrawal from the race, and his appearance on the television program marked the beginning of his re-emergence as a public figure. He said he plans to meet later today with New York Gov. Mario Cuomo, and has scheduled a speech in Philadelphia tomorrow that marks the start of a series of such addresses.
Asked by interviewer Ted Kopplow whether he had an affair with Miss Rice, Hart refused to answer directly.
If the question is in the 29 years of
my marriage, including two public separations, have I been absolutely and totally faithful to my wife, I regret to say the answer is no.
"But I also am never going to answer any specific questions about any individuals," he said.
Hart also delivered a lecture to Koppel on the propriety of the question.
"I've been forced to make a declaration here that I think is unprecedented in American political history, and I regret it. That question should never have been asked, and I shouldn't have to answer it. . . . I will say to you this, and I would say this to the national press corps: never ask another candidate that question. It isn't anybody else's business."
As for his political future, Hart said that while he has no plans to run for
president, "I want to be part of this debate.
"I am going to give speeches and I am going to have an impact," said the man who ran a surprisingly strong race for the 1984 Democratic nomination before losing out to Walter F. Mondale.
"I'm not going to create a campaign organization. I'm not going to raise money. I'm not going to hire a pollster. . . And I hope, by getting what I think are irrelevant issues behind us, and certainly private issues behind us, and certainly focusing on what is a real issue — and that is the privacy of political leaders, so we do get the best leadership for this country — I can make that contribution. And that's all I want to do."
Suburb life costly
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — For sale: nice house and yard, good neighborhood, convenient commute to city, $1.2 million.
That's no type, according to a nationwide survey of 50 exclusive suburban communities released yesterday. It found $1.2 million is the average price of a single-family home in the most expensive U.S. suburbs.
That distinction is shared by the New York bedroom communities of Greenwich, Conn., in lower Fairfield County northeast of New York City, and Mill Neck, N.Y., a tiny town on the northern tip of Nassau County on New York's Long Island.
The survey also found it takes at least $500,000 to buy a home in any of the country's top 40 suburban neighborhoods.
Montville, a tiny community in northern New Jersey, was at the bottom of the list, with an average home price of $440,000.
The Relo Broker Network, a Chicago-based residential broker referral organization that serves more than 13,000 communities nationwide, conducted the survey. Relo said figures were based on summer sales prices
in what it described as active, upscale real estate markets served by the organization's 1,100 members.
"We're dealing with the most affluent buyers in America, so price and interest rates often become secondary considerations." Benjamin A. Rowe, president of the group and chairman of Preferred Properties Inc. of Greenwich, said in a statement accompanying the survey.
"a potential buyer falls in love with a house in this marketplace, he often pays whatever it takes to make a deal, and that's why prices for luxury homes are skyrocketing nationwide," Rowe said.
The report said New York led all states with 18 suburbs in the top 50, followed by New Jersey with 12 and California with 10.
Connecticut's lower Fairfield County had three in the top 10, with Greenwich at $1.2 million, and New Canaan and Darien at $800,000 each. New Jersey's Bergen County had two $1 million-dollar suburbs, Alpine at $1.18 million and Saddle River at $1.15 million.
The survey did not specify what the buyer gets for the money.
PTL meets fundraiser goal
The Associated Press
FORT MILL, S.C. — The Rev. Jerry Failwell announced yesterday that PTL surpassed two fundraising goals in a “summer of survival” drive, so he will keep a promise to plunge down the ministry’s 52-foot water slide fully clothed.
Failwell, PTL's husky, 6-foot-4 board chairman, said he would wear a navy blue suit, necktie, and shoes and would say a few words at the top of the slide before launching himself downward tomorrow on the slide at Heritage USA.
USA.
"I realize it may be my last sermon. I may break my foo neck, but I'm going down that water slide." Fowlclub told viewers of the "PTL Club" television show, with a shake of his head and a grin. "I invite you to watch this idiot do it."
Falwell, who took over the PTL ministry and Christian theme park from evangelist Jim Bakker in March, said the ministry met its goal of raising $20 million by Labor Day. He said the ministry needed the money to survive.
He also said that as of Monday, more than 1,000 people joined a Resurrection Committee by pledging $1,000 aniere.
Falwell said in May that he would go down the theme park's
W.
We still need to meet the $4.5 million monthly budget. We're not free and clear but thank God the summer's over and we made it.'
— Jerry Falwell PTL board chairman
yesterday, "I told you we needed $20 million to survive. There was a lot of people who said we'd never make it. But I'm here to tell you as of yesterday we went substantially over the top."
water slide if 1,000 people joined the Resurrection Committee by Labor Day. At the time, he cailed "PTL Club" co-host Doldham to take the ride with him. But Fallow spokesman Mark Demoss said yesterday that Damh was off the hook.
Falwell said he didn't know the specific amount raised during "the summer of survival" as of Labor Day.
But he said PTL received the largest amount of mail ever yesterday. If donations continue at the present rate, Ffalwell said, the ministry may raise between $21 million and $22 million by tomorrow.
"In May," Falwell told viewers.
PTL, which filed for protection from creditors in a U.S. Bankruptcy Court on June 12, three months after Bakker's downfall amid a sex scandal, is preparing a reorganization plan to be presented next month.
Falwell said PTL has paid its bills to stations around the country and can meet its payroll and utility bills now that the fund-raising goal has been met.
"We're still on the air," he said.
Michigan will rule on state abortions
The justices voted 6-0 to take the case, which was appealed by the state and Right to Life of Michigan.
The Associated Press
LANSING, Mich. — The Michigan Supreme Court agreed yesterday to determine when a law ending statepaid abortions for poor women should take effect.
"We're pleased that they accepted the case," said William Perrone, attorney for the anti-abortion organization. "Hopefully they will decide this case favorable to the pro-life forces."
People's Campaign for Choice is challenging the anti-abortion law in court and circulating petitions in an effort to stamp it out at the ballot box.
"We feel confident that our legal language and our reasons are well spelled out," said Judith Frey, a spokeswoman for the group.
At issue is a law abolishing state- paid abortions for the poor unless a woman's life is in danger.
Right to Life, which initiated the law with a petition drive, contends the law should have gone into effect as soon as it was enacted by the Legislature in June. The pro-choice group contends the law can't take effect until spring.
The two pursued that point in court because the issue had never come up; only a few state laws have started as citizen petition drives, and none was crafted in the same way as the abortion spending ban.
The Supreme Court's decision case came more than two months after Gov. James Blanchard asked the justices to bypass two lower courts and hear the case.
The justices balked, and the case moved quickly through Ingham County Circuit Court and the Michigan Court of Appeals, which agreed with Blanchard that the new law shouldn't take effect until spring.
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, September 9, 1987
13
200 KANSAS CITY
Jenny Splittorff, left, freshman pitcher for the KU softball team and the daughter of ex-Royals pitcher Paul Splittorff, turns to fire the ball toward first base. The team was practicing at Jayhawk Field yesterday afternoon. Splittorff also plays first base for the team.
Pitcher tries to make name for herself
By MIKE CONSIDINE Staff writer
Staff writer
Jenny Splitterff is destined never to be known as simply Jenny Splitterff. Or even freshman Jenny Splitterff.
"It's never Jenny," Splittorff said. "Its always 'the daughter of the ex-Royals pitcher.'"
Royals pitcher. Yes, the pitcher-first baseman for the KU softball team is Paul Splittorff's daughter. The same Paul Splittorff who established six club records, including most career victories, in 15 years with the Kansas City Royals.
taylas "I really think it puts pressure on
her, but it depends on how she handles it," said softball coach Kalum Haack. "So far she's handled everything very well.
everything.
"She hasn't been faced with anything yet where her name's been an item," he said. "She doesn't think anything of it and neither do the girls on the team. Neither do I."
Splittorff was recruited by former coach Bob Stanclift out of Blue Springs High School as a pitcher.
"Even if I didn't play softball, I would have come here," she said. "I love the campus. And I wanted to stay close to home."
stay close to home.
Although Splittorff was recruited as a pitcher and is one of three pitchers on Haack's squad, he said he thought she's likely to make her biggest contribution in the field.
would have known how good I could have gotten."
Springs High School "I had offers from Division I schools, but I wanted to go as high as I could go and see if I could compete," she said. "If I had gone to a school that was smaller, I never
"I think she's going to help us best at first base," Haack said.
As a pitcher, she's more a Paul Splitterff-type than a Dennis Leonard time.
Type.
"She's not an overpowering pitcher, more of a finesse, off-speed pitch er. She's not going to strike many people out." Haack said. "She has good location and good control. Just like her dad. They're very similar."
Splittorff began playing softball at age nine.
"The reason I started was because all my friends were playing," said Splitterff, who started pitching at 14. "I just grew to love it. So I stayed with it after most people dropped out."
She said that being around baseball all her life gave her a little better knowledge of the game than her teammates.
Swimmer hopes of returning to KU squad
Staff writer
Bv ROBERT WHITMAN
if no barriers get in the way, Dionne will return to the University in January to begin class work and be a part of the women's swimming team.
Until that November day in 1985 when she was in an automobile accident, Karen Dionne was a student at the University of Kansas and a member of the KU women's swimming team.
team.
The accident that nearly killed Dionne and killed KU swimmer Tammy Pease occurred on U.S. Highway 75 near Independence, Kan. The car that the two were riding in a hit a scissor spot in the road, went out of control and struck another car.
Dionne was comatose for nearly five months, but is on a road to recovery that could lead her back to the University.
She was released from New Medico Rehabilitation in Wauchula, Fla., on
August 14. She was there for more than 11 months.
"From someone they said wouldn't live, from someone they said wouldn't wake up, from someone they said wouldn't walk, from someone they said wouldn't talk, she's fought all the way back," KU swimming coach Gary Kempf said. Kempf he visited Dionne at her home in Bartlesville, Okla., about two weeks ago.
Dionne said she planned to return to the University for the spring 1988 semester. She said she was not sure what classes or how many hours she would take.
would take.
She said she was taking two classes this semester at Bartlesville Wesleyan College, kinesiology (the study of human movement) and development psychology.
once she returns to the University, there is a place for her in the women's swimming program, Kempf said.
"I can't tell you how, but she'll be an integral of the program," Kempf said. "But she'll work with me on the women's swimming program wherever we need her."
we need her. Dionne said she was swimming on her own in Bartlesville for about half an hour a day. She said she planned to swim for about one hour a day at the local YMCA soon.
As far as swimming competitively again, Dionne said, "That I don't know. I'd always like to, but I don't think it's possible. I'm out of shape. I've been out of the sport for two years.
"If I swim, there's always a place for me. If I don't, I'll be doing something, either coaching or whatever."
Kempf said he was not ready to give up on Dionne as a swimmer.
"Her swimming career is probably over," he said, "but I've learned never to give up on her, though."
ing physical disabilities that would prevent her from swimming again, but that she still had pain in her hip when she tried a flip turn in the pool.
"I'm getting around fine. Dionne
is I'm running a mile of miles
girl!" I yelled, anything.
Dionne said there were no linger-
There is also no lingering fear of cars or driving. She said she was taking a driver's education class at the college for her childish school district especially for adults.
"It's kind of like a review," she said.
Dionne said she drove on back roads with her parents in the family car to become accustomed to driving again.
She said her driver's license had been renewed just before the accident and it had not expired yet.
"It was weird being in a car after all that time," Dionne said.
She said she thought she would be afraid of driving again, but wasn't.
Brett helps Royals gain ground in 4-2 victory
The Associated Press
ANAHEIM, Calif. — George Brett hit a two-run homer and singled home a tiebreaking run, and Mark Gubicza won his first game in over a month last night as the Kansas City Royals defeated the California Angels 4-2.
Reliever John Davis quelled a seventh-inning threat by striking out Brian Downing with two on and went on to get his second save.
California Angels 42-21 Brett's 19th homer gave the Royals a 2-1 lead in the first. He singled in the seventh and drove in Willie Wilson from third base, snapping a 2-1 tie.
In the California second, Wally Joyner singled and took third on a single by Jack Howell before scoring as Bill Buckner bounced into a force play.
and wilt to get it wet. The Royals jumped on starter Jerry Reus in the first inning as Kevin Stree drew a one-out walk ahead of Brett's blow into the right field seats.
The Angels made it 2-2 without getting a hit in the sixth. Downing and Devon White led off with walks and advanced on Johnny Ray's grounder before Downing scored on another infield grounder
Wilhelm Wilson ironed his Gublerzia and pitched four-fit ball for 6% innings and overcame seven walks for his first victory in Aug. 2, snapping a six-game losing streak.
bv Jovner
by Joyner.
With Willie Fraser, 9-9, on the mound, Wilson singled to lead off the seventh. Wilson stole second and stopped at third on Seitzer's single before scoring as Brett punched another single into left field.
told
In the eighth, Wilson singled home the game's
final run.
The Royals had a season-high six stolen bases in the game.
With the victory, the Royals gained a game on the division-leading Minnesota Twins, who lost 4-3 to the Chicago White Sox.
Coordinator's plans help KU football team take show on the road
By CRAIG ANDERSON
Staff writer
The KU football team may have begun concentrating on their opening game against Auburn last week, but Shirley Nieder has been preparing for the game since March.
Nieder, an administrative assistant in the business office of the Athletic Department, works as the travel coordinator for the football team. She has planned football road trips for the Jayhawks since 1974.
The preparations began six months ago when Nieder began contacting hotels in the Auburn, Ala., area to see if she could reserve the 75 to 80 rooms that the football traveling party would need. Nieder said the closest hotel she could find was a Holiday In Holdhome in Montgomery, an hour's drive from Auburn.
A final decision on the Holidome, she said, was made after haggling on the price of the rooms. The final price agreed to was $45 a room, per night.
"The hotels obviously want to make money so they want to get us for as much as they can," she said. "I'm usually able to talk them down to the price I want."
to the care room.
Once at the hotels, Nieder said the players were given room keys immediately so they could go right to their rooms. While at the hotel, she said players and coaches avoided any frivolous expenses and lived on the bare necessities.
"No players are allowed to make any long distance phone calls," she said. "They don't eat steak dinners
for means:
Because of the distance to the football stadium. Nieder arranged for buses to take the team to and from Auburn's Jordan-Hare Stadium. She said she completed those plans during the summer. The Alabama State Highway Patrol agreed to escort the team wherever it went on the road trip.
for meals."
Nieder said the football team would travel by airplane to its games with Auburn and Colorado. She said whether a flight was chartered or commercial depended on which was less expensive. Kansas will take a chartered plane for its trip to Auburn.
Adrian
We all the travel plans had been finalized, Nieder then talked with Coach Bob Valesente to make out a time schedule. The schedule included the team's plans from the time it left the Jayhawker Towers on Friday morning to its arrival at Forbes Field in Topeka after the game.
Though the schedule may be given out to members of the traveling party, it is always subject to change. Nieder learned yesterday morning that Valesente had decided to move his team's practice from the Alabama Christian Academy in Montgomery to Jordan-Hare Stadium.
ery to join them.
With the change, Nieder said she would have to reroute the buses to take the team to Auburn instead of Montgomery, as had first been planned. She said she would have to talk with Valesente to revise all the travel times.
Pieper expected to be ready to face Auburn this Saturday
By a Kansan reporter
Kansas senior offensive tackle Bob Pieper took part in all contact drills during the Jayhawks practice yesterday. Lynn Bott, director of sports medicine, said he expected Pieper to be at full strength for Kansas' opening game this Saturday against Auburn.
Auburn.
"Pieper looks excellent," he said.
"He went through all the drills with no problem at all."
The KU defensive line is still a concern, Coach Bob Valesente said. He said the Jayhawk front four is unproven and will be tested by a strong Auburn offensive line.
"Von Lacey hasn't had much experience at defensive tackle," he said. "All the guys are working hard, though."
brugio
Nine non-redshirt freshmen will travel with the Jayhawk varsity to Auburn. Running backs Frank Hatchett and Maurice Hooks, offensive linemen Dave Dunne and Jason Shepherd, tight end Wolf Blaser, second team linebacker Kyle Schenker, safety Michael Page and linebacker Tony Barker will all make the trip. One two freshman quarterbacks, Lance Flachsbarth or Kevin Verdigo will also suit up for the opening game.
David O'Donnell KANSAN
It's a kick
Fred Sadowski/KANSAN
Jon Gregor, goaltie for the KU Soccer Club, kicks the ball out and away from the goal while practicing with the club yesterday evening at Shenk Complex, 23rd and Iowa streets.
Most Big Eight teams seem solid at quarterback position
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The most vital position on any football team — the quarterback position — seems to be fairly solid at most Big Eight schools heading into the 1987 season.
Colorado's veterish wishbone operative, Mark Hatcher, has cleared up his academic problems and is open Saturday when he visits the season. He visits Oregon. Coach Bill Brennan had professed plenty of confidence in Hatcher's backups in the event that his only experienced wishbone quarterback was unavailable. But McCartney was not at all hesitant when asked yesterday if Hatcher was his starter.
"You bet he is," McCartney said in the Big Eight's weekly telephone news conference with head coaches.
Second-ranked Nebraska, which hosts No. 3 UCLA on Saturday, will be under the direction of junior Steve Taylor, whose 157 yards rushed last week against Utah State set a school record for single-game rushing by a quarterback.
Missouri's wishbone will also be in capable hands, assured Coach
"Ronnie Cameron has been playing the best football of his life." Widenhofer said. Cameron, a quick, sturdy junior, has been injury-prone since he arrived at Missouri, however.
Woody Widenhofer.
"But so far he's been injury-free, and he's playing very, very well." Widenhofer said. But if Cameron should falter — or even if he doesn't — the Tigers may well see SMU transfer John Stollenwerck running their new offense.
"Cameron is probably a little
quicker in the open field and his passing arm is probably a little stronger", said Widenhofer, whose Tigers open their season at home Saturday against Baylor. "But Stollenwerck is probably a little more accurate as a passer."
But only because he's a fifth-year senior," said Walden, this year's only
Iowa State and Kansas insist they have two quarterbacks apiece. Iowa State coach Jim Walden said yesterday he will start the season against Tulane on Saturday with Brett Sadek under center.
newcomer to the Big Eight's coaching ranks. Fourth-year junior Derek DeGennaro will also see action, Walden said.
"We don't have a No. 1 and a No. 2 quarterback." Valesene said. "We have a No. 1 and a No. 1-A. I feel very comfortable with our quarterback situation. It's nice to know that there
Even though he's settled upon underclassman Kelly Dohoeh as his starting quarterback Saturday against Auburn, Kansas coach Bob Valesente insisted that senior Mike Orth will be heard from.
will be a quarterback with me along the sideline who's capable of going in there and turning the game around."
Walden, Valesente and Widenhofer are no doubt hoping that one quarter-back will step in and claim the position the way Gary Swim did Saturday for Kansas State. Replacing Tim Hanson starting the second half, Swim, a junior college transfer, three touchdown passes to John Williams, rallying the Wildcats from a 16-deficit to a 22-19 lead in a game they eventually lost to Austin Peay 26-22.
---
1
14
Wednesday, September 9, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Sports
Basketball coaches ready for recruiting battle
By DARRIN STINEMAN Staff writer
Kansas men's basketball coaches Larry Brown, Alvin Gentry and Ed Manning are armed and ready to embark on a nationwide search for the next generation of Jayhawk basketball players. The coaches will begin visiting potential recruits' homes on Sept. 17, the first day the allows universities to make personal contact with high school players.
Because NCAA rules forbid college basketball programs to release the names of players they are recruiting until they have signed a letter of intent Gentry could not say who the coaches would visit. He did say,
however, that the coaches are "very interested" in some high school prospects from the Kansas City area, and that they will be traveling to California, Colorado, Florida, Mississippi, and Texas to visit high school seniors.
During the period they are allowed to make personal contact, Gentry said he, Brown and Manning would visit recruits during the week and have them come to Lawrence on the weekends to see the campus. He said the recruits are usually invited to the University when a football or basketball game is scheduled.
That continuous cycle will make it a hectic three weeks for the three coaches.
"You can only see one or two kids a day," Gentry said. "If there was one thing a college coach didn't have to do, for me it would be visiting (recruts)' homes."
Fortunately for the coaches, they won't have to go into the recruiting battle unarmed.
One of the weapons they will be carrying, coach Alvin Gentry said, is a winning basketball tradition.
"I think our program speaks for itself," Gentry said. "The last four years we've won as many games as anybody. We're very comparable to any school in the country, and that's playing a very tough schedule."
Gentry said the attractive KU campus is another thing prospective
"I think we have a very, very pretty campus," he said. "Most of the kids not from this area think they're going to find a desolate place. When they see what kind of campus we've got it works as a very positive thing for us."
players like about the school.
The coaches found the players they wanted to recruit last summer after watching AAU and other types of basketball tournaments. They then contacted the players by telephone to find out if they were interested in the KU program.
ition for the players they're seeking will be intense.
The coaches will be contacting players from several states during the visitation period, which lasts until Oct. 10. Gentry said the compet-
That chance will be minimized, Gentry said, because of what the Kansas program has to offer.
"We're going up against the best schools we've ever gone up against," he said, citing Oklahoma, Kentucky, and Notre Dame. "If we get these kids, we're going to have a good recruiting year. There's a chance we won't get an."
Rain turns U.S. Open singles match into marathon
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — It took nine hours to play one match at the U.S. Open yesterday.
Rain played havoc with the schedule all day and eventually forced tournament officials to postpone the matches at 8 p.m. EDT.
The only match completed before the postponement was Helena Sukova's 6-1, 6-3 quarterfinal victory over Claudia Kohde-Kilsch.
They played only 53 minutes of tennis, but two rain delays extended the match for 5 hours, 22 minutes.
"Those were the toughest conditions I've played under," Kohde-Kilsch said. "Coming on and off the court, waiting four hours, the noise from the planes. And she was acing me all the time."
Sukova, who had five aces, said neither player benefited from the rain delays.
"It was bad for both of us," the 22-year-old Czechoslovakian said. "You never knew what was going to happen next."
Two fourth-round men's matches
not not be completed because of the rain
Second-seeded Stefan Edberg was
leading fellow Swede Jonas Vsvenson 6-2, 5-5, and No. 3 Mats Wilander was beating Ken Flach of the United States 6-3, 6-3 when a downpour halted play for good.
Today's schedule was being still being determined last night.
Rain delayed the start of the Sukowa-Kohde-Klisch match 54 minutes. Sukova was trailing 1 in the second half and Ingomour pumur struck, causing a 61:11 delay.
Play resumed at 4:46 EDT, but had to be stopped four minutes later when rain fell again with Kohde-Kilsch leading 3-2. Following an 18-minute
delay, Sukova quickly closed out the match by winning the final four games.
The players said they watched television, played cards, ate and read in the locker room during the breaks.
"You have to keep the tension;
said Kohde-Kilsch, a 23-year-old
West German. "You can't fall
sleep."
Sukova, who lost to Martina Navratlova in the finals here last year, will play the winner of the Navratlova-Sabatini match in the semifinals.
Asked whom she would rather
play, Sukova replied, "Martina is No. 2 in the world and Gabriela is No. 8, so it's always better to play the lower-ranked player."
The Navratilova-Sabatini match was the only other women's singles matched scheduled yesterday.
A pair of fourth-round men's matches were also postponed — No. 5 Miloslav Mecir vs. Mark Woodforte and Zachary Chesnovok vs. Ramesh Krishnan.
On Monday, No. 4 seeds Boris Becker and Hana Mandlikova were ousted from the tournament.
The Associated Press
General Manager Dallas Green announced Luchesi's appointment and said, "Frank understands that it is for 25 games and no longer."
CHICAGO — Frank Lucchesi was named interim manager of the Chicago Cubs yesterday, replacing Gene Michael, who resigned after almost $1\frac{1}{2}$ years.
Cubs choose temporary manager
But we won't make a decision until we're completely satisfied."
Green said the move will "give us time to gather our thoughts and give us time regarding the managerial decision. We'd like to make the decision in October or November, hopefully before the winter meetings.
Third base coach John Vukovich has been considered a prime candidate for the manager's job.
"It would be unfair to put someone like Vuke under the gun for the final 25 games," Green said. "The pressure woud be terrific."
Lucchesi, 59, managed in the minor leagues for 17 years before taking over the Philadelphia Phillies from 1970-72. He replaced Billy Martin as manager of the Texas Rangers in 1975 and managed them until he was fired in 1977. His managerial record
in the major leagues is 341-429.
Luciensi said he would not seek and was not a candidate for the leadership position with coach with the Cubs this season, working as their "eye-in-the-sky."
Green moved quickly after learning through the media about Michael's decision to resign. Michael figured to be fired at the end of the season.
"I don't think it's fair to the players, Gene Michael or the organization to leave Gene in a harm-deck." The game was his and his decision only.
Scoreboard
Baseball
American League
Seattle 7, Cleveland 0
Chicago 4, Minnesota 3
Milwaukee 6, Toronto 4
Kansas City at California, (n)
Chicago at ppd., rain
Boston 8, New York 6
Texas 12, Oakland 1
National League
Pittsburgh 4, Chicago 1
Los Angeles 5, Cincinnati 3
Montreal 4, St. Louis 1
New York 5, Philadelphia 2
Atlanta 4, San Diego 2
San Francisco 6, Houston 4
College Football
Associated Press Top Twenty
1. Oklahoma
2. Nebraska
3. UCLA
4. Auburn
5. Ohio State
6. LSU
7. Miami, Fla.
8. Florida State
9. Michigan
10. Clemson
11. Penn State
12. Washington
13. Arkansas
14. Tennessee
15. Arizona State
Auburn set for 'Hawks after rout
The Associated Press
AUBURN, Ala. — Auburn's ground game was one of the few things that didn't click in the opening-day victory over Texas. And there are no guarantees it will suddenly shift into high gear against Kansas on Saturday.
"They had nine men within seven yards of the ball," he said. "That's why we threw so much."
Running backs coach Bud Casey said Texas concentrated most of its defensive attention on the running game, which was the reason Auburn could only gain 112 yards on the ground.
Quarterback Jeff Burger completed 16 passes for 269 yards — the most by an Auburn quarterback since 1771 and to a 31-3 victory over the Longhorns.
"Look at the stats." Casey said.
"We threw the ball. We threw it 22 times and ran it 33. We consider two runs to one pass being balanced."
Casey said it could be more of the same against Kansas on Saturday at Jordan-Hare Stadium. Kickoff is set for 6 d.m.
"We'll take what they give us," he said. "Their defense is a little like Texas and we had to pass."
Kansas, which did not have a single victory in the Big Eight Conference last season and 8 overall, "is just as big as Texas," Casey said.
"The only thing they have going against them is that they have the name Kansas stamped on them and they went 3-8 and have the perception that they aren't good. That's not true."
Coach Pat Dye agreed with Casey,
I think Kansas will be better than
Texas.
Kansas Coach Bob Valesente, in his second season with the Jayhawks, has switched to a two-back offense to try to improve the running game. But he said it might be difficult to notice any difference against Auburn's defense.
"We might have an improvement of 75 to 80 percent in our running game and not show it against Auburn," he said.
FACTORY
OUTLET
100
FACTORY
OUTLET
Designer Sweaters from Peru
Soft, luxury alpaca and pima cotton for men and women. First quality, catalog overstock at savings of 40% to 75%. Unusual apparel and accessories, all hand made in Peru. Bring in this ad and save an additional 10% on any purchase. Offer expires Oct. 15, 1987.
the peruvian connection ltd.
Factory Outlet, 600 Lawrence Ave.
(across from Dilton's in Stone Meadow Sq.)
Tuesday through Saturday, 10:00 to 5:00; Sundays, 12.30 to 5:00
RIVER CITY REUNION
Lawrence, Kansas September 1987
BOOK SIGNING TODAY
Anne Waldman and Diane dPrima, Noon to 1:30
OREAD BOOK SHOP
FREE
FramaUP custom framing & gallery LET US DO YOUR PICTURE FRAMING We Do The Work...Labor is FREE
NEEDLEWORK AND SHADOW BOXES EXCLUDED.
This ad must be presented at time of ordering. Not valid with any other coupon. Offer expires 9/12/87.
843-0498
fnu
15 E. 8 (1/2 Blk. East of Mass) Tues.-Sat. 10-5:30 UDK
--on
$995 Complete
PRINT "HAVE A BAD MEMORY"
RETURN
Tandon
Tandon PCX-2
2 disk drives, 640 K RAM, serial and parallel ports,
monochrome display & keyboard.
EDUCATION DISCOUNT
ON STATE CONTRACT
Watch for...
Tandons on Campus
September 10
Computer Center Auditorium
COMPUTER OUTLET
Your computer connection at 843-PLUG • 804 N.H.
Lawrence, Kansas
Confidential pregnancy testing services • Birth control • Tubal Testing and treatment for sexually transmitted diseases. Providing quality health care to women since 1974. Insurance, VISA & MasterCard accepted.
Confidential pregnancy testing • Safe, affordable abortion services • Birth control • Tubal ligation • Gyn exams
If you need abortion or birth control services, we can help
Carebensive
Health for Women
4401 West 100th & 46th
Overland Park, Kansas
enents (913) 345-1400
1 800-277-1918
Toll Free (except KS) 1-800-227-1918
BORDER
BANDIDO
WEDNESDAY SPECIAL
ALL YOU CAN
EAT $3.79 5-9 p
- tacos
• taco salad
All you can eat from our wide selection:
I
- taco salad
- burritos
- burritos
- chili
- tostada
- enchiladas
- refried beans
- Trefed beans
- Spanish rice
NEW LOCATION:
1820 W. 6th
(just east of lowa)
749-2770
- chili conqueso
- Spanish rice
- spicy congee
- salad bar
1528 Iowa
1528 Iowa
(across from post office)
842-8861
ClassifiedAds
ANNOUNCEMENTS
be a charter member of the club Travis McGee Fan Club! Tonge! George K. 941-7923 Keith K. 841-8366
NEED A RIDE/RIDER? Use the Serve Car Pool Exchange Lobby, Kansas Union
Reading for Comprehension and Speed Workshop
Mondays, September 14, 21 and 28; 3:30 - 5:30 p.m.
Materials fee: $15. Register, pay fee by noon,
September 14, Student Assistance Center, 121
...
Just Opened!
Ethnic Fashions
73312 New Hampshire
Featuring dresses from Africa and Asia, unique jewelry, fine leathers and quality folk arts.
COMMUTERS. Self Serve Car Pool Exchange.
Main Lobby, Kanaas Union
Heading home for the holidays? FLY CHAPE
Call us now. Carpenters Travel, 431-6988
Just starting and you're already stressed out?
Get the kinks on at Lawrence Massage Therapy.
Gift certificates available too! (Tell your
friend you are attending Bruce and
Alice at 431-6982 or its kicks to you!)
MUSHROOM Club! Free slide show at the Public
Hotel! Every one welcome! 7:30 Wednesday
September 16
DEALING WITH THAT UNEASY FEELING which commonly occurs when, you walk into a room with a stranger you don't know or like to know. You are waiting for an interview to begin, or many other social situations. Three questions to ask before the Smith Hall. Free no registration. Presented by the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall.
ESSAYS & REPORTS
16,878 to choose from — all subjects
Order Catalog Today with VisaMIC or COD
Toll Free 800-351-0222
Or rnr $2.00 to Eessay's Reports
11322 Idle Ave #906 SN, Los Angeles CA 90025
Custom design also available—all levels
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, September 9, 1987
15
Get Something Going!
Get
Get business back in the black by increasing sales with a hard-working classified ad. Make it easier to advertise, associate it with quality, value, and the profitable in classified. Make the cash flow more stable.
Kansan Classifieds
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
864.4758
Research Paper Workshop. Examine topic selection, taking notes, organization, writing style. Tuesday, September 15, 7 - p.m. 405. Wesley Street. Student Assistance Center. I21. Strong.
The Transcendental Meditation Program is a simple, natural, effortless mental technique which allows the mind and body to experience a deep state of rest. TM is the foundation of this system for achieving perfect health as seen on the Donahue show Sept 1, 1897). Come hear a free, public introductory presentation WEINES BOOK, KANSAUN ASSOCIATION, P.M., in THE PINE BOOK, KANSAUN ASSOCIATION
TUTORS: List your name with us. We refer student inquiries to you. Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall.
864-4358
Volunteers needed. Headquarters Crisis Counseling Center. Training provided. Information meeting. Wednesday, September 9, or Sunday, 12:30-8:39 p.m., 4119 Massachusetts 841-223.
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of
Students Assistance Center, 121
Strong Hill Hall.
Graduating this year?
Hoping to find a job?
If so, plan to attend the Career Employment Workshops at the University Placement Center. Watch for the large ad in Friday's University Daily Kansan, or come to the Placement Center, Level 1, Burge Union for the schedule.
Be a H.E.R.O.
The Higher Education Rescue Operation
Sign-Up Today!
Wescoe Beach
10:00-3:00
HILLEL
milner
invites you to
Shabbat Dinner and
Services, Friday, Sept. 11
at 6 p.m. Hillel House
940 Mississippi.
RSVP by
Thursday, Sept. 10.
Donation of $2 requested.
For rides and more info.
call 749-4242.
ENTERTAINMENT
ULTIMATE ENTERTAINMENT
(Ultimate Mobile DJ System For All Occasions.
Phat at 824-3380.
At your request is Lawrence's Best and Most Affordable D.J. Sound and Lighting for Any Occasion. 841-1465
metropolis
a DJ Service in Lawrence
Experienced Club & Radio DJ's
Music for all Occasions
Sensory Room & Leitung
DJRay Velasquez-8417083
WANTED: LEAD SINGER for established rock band. We play a variety of music including REM, Dire Straits, and U2. Call Paul at 841-9652.
STAX OF THE
MOBILE MUSIC/DISC JOCKEY
SERVICE
DJ
KIP WALKER
Serving Lawrence, Topeka,
and Manhattan for
over 6 years!
P.O. BOX 1581
LAWRENCE, KS 66045
(913) 842-3112
FOR RENT
1 bedroom apt sub-bent $200/room, close to cam-
pany, 2 bedrooms, 3 baths. Brand NEW.
BRAUND NEW completely furnished 4 bedroom
apts available immediately. On the bus route and
on the train. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths. 800 sq. ft.
4 2 4 2 4 2 4 2 4 2 4 2 4 2 4 2 4 2 4 2 4 2 4 2 4 2 4 2 4 2 4 2 4 2 4 2 4 2 4 2 4 2 4 2 4 2 4 2 4 2 4 4 4 4 4
Feeling cramped? for rent a large 3-bedroom house, living room, family room with fireplace, large kitchen with dining area, stove, kitchen washer/driller, garage, fenced yard-4800/month.
Female roommate needles 1/4-inch non-smoker, 1/4-inch non-smoker, Campus Suite Call after 4 070-763-8255
Glenhaven Apartments walk to class
2½ blocks from Union 1135 Ohio, 2 bedroom and bedroom 1½, left 2¼. Exciting air, including microwave, including microwave, wader. Wired for cable.
For sublet, 1 br. bpt with microwave,
2 baths, 1 bus. basin, 1 bus. pool facilities.
Call 843-997-05 after 5.
dishwasher, icemaker, brand new, on bus route,
pool facilities. Call 942-8197 after
visitation. Enroll in school and
bath. One block from University. With off-street parking.
No pets, please. 841-500.
Hillview Apartments
1733 W. 24th
841-5797
- 1 & 2 bedroom units
- laundry facilities
- on bus route
- on bus route
- water paid
- off street parking
- rental furniture available from Thompson Crawley
...
Furnished two bedroom apt one block from the University with off street parking. No pets.
GUARANTEED SPACE at Nasmith Hall for 78
days. Call Matt: 842-5352 for details or
Call Matt: 842-5352 for details.
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
A FEW 2 BR APTS LEFT FOR FALL
- KEJUFS AIRM & HEAT
* FULLY EQUIPLED KITCHENS
* LOWEST UTILITIES IN TOWN
* REDUCED SECURITY DEPOSITS
BRING THIS AD AND
RECEIVE ADDITIONAL
$20 OFF MONTHLY RENT
CALL 843-4754 FOR DETAILS
HOUSE FOR RENT Recharge large 5 m²/bath house CLOSE TO CAMPUS with LAUNDRY IN BASEMENT and 6 bthrm or study. Two funnels (gays) need 2-4 more people to share rent and bats at the Kentucky. Contact Daryl at 316-264-8123 or 318-265-8125. IDT 12F
Riverfront for rent in new townhouse (north Lawrence) $170 plus 1/3 utilities. Seek quiet, nonsmoking, graduate student. 842-8232-Bob.
Sleeping rooms - b 2 firm. apt. close to campus.
GODDESS OF WATER
SUNRISE PLACE
9th & Mirchian
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.
1-800-555-3222 1-800-555-3222 M-F.
FOR SALE
137 Syllabus remote control color TV and stand.
Call 612-4901 after 6 m. T.
$1250. Perfect condition!! Call 749-5325.
1986 MOPED sale - HONDA SPREE. Great condi-
tion! Call 449-7341.
FULLY IBM/PC IT/COMPATIBLE
computer. IBM/PC 1024 and format
MODEL IBM/PC 1025.
Honda S-96 285cc 10k lb. p.m.
1985 Honda RX350 150cc. Paid $715, asking
$845 for condition !
Absolutely neatly Aware array of Antiques, collectibles and neat stuff we have: hardback and 1/2 price paperbacks, fine art prints, pottery, Penthomes etc., loads of antique, Indian, and costume jewelry (giltter and good stuff), the right vintage clothes for any occasion, antique cameras, miniatures, flies, and the best selection of antique furniture in the area. Quantities Fare Market, 811 New Hampshire, Open Sat & Sun
5 piece white pearl drum set. Excellent condition. Worn but not scratched. 7 piece white "white". Excellent condition. Bake offer on wine or beers.
CHEAP SF 40 classes - Asimov to Zelany. Call Db at 814-2372 after 5.
KORG. Digital drums, digital percussion units.
Professional sound, all accessories. only $100
per kit.
Introductory offer: PC compatible computer
features monitor, mouse, 512K, disk drives, 5MHZ
MDoS, software, GEM, basic, 1 year warranty.
M83UJI 5 p.m.
Enlarger for you:
Omega D2M, w/variable cond.
also Nikon
Leave message at 841~
Leave message at 841~
ipcce: 091-896
large denies
Living room chair: $20
Old denies
Call after: 31. November 7, 2014: 729-148
For Sale: Fisher CD player, AMS, one song and
discreet repeat, 825-nigotable. 842-4949.
- MOTHRALL GOOD USED FURNITURE
Monday Friday 10:00 p.m. Saturday 10:30 p.m.
Bathroom 6:00 a.m. Kitchen 9:00 a.m.
Tetraplate review course for all (our parts of) CPA exam for $100. (A new item is $500). Used once to pass the CPA exam on the first try. Call after 5 p.m. at 316-393-5649.
Racing Bicycle. 22 pounds. $800 one year ago,
sacrifice at $400. 91-948-986.
Less than 30 minutes. 104-652-7889.
Pioneer stereo (receiver, cassette, turntable,
HPM 40 speakers). Recent albums, tapes-all
$200 OBO. 841-1173.
Sailbards: BIC 2005 Funball with 5.7 foot衣扣-$720, VINCY 2005, 116 liter m0 s2 sail, adjustable boom-448 or will separate, -1·642·6222
Tandy 1000, 128K, memory expansion api
Nikki 10k with Shimano Comp. Beautiful
less than 10 miles $150, 810-841-5636.
Bicycle bike 19 inch Bianchi. Like new. Have
basketball shirt. $285. 1-866-341-2108
memory expand
one disk deep networked optional
Dot matrix printer, built in modern,
green monitor. Price $110 or best offer. Call call 1-389-3890.
AUTOSALES
cena. Call 817-653-4200.
1974 Mercury Montego, runs great, A/C, FM/AM
cassette stereo. $50 and negotiable. Call
849-5041
1981 Chevrolet Impala 2-door sedan, Concord
stereo, AT, PB, PS, A/C, excellent condition.
$2400.84-3688
Twin mattress, box springs, and frame. Like new. Asking $100. 841-8491.
1973 Honda 350 only 16,000 miles, new battery,
good condition. Bid: 841. 9524. Paul.
good condition. Best offer. 841-9632. Pduf
1973 Pontie Catalina PB, PS, A/C radio, extra
charge.
Tip Carrier for sale. Runs well, cheap transportation
$250 841-2343
first aid kit
70 VW Beetle, excellent condition, no rust, heat works, radio, white. N. W. Lawrence; $850.
79-1817
@ Mustag convertible$4500 841-3760 First come, first颁!!
78 Datsun 280Z-good running condition. Needs some body work. $750 or best offer. Call 814-1421.
Honda Civic 3-door hatchback, 35 MPG, A/C.
749-1837
74 VW Super Beetle new parts. Good condition.
Model 4021, dt 6752
stereo, highway miles, make offer. 842-524-5
Borex T19-8, leather interior, loaded 3IK.
KUBOTA K20.
good condition
good condition
811-469-1003 or 311-474-172
NEW CAMS 811-469-1003 $250-$450 OVER
BUY NEW CARS, NEW TRUCKS $150-400
COST, DELBERT D. THOMAS 818-3449
BUY NEW CARS, NEW TRUCKS $450-±100
DRIVER 3, DIRECT 7, THOMAS 885-8449
HONDA ACCORD LX, hatchback, 1862, metallic
blue, one AWER, PS. Sony AM FM cassette,
mech excel. 100,000 highway km.
Mech excel and very reliable. $200. Dan at
843-0091.
CAHS SELL for $15 (average!) Also see,
trucks etc. you now available. 805-689-6007.
E-mail us at cahs@cahs.com
Is It True You Can Buy Jeeps for $44 through the U.S. government? Get the facts today! Call 1-877-321-1421 Extr. 324
Tune up your import car, $35. Parts and labor included, satisfaction guaranteed. Call Aaron, 841-4629
FUN SPORTS CAR-197 TR, great condition,
Call 814-6944 (Lenexa).
LOST-FOUND
LOST-ST. crescent class. St. John High School, Benton, KS. Royal blue stone. Grad. date 1986, inside on insides BEF. If found, PLEASE return to LOST-ST. or call 524 or 649-6179 and ask for Jackie ASAP.
Found keys in Fraser, 1st floor on 8/27; 2 car and others.
Call 843-6935.
Lost: (organizer/appointment book—has business cards, design), per personal items and notes.
Probably lost in Snow Hall or Stauffer. Please MLU#967.
Lost Thermodynamics book at 24th & Ridgecourt.
Last Thermodynamics book at 844-6904 or 843-6517.
11-562 Weekly/wk mailing circulators! Rush self-
addressed stamped envelope: Opportunity, 9016
Wilshire Blvd, Box 226, Dept. Q, Beverly Hills, CA
©2011
HELP WANTED
ATTENTION: STUDENTS! Nail firm preparing for Fall/Winter work. $775 to start you up in the job of a student, and your ship are possible, & you may earn 2, 3, 4 credits/yr or semester. *Must apply now.*
River City Reunion Collector's Corner. 810 E
Hwy 245. Ephemera-A城. Call for appointment.
842-728-7300.
Bakery sale/cleaning. One for Tuesday, Thursday, and Sunday, at 10 a.m., 6 a.m., 8 a.m., on Wednesday. 3 weeks paid vacation after 1 year. KU grad student preferred. 34 per hour after training. Apply at Munchers
Bike mechanic with Shop Experience. Call Gary at 842-6363
nuffalo Bob's Smokehouse and Mass. Street Deli now hiring food service and mass. employee福利 $40 per hour, $30 per hour, $40 per hour and $2.00 per tip. Must have experience and some lunch time availability. Apply online at nuffalobobssmoketoday.com.
Child care needed for local church for Sunday and
school activities. Also, some child care neede
for special occasions. Good pay Call Christy
at 841-9611 for Saturday interview.
Chairman secretary to work two mornings a week. Requires typing and genres skills. Call Monday through Saturday morning.
Dependable, mature person to assist with per-
manent car care. Possible former professor in
exchange for rent in residence. Travels in
living quarters. 10-15 hrs. a week expected. Off
the job for at least a year. A bachelor's or
a.m. . Only students interested in, or experienced
with driving are welcome.
DEPRESATELY SEEKING._WORK STUDY
STUDENTS for 3 positions at the
Exhibition. Exhibition Assistant,
and Information Desk/Telpehon Assistant.
Inquire at 6th floor of Spencer Art Museum
Female for assistance with my care. Mornings or evenings. Call 749-4395.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $10,950-$40,250/20-yr.
Hiring Call: 61-876-6000 Extr. R. 7578 for current
job position.
Fragrance model-demonstrator available Saturday.
Approximately 1 hour total hours. Please
contact us if you need more time.
Wanted: students who need a little extra cash Come join the fun of working on the big projects. Good pay, flexible hours, meal discounts, free tailoring and business services by applying today. You'll gladly be joined by you!
Need help with fall harvest and wheat planting.
Professional combine operator. Call after 8am.
Phone: (212) 545-0790.
Kansas and Burge Union Food Service Departments need part time help. They are a team of 20 line workers 1:10 a.m - 1:30 a.m, dishwasher 10:30 a.m - 2:30 p.m, custodian 1:30 a.m - 2:30 p.m in person. Kansas Personnel Office, Fifth Floor, Kansas University.
RESORT HOTELS, Cruiselines, Airlines, Amusement Parks, Corporate Offices, Travel & career positions. For more information and an application; write National Collegiate Recreation Service; P.O. Box 1280.
HIRING! Government jobs-your area.
$15,000-$68,000 Call (602) 838-8885 EXT 4055
SALES-1 need 2 salespersons to help sell a great lot of over 2500 books in this area. P/T or F/T Flexible hours. This is a great level ground operator. Call Mr. Navat at 849-8430. Be your own best. Call Mr. Navat at 849-8430.
New hiring experienced line cooks and prep cooks. Wage commensurate with experience. Must have some daytime availability. Apply at 719 Mass. above Buffalo Bills' Smokehouse.
Now hire for part-time video route position. Will maintain, repair, and collect video games. Must have experience and credible references. Startage wage $4.00 per hour. Apply at 719 Mass.
Part-time screen printer wanted. Work experience helpful. Apply at Jawahry Spotw
*art-time graphic designer wanted. Apply at J-Hawk Spirit from 10-1.
Sub&stuff
Sandwich Shop
Now accepting applications from energetic, hardworking, responsible individuals. Openings available on all shifts.
Delivery!!
Attention!!
Now accepting applications for drivers, 20-40 hours, hourly wage plus CASH PAID NIGHTLY. Please apply at
Person to sit with 8 year old after school Alvara area, 749-8384 after 6 and Saturdays. Sales-fair gift company need 2 salespersons to help sell a great line of over 2500 gifts locally. P/T $10,000 per person. Some sales experience helpful but not necessary. Call Mr. Navir at 842-9832, 3 p.m. only.
Waterbalaon Representative-National company seeks college reps to sell waterbalaon launcher. "Lunar Launcher" (TM) Send name, address, phone number of the student. P. O. Box 1251, Shawnee Mission, KS, 66201 WORK STUDY position available in the Study Abroad Office. Must be able to work Monday and Wednesdays: 9:30 a.m-12 m and 1 p.m-3:00 p.m. Calling telephone, giving out general study abroad information to students, some typing, mail out, emails, using telephone, giving out general study abroad information at the Office of Study Abroad, 235 Lippincott.
St. Lawrence Campus Center needs church nursery assistance. Sundays 9 and 10 or 10:30 a.m. 45 per session. Call Diana at 749-1633 or Karla at 841-1548.
MISCELLANEOUS
ROLL OUT
THE BARREL
$10$360 Weekly/PT, mailing circulals! "Quaos/basses, information: RUSH self-addressed envelope. CM/MA-CDQ POLB 7730. Rockland, IL 61126."
Monday thru Thursday
mall established foreign car repair shop for sale
a Lawrence, Ironton. 841-5406
Sub & Stuff, 1618 W. 23rd.
Refill your "HAWK" glass only
$1.00
We have a new store that can get cash on almost anything of value. Also, good buys on home, guitars, ample equipment home, guitars, amplifiers, Washburn Jawbone & P Jewelry, W8. 04h, 749-1919.
It Could Only Happen At.
THE HAWK·1340 Ohio
PERSONAL
OUR trophy case!1--The General
Bi-WM-attempts athletic and athletic. Would like to meet same for Strength and appearance. Send letter to: Strength and appearance, photo and photo; to: DC, P O L07, Lawrence K, 66544
802, Lawrence K, 66544
IEY, WENDY!! The race goes not always to the wift but those who keep on running. You can tag no evintime!! Love always, Sean.
AEPI's -Let's keep the Greek Week trophy in
Italy! The Greeks!
the anytime... Live always, learn!
Help! Lost my organizer, now I'm lost! Please
can you & found for details?
Happy 22nd. Keith C.!
Bobbie
How about when you had a green sock sticking out the front of your jeans & the time when your mother's pantyhose stuck on your shirt and you didn't realize it until you got to school! How 'bout them Peanuts
How bout them Peanuts
boxes?
(your devoted girlfriend)
Intelligent, good lookin' guy who's interested in sports, music, dance'n, nature, etc. is lookin' for intelligent, attractive, mature, single gal, never been married-with same interest. Please mail up to date picture and write the truth about your marriage. Answer. Jay, P. O. Box 140, Lawrence KS 60044
Julie (Cm. grad); met you in K.C 3 weeks ago to meet you to love meet you.
The pre-schoolers are drive me crazy and I need adult supervision. Response. Signed I will dance with you.
BUS. PERSONAL
Bike Workshops—Our mechanic will teach you how to change flats, true wheel maintenance blades and tune up your shoes on Saturday. 6 a.m., begins September 19. Sunflower 504, Massachusetts,
HEADACHE, BACKACH, ARM PAIN, LEG PAIN Student and most insurance accepted. For complete chirurgic care call Dr. Mark Johnson, 842.3309
--not pedigree, count most. You know it!
Pregnant and need help? Call Biright at 483-6421. Confidential help/free pregnancy
(pooch, kitty, other pet
Your name, address, zip
Pet's name*
*(shown on Certificate)
$5 check/money order, to:
Attention Potential Entrepreneurs
Rare and Used Records. Buy, Sell, or Trade.
Quantrill's 811 New Hampshire.
The association of Collegiate Entrepreneurs is holding its first meeting on September 4, at 7:30 p.m. in the Pioneer Room. Level 2, Burge Union
- Body Toning Classes
Sulflower Mt. Hike Workshop-Learn how to request & adjust your m汁 Thur-Miday-thursday, 6:4 p.m., begins September 17, $ 85, 804 Massachusetts, Lawrence, 834-5000.
$25 per month
SEMESTER
MEMBERSHIP
Juntari's 811 new hampshire.
**KIFREE AT VALI BEAVER CREW!** 4 day
backup, from home to work.
Add extra nights, just $15.00
per person. Call 900-6257 today!
I L~~Y=A" Y=A"
Certificate
I F P
Bress For Braper
Box 1075
Lawrence, Ks 6604
Toning Programs
- Individualized Weight and Toning Programs
- Certified Instructors
- Certified Instructors IDEA/RHYTHMIC AEROBICS
- Air Conditioned
- Hourly Classes
- Tanning
- Hourly Classes
- Shower Facilities
THINGS CLUB
Houston
M.F. 8:30-8:30 )
Sat. 9:00-4:00 )
Sun. 10:00-2:00 )
Body Shapes
FITNESS CLUB
membership Transferable to 2500 Clubs
COMPUTER CONSULTING: Tutoring and programming for elementary computer science and mathematics students, projects and other works. Reasonable prices for individuals and group sessions.
SERVICES OFFERED
"CRISMON SUN PHOTO" is looking for young women interested in developing a modeling portfolio. Interested students can email us at crismon@sunphotoproject.org
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749.
FLASHBACK PHOTO fast and dependable party picture service (book 844-8770 to book your next
Have Dice-Will Travel. Mobile Sound Service.
Complete selection of dance music including
Progressive, Soul and Top 40 dance music.
Experienced D.J. Quality Equipment. Affordable.
$150.
GRAPH & Scientific and graphic illustration,
maps, drawing and statistical and also water-
borne data.
Phone 812-501
JEM FAVORS for all your party favor needs. Hats, shirts, paddles, glasses. If you have a unique idea, call us and we'll find it for you.
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ekachrome processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W services. PASSPORT $6.00. Art & Design Building, Room 206. 864-4767
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $/hr; 843-9032
(p.m.)
MATH TUTOR Algebra through multivariable
calculus (000-141) 5 years experience
CHEMICAL ENGINEERING 84-049
84-049
**MUSIC**
*MUSIC*: Music for Red House Audio - Mobile Party Music, 8 track
*P.A. and Lights*, Maximum Audio Wizard,
Call Reel 749-1275.
Now in Lawrence: inexpensive *tract demos*, DJ sound and light company, private guitar and drummer, free access to studio equipment.
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Ser-
ices. Overland Park...913)401-6878
Overlap PDK# 913-787-1048
Prompt response and abortion services in
814-5716
SEWING-AILERATIONS-Love to sew for others.
SEWING-AILERATIONS-Need to sew for others.
SUNFLOWER DRIVER-驾驶 School. Get your driver's license without patral testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided.
FIRST AID
Warm, caring people like children ages three to five are needed at Hesdtart as volunteers work between 7:30 and 3:30 Monday thru Friday. Daycare volunteers need from 12:30 to 5:30 for. Daycare volunteers need from 12:30 to 5:30 for.
2500 W. 6th Street 841-7230
Graystone Athletic Club
Special Student Membership
$150 per semester
Racquetball/Tennis
Exercise Equipment
TYPING
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing.
Judy, 842-7945 or Lisa, 841-1915.
AA absolutely Fast Typing is Back! Dependable,
Reasonable Rates, Late Night Typing Available
Kathy 814-290 days, 749-524 eve.
2 Smart Word Processing. Spelling Corrected.
Very Reasonable. Call Foster 749-2740.
1 plus Typing; Letters, resumes, thesis, law typing, etc. 13 years experience. Call Terry 842-4754 or 843-2671 weeks and weekends
. NOW, Papers $1.50/pp. Resumes $15.
WRITING LIFELINE 81-3469
A-1 reliable professional typing: Term papers, Theses, Resumes, etc. reasonable IBM Electronic Transcriber 842.3246.
1-Der woman word processing. Former editor will transform your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. Call 843-2652 days or e-mail info@editions.com.
For professional typing/word processing, call Myra 841-6900. Fall special 213,门户筹 841-6900.
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS.
MOMMY'S TYPING is back from Australia !!
8423739 on 9pm, please.
Quality Typing includes excellent spelling, punctuation, grammar, editing. Fast reliable service. Pickram delivery available. 843-0424
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term papers, thesis, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter
quality printing, spelling corrected. 842.7477
UNSECRETARY. Typing and word processing.
Affordable, fast, accurate. Spelling corrected,
letter quality. Pickup on campus. Monica
841-8246. Evenings-weekends
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing, manuscripts, resumes, theses, letter quality printing, etc. 843-5062
Quality typing or word processing for theses, dissertations, resumes, term papers, applications. Professional editing, composition available. Have M.S. Degree.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TYPING PLUS assistance with competition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. resume. Have M.S. Degree 841-6254
WRIGHT'S TYPING SERVICE. Term papers, theses, miscellaneous, IBM Esecive. Spelling corrected. 843-954
WANTED
Formale upperclassman desired to share 2 BR flat in the center of the city, with phone. Fuel, KU hotel. Available in residence.
Hallmark
Would you want KWI student to buy him season tickets to KI basketball games. Will make it earth your白羊. Call 1-909-821-5457 Ask for Jake Shehan.
Non-traditional, non-smoke, mature male graduate student to look学习 existing rent ext with mature female grad student. Please call 843-5496-ask for assistance needed upon request. Would prefer to meet in person.
Pianist for Lawrence Wesleyan Church. One hour Sunday morning, two hours during week for rehearsal with soloists. Compensation is use of church and piano for personal rehearsal. Call
Urgent. Need a non-smoking male roommate to
share a 2-bedroom apartment. $165/month plus
utilities. Call Cesar at 864-0469 (days) or 842-1325
(after 5:30 p.m.)
Wanted: All Sports Ticket. Will pay well for it!!
Call 842-7995
Wanted 2 female roommates $170 and 1/3 utilities
Trailridge. Call 842-6541.
Wanted: Female roommate $140/month plus 1/2
utility. Owners. On bus route. Call 749-4379.
Wanted: four drawer file cabinet in good condition.
Steve 864-7042
Wanted. Roommate for 3-bedroom duplex, fully furnished except bedroom, $10 plus 1/7 uniform.
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Wednesday, September 9, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
K. U. STUDENTS & FACULTY Welcome To Rent One Video Get One Lawrence FREE!
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The showers that be
Y
Details page 6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday September 10,1987 Vol.98,No.14
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Ginsberg reads old, new work
By JULIE McMAHON Staff writer
The line formed outside the Kansas Union Ballroom an hour before the "guru of the 'just say yes' acid rock generation" stepped on stage.
Scott Carpenter/KANSAN
But the famous poet needed some help from his enthusiastic followers before he could start reading. An announcer asked the audience if anyone had brought the collected works of Allen Ginsberg. An arm in the first few rows handed a thick, red book up to the stage.
ART 512
See related stories p. 7.
With that, Allen Ginsberg was ready to begin singing with guitarist Steven Taylor and reading his own poetry — which was witty, political and sometimes unabashedly homosexual — to a crowd of about 700 last night.
Ginsberg has performed before at the University of Kansas, but he said last night's audience was his best ever at KU.
"It was bigger, more enthusiastic. The students are better. I'm better." he said. "There's less resistance. People are more sure of our loves."
Many of Ginsberg's fans in the audience were older than the usual KU student.
A middle-aged man in a gray tweed suit and neatly trimmed gray-fleeced beard said he'd been a Ginsberg fan since the late '60s.
"He was an interesting new voice coming after the conservative '80s," said the man, Larry Epps of Columbia, Mo. Epps graduated from the University of Missouri at Columbia in 1973.
Playing around for a cause
Davina Gabriel of Kansas City, Mo. was dressed in a purple paisley outfit and had purple feathers stuck to her skin. She had an abundance of an eye dangled on her forehead.
"I read some of his stuff in college," Gabriel said. "But I didn't really get into it until eight or nine months ago. His writing is so power-
Above, Lisa Rosenberg, Wichita junior, a painte message on part of a huge mural in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall. Below, fraternity and sorority members play a game of human checkers. These were two of many Greek Week activities held in two days of fund raising for Lawrence Warm Hearts, a local charity organization that assists the needy with heating bills.
Younger people in the audience expressed curiosity about Ginsberg.
"I'll have to claim ignorance about all of this," said James Martin, Lenexa senior. "It's an educational experience."
X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X
Wendy Griswold, Topea sophmore, said, "I've read absolutely
See GINSBERG, p. 6, col. 1
Haskell officials say threat of tuition bill harmed enrollment
By VALOREE ARMSTRONG Staff writer
Staff writer
The threat of tuition, along with a scarcity of financing, caused lower enrollments at all three Indian postsecondary schools this fall, administrators from the three schools said.
Haskell Indian Junior College and two other Indian schools still are under the shadow of a Reagan administration proposal that would require their students to pay tuition, school officials said yesterday.
Jean Gibbs, director of admissions and records at Haskell, which is in south Lawrence, said 100 students who had attended Haskell last year did not return this fall. Enrollment is 756. down 43 from last fall.
The required tuition was proposed by Reagan in the spring and rejected by the U.S. House in June. But uncertainty over the proposal's fate had students and officials confused in the spring. Many students inquired whether they would have to pay the推奨 $850 in tuition, Gibbs said
The federal Bureau of Indian Affairs pays for students to attend Haskell, leaving students with just a $70 fee for textbooks, dormitory costs and activity fees.
"But I think it's safe to say that the discussion concerning tuition had some impact," he said.
Marvin Buzzard, de student of at Haskell, said it was difficult to tell how much Reagan's proposal had affected enrollment.
some impact, he said
Gibbs said tougher admittance
standards this year also had added to the problem at Haskell. In addition, some students might have found work or been unable to raise enough money to return. Gibbs said.
The House passed a bill on June 25 that blocked the proposed tuition at Haskell and the two other institutions - Southwestern Indian Polytechnic Institute in Albuquerque, N.M.; and the Institute of American Indian Art in Santa Fe. The House bill also would provide Haskell with $1.25 million for safety repair projects.
At a committee hearing on the bill, U.S. Rep. Jim Slattery, D-Kan, testified before the House Interior Appropriations subcommittee that Haskell could not survive if it charged admission, because 50 percent of its students' families had annual incomes of less than $9,000, said Cynthia Rapp, press secretary for Slattery
however, the House bill still must pass the Senate and be signed into law by Reagan. Rapp said that because the Senate had not yet scheduled review of the bill, it probably would be effective for the spring semester.
Meanwhile, Bob Martin, president of Southwestern, said yesterday that enrollment at his school, too, had dropped — from 502 last fall to 460 this fall.
Charlotte Tenorio, registrar at the Institute of American Indian Art, said enrollment there had decreased from 160 students last fall to 125 this fall.
Enrollment at Indian schools drops The threat of tuition is one reason for declining enrollment in Indian schools, officials say.
Fall 1986
Fall 1987
Haskell Indian Junior College
Southwestern Indian Polytechnic Institute
Institute of American Indian Art
799
756
502
460
160
125
Bill Skeet KANSAN
Men's glee club loses stipends and singers
Staff writer
By JORN E. KAALSTAD
The KU Men's Glee Club needs new voices because some of last semester's songbirds lost the melody along with their stipends.
membership dropped from 20 last semester to eight this semester after stipends of $100 to the singers were discontinued, said John Clyatt, Lawrence graduate student and Glee Club director.
Club director.
"Now we have eight, which is the absolute minimum for a glee club."
Clytt安说. The club desperately needs more students to join the choir, he said.
I'd like to sing at the homecoming parade, and I'd love to play at football and basketball games, as the club used to do before. But it all depends on whether we get more men in the chair," he said.
in the club. Although the club actually is called Choral Music and students receive one hour credit for it, $100 stipends were paid to last spring's singers by the Thomas and Amy Larrmore Foundation for men in Choral Music to help attract more people to the club. Thomas Larrmore was a former Glee Club director.
The Larremore Foundation, which is administered by the Kansas University Endowment Association, traditionally awards scholarships to male choral singers, said James Ralston, professor of choral music. The Glee Club stipends were awarded last spring because the department of music had some extra money available from the foundation. Ralston said.
"The stipends were a one-shot deal to try to attract singers after years of declined interest in the club," he said.
more and chair member, said that the loss of stipends had contributed to the decreasing membership and that he was said the loss had made studio
said.
Because there wasn't extra money available this fall, the stipends were not offered again, Ralston said.
"We just meet and sing and have a great time together." Leonard said.
Mark Leonard, Lawrence sopho
Although the official add drop
and drop instruction said
students still could enroll.
A glee club is a male chair that specializes in barber shop music. Barber shop is an American popular music form that emerged in turn-of-the-century barber shops, where merchants gathered to sing "Sweet Adeline" and "Good Night Ladies," Clytta said.
"I'll let people enroll in my class at any time in the semester," he said. Students don't have to audition to be in the glee club.
"We also sing classical pieces and University fight songs," he said.
Thomas Larrimore was a KU professor of law and Glee Club director in the 1920s, when the club was at the peak of its popularity with 40 members. Under Larrimore's direction in 1926, the club placed second in the National Glee Club Competition in New York City and members were photographed with President Calvin Coolidge.
Leonard, one of the non-music majors in the choir, said singing in the glee club was a way to get rid of the pressure it is on its performance pressure in this class.
Clyatt said 30 to 60 singers was a good size for a choir.
"A chair that size can give an audience a neat experience," he said. "I've listened to a 120-member choir that made my tears flow."
Cutting the ribbon
The Glee Club was a vital part of the social life on campus up until the early 50s when it temporarily died because of low response from students, Ralston said.
ig Ep members acknowledge alumni for helping to rebuild fire-gutted house
Staff writer
By MICHAEL HORAK
Staff writer
"It's unbelievable," said Bryan Rose as he looked at a series of snapshots taped to a wall at the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity.
"When I left last spring, it looked like that," he said as he pointed to a photograph of the fraternity's fire-gutted second floor. "Now look at it."
"It was an incredible chore for them to get us in here by this fall," he said. "We wanted to show our appreciation."
Ken Jones, Sig Ep president, said the ceremony and the dinner that came after was organized to acknowledge the work alumni had done to rebuild the fraternity before school started.
Rose, Hutchinson senior, was among the 130 members, alumni and special guests who attended ribbon-cutting ceremonies last night for the rebuttal and refurbished fraternity at 1645 Tennessee St.
Part of a police barricade tape,
which cordoned off the fraternity after it suffered extensive damage in the April 26 fire, was attached to the ceremonial ribbon.
The fire, which started when an electrical wire overheated in a room refrigerator, caused an estimated
board president. The final minor details should be worked out in the next few months.
— Danny Kaiser
Throughout the summer, construction crews worked at a feverish pace to rebuild the fraternity before school began. On Aug 22, the house was
'A fire like this could kill a fraternity, so it was important that they got back together quickly. I think it was tremendous what they did.'
Danny Kaiser Coordinator for greek programs
"In almost every way, we put everything back into the house in better condition than it was before." Gray said. Along with rebuilding damaged rooms, the fraternity added $200,000 in extra improvements, including a new pitched roof,
$300,000 in damage to the fraternity. In addition to the damage to the building, several members had substantial personal losses. Jones said a few members had personal insurance claims in excess of $10,000.
The fraternity will sponsor an open house between 3 and 5 p.m. Sunday for the public to see the renovation and improvements.
The fraternity had not reached a final settlement with its insurance company, said Tom Gray, alumni
reopened but minor carpentry work continued until this week.
"A fire like this could kill a fraternity, so it was important that they got back together quickly." he said. "I think it was tremendous what they did."
Danny Kaiser, assistant director of organizations and activities and coordinator for Greek programs, was among the KU officials who attended the ceremony and dinner. He complained that the fraternity for reopening so soon.
During last night's ceremony, alumni and guests were given tours of the house. Members were quick to determine a alarm system installed in the house.
Defaced memorial to get more security
KU has no plans to give campus Vietnam memorial extra surveillance
he said. The fraternity's old roof was flat.
By a Kansan reporter
Vandalism at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Kansas City, Mo., has prompted new security measures there, but University of Kansas officials say no extra security is planned for the KU memorial.
Lt. Jeanne Longaker of the KU police department said that no vandalism had occurred at the KU memorial since an incident a year ago and that she knew of no plans for extra surveillance now.
The stone memorial is in a grassy area between Memorial Drive and the Chi Omega fountain. The memorial was dedicated May 25, 1986. On July 4, 1986, someone defaced the
memorial by writing a slogan on the stone with a black marker.
624
'These incidents do tend to make me nervous.'
Thomas Berger, research assistant in the executive vice chancellor's
otte who led the effort to build a Vietnam memorial at KU, said no extra precautions would be taken.
"These incidents do tend to make me nervous," he said.
At the Kansas City memorial sometime last weekend, vandals cut 15 to 20 small chips out of the granite surface of the memorial. No witnesses have been found, and Kansas City police said they were not sure exactly when the damage was done.
Officials of the Kansas City Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund said recently that they would place a TV surveillance camera hooked up to a security system at the Kansas City memorial.
---
Berger said there was a remote chance that the incidents at the Kansas City memorial and the one at KU were related. Anytime something happens there, he said, there's a chance it might happen here.
"We are taking no more precautions or doing any unnecessary worrying more than the worrying we're right now." he said.
In March 1986, swastikas and political slogans were found on the Kansas City memorial. An Oalate man pleaded guilty to that defacuation and was sentenced to 60 days in jail and 1,000 hours of community service. He also was ordered to pay $8,000 for the damage.
2
Thursday, September 10, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Iraq retaliates for Iranian attacks tries to get cease-fire acceptance
MANAMA, Bahrain — Iraq said its warplanes attacked Iranian cities, power plants, factories and oil centers yesterday in retaliation for attacks on Kuwait and to force it to accept a U.N.-sponsored cease-fire.
The raids came two days before
Iran said 105 civilians were killed, and it vowed vengeance.
United Nations Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar was due to arrive in Tehran on a mission to end the 7-year-old war.
Iran said it shot down three Iraqi jets and captured one pilot when groundfire hit his French-built Mirage jet over the western city of Arak. Iraq acknowledged losing one plane.
Chicago school officials try to end strike
CHICAGO — Public school officials sought a court order yesterday to send teachers back to their desks and open the city's rooms to 400,000 students who missed the first day of the fall term.
Ohio, New Jersey, Pennsylvania,
Massachusetts, Washington and
in Michigan, where 11,500 Detroit
teachers are on strike. In all,
strikes by about 48,000 teachers
affected nearly 750,000 pupils
around the country.
Walkouts also were under way in
Hart begins bid for political arena
NEW YORK - Gary Hart, receiving praise and sympathy for his soul-baring interview on national television Tuesday, embarked yesterday on a campaign to re-establish himself as a key player in the nation's political arena without joining the race for the White House.
Hart traveled to New York for a private luncheon meeting with two other prominent non-candidates: New York Gov. Mario Cuomo and Arkansas Gov. William Clinton. He also arranged to deliver a foreign policy speech today in Philadelphia.
Message asks Playboy viewers to repent
TULSA, Okla. — Playboy Channel viewers saw a printed message that said, "Repent your sins. Keep the Sabbath holy." appeared on their television screens for about 10 to 15 seconds, the Tulsa World
reported yesterday.
reported y'estabury.
A Tulsa Cable spokesman said, "From what we've heard, someone got on in the satellite dish, or to use PlayBoy's term, someone 'stepped on their transponder.'"
Philippine cabinet resigns to strengthen government
The Associated Press
MANILA, Philippines — The Cabinet resigned yesterday under pressure from pro-business members seeking reorganization and stronger leadership after the coup attempt last month.
President Corazon Aquino was grim-faced after an emergency Cabinet meeting. She gave no indication of which resignations would be accepted or when she would announce a new government, and she snapped at reporters: "You will know!"
Presidential spokesman Teodoro Benigno said the 25 Cabinet members and three officials of the Commission on Good Government handed in hurriedly written letters of resignation during the 15-minute emergency meeting.
Among those resigning was Joker Arroyo, Aquino's executive secretary and closest adviser. Senior military officers, congressmen, prominent businessmen and church groups had sought his dismissal since the coup attempt by mutinous soldiers Aug. 28.
Officials said the pressure for resignations began after Arroyo alleged Tuesday in testimony before the House of Representatives that business leaders were undermining the government.
Arroyo's remarks also included accusations of disloyalty by the military. His three-hour speech brought into the open bitter Cabinet divisions and distrust between civilian authorities and the military.
In Washington, presidential spokesman Marin Fitzwater told
reporters: "We support Cory Aquino personally in her attempt to strengthen that government and to establish a rule of law and as much normalcy as possible in the existing circumstances."
It was the second mass resignation since Aquino came to power on Feb. 26, 1986, when former President Ferdinand M. Marcos fled the country.
Most ministers were retained in that reorganization, after a coup attempt Nov. 23 by followers of Ben Aziz and Ponce Enrile, but Enrile was fired.
Conflicts have increased since the Aug. 28 uprising because of the government's apparent inability to detect the threat of an increased number of military units that either joined the revolt or refused to help put it down.
Lawyers OK Bork nomination
Dissenting votes not enough to deny him highest rating
WASHINGTON — An American Bar Association committee, apparently with some dissenting votes, said yesterday that Robert H. Bork was "well qualified" to be on the Supreme Court, the ABA's highest rating for a prospective justice.
From The Associated Press.
The lawyers' organization has three rating categories in reviewing high court nominees: well qualified, not opposed and not qualified.
Sources familiar with the committee action, asking not to be identified, said there were some panel members who voted "not opposed" or "not qualified." There was no immediate explanation of why the dissenters had reservations about Bork.
The Associated Press
An administration official, who requested anonymity, said the vote by the 15-member ABA Standing Committee on the Federal Judiciary was not unanimous. The ABA declined to disclose the vote.
The ABA unanimously gave Bork its highest rating, "exceptionally well qualified," in recommending in
1982 that the Senate confirm him to be a federal appeals court judge
The rating of "exceptionally well qualified" is not used by the ABA.
The Senate Judiciary Committee begins hearings on Bork's nomination next Tuesday.
Presidential spokesman Marlin Fitzwater, meanwhile, described Bork's life as "an open book" but acknowledged that a White House booklet touting his qualifications for the Supreme Court told only part of the story.
Singles now older, report says
WASHINGTON — The percentage of Americans in their early 30s who have never married has more than doubled since 1970, increasing the prospects that a growing minority will stay single all their lives, the Census Bureau reported yesterday.
The Associated Press
Among men between the ages of 30 and 34, those who had never married totaled 23.1 percent, according to estimates made last March. That was up from 9.4 percent in a 1970 Census Bureau report.
Among women in the 30-34 age group, 14.6 percent had never been married, according to the 1987 survey, compared with 6.2 percent in 1970.
In other age groups, 61 percent of women aged 20 to 24 had not married in 1987, compared with 36 percent in 1970. For women aged 25 to 29, the figure was 29 percent in 1987 against 11 percent in 1970.
For men, 61 percent aged 20 to 24 had not married, compared with 36 percent in 1970. Among men in the 25-29 age group, 42 percent were not married, compared with 19 percent in 1970.
"The percentage that remains single throughout their lifetime is likely to be higher than in the past in view of the increases in never-marrieds among today's young adults," the report said. "The vast majority, however, eventually are likely to marry."
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3
Local Briefs
Local couple dies in wreck in Minnesota
A Lawrence couple was killed Tuesday in a two-car accident in central Minnesota, according to the Minnesota Highway Patrol.
Delbert Eisele, 67, and his wife,
La Verne Eisele, 61, former owners
of Marks Jewelers, 817 Massachusetts St., were returning to Lawrence from a vacation in Park Rapids, Minn.
Delbert Eisele was driving on a county road when he crossed a highway and struck a pickup truck broad-side. The driver of the truck, Alan Crandall, 28, of Minnesota, also was killed.
A patrol spokesman said that a patrol heavy morning fog, Elisse missed a stop sign. All three pronounced dead at the scene.
Funeral arrangements for the Eiseles are pending at WarrenMcElwain Mortuary.
Lawrence residents get obscene calls
Obscene calls to Lawrence residents that began about two months ago, and then stopped, started again last week.
Judith Hefley, director of community relations at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, said a female telephone caller, who says she is taking a survey for the hospital, is asking residents obscene questions. The hospital is not conducting a survey, and the calls should be reported to the Lawrence Police Department. Hefley said.
Police have received no complaints about the obscene caller since last week, said Sgt.丹 Dalquestef of the Lawrence police.
Robinson to close briefly for repairs
Robinson Center will close at 5 p.m. Friday instead of at 10:30 p.m. due to repair work on shower water lines. The center will open again at 8 a.m. Saturday.
Douglas County to receive grants
Douglas County will receive $30,680 in block grants under the federal Bureau of Justice Assistance Act of 1984.
Kansas Attorney General Bob Stephan announced yesterday that $21,580 would go to a victim-witness program in the district attorney's office and $9,100 to victim-witness services through the Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center.
The block grant program is administered by Stephan's office. Money was available to the state for fiscal years 1986 and 1987 and requires a 50 percent match by state or local governments.
Eisenhower to talk at WSU lectures
David Eisenhower, grandson and biographer of President Dwight Eisenhower, will open the 1987-88 Wichita State University Forum Board Lecture Series on Sept. 28.
Eisenhower will speak at 9:30 a.m. at the Campus Activities Center Theater on the campus in Wichita.
Also scheduled to appear are Dick Cavett, PBS talk show host and author, on Nov. 2; Max Robinson, ABC News correspondent, on Feb. 8; and Sonia Johnson, a feminist author who was ex-communicated from the Mormon Church, on March 7.
From staff and wire reports.
Faculty wooed by unions for Nov.17 vote NEA, AAUP seek to represent teachers in Legislature, salary negotiations
Bv NOEL GERDES
KU faculty need to form a union to raise their salaries and eliminate a sense of powerlessness, the head of a group seeking to represent the faculty said yesterday.
Staff writer
"The administration listens to itself, not faculty," said Robert Hohn, collective bargaining committee chairman of the American Association of University Professors. A would address that problem, he said.
Hohn spoke to about 40 people at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
the KU chapter of the National Education Association, or not to form a union. If no option receives more than 50 percent of the vote, the two options with the most votes will be placed on the ballot again.
Faculty members will vote Nov. 17 and 18 whether to form a union, represented either by the AAUP or
Those eligible to vote are faculty with the rank of lecturer or above who hold at least half-time teaching positions, librarians, research scientists and curators, said Terry Madden, Medken. KU-NEA. These with the titles of chancellor, vice chancellor, dean or director will not be eligible to vote.
Hohn, who is a professor of educational psychology and research, said KU faculty salaries were rising at a rate similar to the university's. No U.S. college or universities.
ty has given its faculty members a smaller salary increase this fiscal year than the average 1.5 percent increase KU faculty members will receive, Hohn said.
"Financially speaking, we are falling further and further behind," Hohn said.
Forming a union to handle collective bargaining for faculty will not automatically raise faculty salaries, but faculty unions will benefit faculty unions prosper as a whole.
At KU, the faculty now has no representative of its own to directly lobby the state Legislature and the Board of Regents. Although KU administrators now convey faculty opinions, their main goal is to represent the entire University.
"We need a voice that speaks for the faculty alone," Hohn said, adding that the AAUP was the logical choice to represent the faculty. AAUP has a long tradition of guaranteeing the rights of university faculty and has a national network of information and sources, he said.
The AUAP, founded in 1910, represents about 50 universities around the world.
Madden agreed with Hohn that the faculty needed a new unifying force and that a union would be the most effective. He said the faculty should play a stronger role in University government than it does now and should should form a union that would only represent faculty.
But Madden disagreed that the
Artist from China bikes across U.S.
By MICHAEL MERSCHEL
Staff writer
Even with his tanned, peeling skin and smooth bicyclist's legs, Bingyao Chang does not look like someone who has ridden a bicycle halfway around the world.
Maybe it's because he, unlike others who go for marathon riding attempts, is not a professional bicyclist, or any kind of professional athlete.
Chang, who heads for the Kansas City area today after a threeday stay in Lawrence, is a vice professor at the Central Institute of Fine Arts in Beijing, China, and a well-known Chinese playwright, poet and painter.
speaking through an interpreter, Chang said yesterday that he was riding around the world trying to articulate art and culture of different nations.
He decided to go by bicycle because he missed too many sights when traveling by car or plane. He said he liked having the freedom to observe what he wanted.
Chang, 52, left his home, his wife and his 18-year-old son in January 1986. He rode across Hong Kong and returned to San Francisco last February.
He said that before embarking on his trip, he spent fifteen months riding the length of the Yellow River in China — 2,900 miles — because he thought he must understand his own nation's culture before he could understand the rest of the world.
Qingli Wan, a former colleague
of Chang's and now a KU graduate student, said Chang was famous in China, particularly for his poetry and paintings.
Chang will open an exhibition of his paintings in Los Angeles in January and will lecture at universities in New York and Washington, D.C. He also has been invited to Europe, Holland, Fragile, Italy and India.
Chang said he had thought of abandoning his trip a few times and missed his family very much. He said he had two plans for the rest of his trip, one that would take two years and one that would take
He said he didn't know how long it would take to finish the trip. Before January he planned to travel by car, but he hoped to meet President Reagan.
M. HONDA
Chang said his trip was being paid for partly by U.S. corporate sponsors, including the Los Angeles Times, that helped plan his route across the United States. Chang also pays for the trip by selling his watercolor paintings of people and landscapes.
He said he carried his brushes and paper on his bike, along with a tent and sleeping bag. While white rider he covered 40 to 50 miles a day.
Chang said he had run into only a few problems on his trip, such as hot weather in California and a flat tire in Topeka. Even though he speaks only a few words of English, he said he found U.S. citizens very amenable.
Bingyao Chang, vice professor and painter from the Central Institute of Fine Arts in Beijing, China, is traveling across the United States and around the world by bicycle. Chang left his home in January 1986 and will continue his journey today after a three-day stay in Lawrence.
Chang has had peoplevolunteer to house him overnight, help him fix flat tires and drive their cars in front of his bike to break the wind.
He demonstrated his interest in
people when he turned the tables on reporters interviewing him last night, asking them questions about their concerns and their opinions on patriotism, love and friendship.
Group helps foreign women, children cope
Staff writer
For the 20th year, Small World, a non-profit Lawrence organization, is offering classes to help foreign families cope better in the United States.
Women and children from foreign nations who are uneasy about living in Lawrence can learn about life in the United States and improve their English at off-campus classes this fall.
However, men are not invited because many Arabic women have religious beliefs that do not allow them to meet with men other than their husbands, said Kathy Mulinazzi, the organization's co-chairman.
By KIRK ADAMS
volunteers who speak Arabic,
French, German, Spanish, Korean,
Chinese and Hausa, an African language.
Mulinazi hopes that people who speak other languages also will volunteer. In past years, the organization always has found teachers speaking participants' native languages, she said.
Small World offers four levels of English courses, from the most basic English to a class in conversational English. The classes are taught by
Small World has programs for children under 3 years old and children aged 3 to 5, said Judy Keller, an educator of the children's programs.
For adults, activities include U.S. and international cooking, crafts and sewing. Mulinazzi said.
"We'll be doing art activities and games and songs," Keller said.
"A lot of the people want to learn how to make pizza," she said.
The group meets from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays at the First Presbyterian Church, 2415 Clinton Parkway, during KU's fall and spring semesters. A night class also meets the first Monday of each month from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the same place. Small World also plans to offer transportation after the first week.
Mulinazzi said people could register from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. today or at any meeting. Fees to help pay costs are $10 a family for one semester, or $18 a family for both.
Mulinazzi said she expected from 60 to 100 people to attend the meetings after the classes got started.
Another activity Small World offers is field trips that, Mulinazzi said, women could participate in along with their children.
She said last year for Halloween,
Small World took a trip to a pumpkin patch where the students picked apples and carved them into jack-o-lanterns.
"They were really interesting, especially the Oriental women's pumpkins, because they turned out to be more like dragons." Mulnazzi said.
For participants who are from countries with warm climates and thus are unprepared for the cold Kansas falls and winters, Small World plans to have a clothing exchange in October. "They think 50 degrees is cold," she said. Keller said any donations of coats, sweaters and other winter clothes could be dropped off at the church but should be marked for Small World.
AAUP would be a better faculty representative because it was an organization of university professors and because most members of the NEA are secondary and elementary school teachers.
Staff writer
He said the NEA represented faculties at 75 universities across the United States.
By BEN JOHNSTON
"What we have to offer faculty is a long and well-established state organization that already has influence in the state Legislature." Madden said.
Students awaiting housing
If patience is a virtue, KU students waiting for apartments at Stouffer Place may be saints by the time they move in.
All 300 apartments in the University of Kansas' housing project, which is reserved for students who are married or have children, were occupied this year. Ruth Swain, Stouffer Place resident hall manager, said that students who wanted to move in would have a long wait.
Stouffer Place consists of 25 buildings east of the Daisy Hill residence halls, on Engel Road between 16th and 19th streets. Of the 300 furnished apartments, 200 are two-bedroom and 100 are one-bedroom.
"Students who want a two-bedroom apartment will have to wait about a year," Swain said. "There is always a long line for two-bedroom apartments. Right now it is so long we are not even counting the number of names."
"There are 25 people on a list for one-bedroom apartments," Swain said. "The list is shorter for one-bedroom apartments, but the waiting period will vary. Someone got in recently after a three-month wait."
At a time when KU's residence hall system is overcrowded, Swain said the Stouffor Place waiting lists were the longest they had ever been.
Students on the waiting lists can move in when a current tenant decides to leave, which is usually at the end of a semester. Tenants who give housing officials 60 days notice can leave anytime. Swain said.
She said Stouffer Place was popular for a variety of reasons.
"It is hard to say which is the most important reason." Swain said. "I most often hear the economic reason — that the apartments are reasonably priced. The second reason I hear that it is a good place to raise children. The third reason may be the location."
Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said monthly rent had been increased this year at Stouffer Place from $156 to $160 for a one-bedroom apartment and from $176 to $180 for a two-bedroom apartment.
"We hadn't raised the rates for three years," Stoner said. "It was done to offset basic operating costs."
An increasing number of single parents are living at Stouffer Place.
"When I first came here in the fall of '83, there was only one single parent that I knew of," Swain said. "Last year there were 22, and this year there are 24."
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Thursdav. September 10. 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Erase the racism
The remnants of racism linger on.
Thirty years ago this week, National Guardsmen, on the order of the governor of Arkansas, stood in the doorways of Little Rock's all-white public high schools to prevent court-ordered desegregation.
Though most of us shrug with muted disgust and ascribe these racial atrocities to the misplaced values of the past, the sad fact remains that racism is not dead and gone.
The constitution of West Virginia still prohibits blacks and whites from attending the same schools. Though the provision is null and void because of the United States Supreme Court's ruling in Brown vs. Topeka Board of Education, it remains a black eve for both the state and the country as a whole.
It already is.
Some state lawmakers have tried to eliminate the offensive passage by bringing it to a public vote. But the efforts have faltered because many legislators fear that the people of West Virginia, only about 3 percent of whom are black, would not vote to strike the section. That, opponents say, would be an embarrassment to the state.
remain for the present. But in trying to do so, they sacrifice both.
It already is. The public could do no worse than to leave the state constitution sullied with the stains of damnable racism, as it is now. Timorousness on the part of state legislators is cowardice, an unwillingness to stand up for the principles that make this a great nation. They would give away the principle of equality in exchange for the preservation of West Virginia's image.
But if trying to off so, Lie with them. And if their character is so weak, their hearts so full of hatred and their clouds so clouded with the ignorance of a bygone era that they would reject the change, let it be plainly and truthfully acknowledged.
West Virginians, and by extension all Americans, must have the courage to see themselves as they are. Let us confront those attitudes that threaten to drag us down into a mire of unfulfilled promises and racial conflict.
Labor-intensive
Imagine spending the next four years in freezing temperatures, with little or no food, away from any family or friends, doing hard labor.
promises and racial conflict Only in this way can the necessary attention be focused on the lingering manifestations of racism, so that we can banish them from our society once and for all.
On Monday, Rust was convicted of violating international flight rules, illegally entering the Soviet Union and malicious hooliganism. He was given the stiften sentence, four years, for the malicious hooliganism charge, the only charge he contested
The crime Rust committed was indeed serious. He endangered international security, his life and the lives of others. His prank should by no means be taken lightly.
Rust caused an uproar within the Kremlin. After his stunt, Communist Party leader Mikhail Gorbachev immediately called an emergency meeting of the Politburo to take action. The defense minister, the highest-ranking defense official, was fired, as was the marshal of aviation, the head of the air-defense system. An in-depth investigation was conducted.
Matias Rust has a significant adjustment ahead. The young West German pilot who rather innocently landed his small plane in Red Square in May will spend the next four years in a Soviet labor camp.
The Kremlin saw the seriousness of Rust's action, and so should he. However, four years in a Soviet labor camp is too harsh. Imprisonment, yes. In a labor camp, no.
The roads lost.
Hit the pavement
The roads lost. The special session of the Kansas Legislature disbanded with the only accomplishments being political hard feelings, wasted time and unnecessary expenditure.
According to the U.S. Department of Transportation, Kansas has the highest percentage of roads in need of immediate repair of any state. Out of 816 total miles, 66.8 percent are deficient. Our roads need help.
record time.
The special session was a political gamble that backfired, making Gov. Hayden look foolish. The legislators were disagreeable, and the net political gain was nil.
Our roads need responsible repair and upkeep, the kind with a more manageable price tag than $3 billion.
What Kansas roads do not need is the political show of a special session called to try and push a big-spending bill through in record time.
more manageable price tag than our politics aside, let's mend our roads to the best of our pocketbook's ability and forget the drama seen in special sessions that drain thousands from Kansas coffers.
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
News staff
Jennifer Benjamin ... Editor
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Bill Sheet ... Graphics editor
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CINEMA & ENCOUNTER
(1983)
"CALM DOWN...I'M WORKING ON IT!"
Reagan hampers peace efforts
Since President Reagan took office in 1980, the U.S. policy toward Central America has been an intractable one, spurning efforts at negotiation and reconciliation in favor of a heavy-handed military solution. Now, however, with his policy in disarray and with prospects for new contra-aid appropriations in grave doubt, the president has suddenly reversed his position and has offered his own peace plan for the region.
Reagan has once again used his considerable political acumen to make black appear white; he hopes to turn the failure of his peace initiative into a resounding success for his contra-aid policy.
a résounding声. The very tenacity with which the president has supported the effort in the past is enough to caress to rub on his motives. The victory of the Nicaraguan rebels has been his primary foreign policy objective since the day he took his oath. It is likely that a man who believes the contrasts to be the moral equivalents of our own founding fathers would simply give up the cause?
Moreover, President Reagan has unquincovically stated that his efforts to achieve a contra victory over the Sandinistas are not dead. Only days after his peace plan was made public, he told a group of businessmen who had made donations to the war effort that he had never been willing to abandon the contras.
Yet his own plan, like the Guatemala plan signed by representatives from Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Guatemala and Costa Rica, calls for an end to all U.S. support for the rebels. How can the president be committed to two
Ben Shult Staff Columnist
mutually exclusive objectives? Obviously, he must be insincere about either his interest in the peace plan or his interest in a contra victory. And it isn't the latter.
President Reagan seems to give his own plan little chance for success. In fact, his administration has placed the emphasis on the new, record-breaking aid package that will be necessary after the plan fails, rather than on seeking the success of the plan itself.
White House Chief of Staff Howard Baker has insisted that the plans for more aid were necessary because "we can't be sure the Sandinistas are really interested in peace."
The bitter irony in Baker's statement is that the United States has tried for six years to overthrow the Nicaraguan government, has mined Nicaraguan harbors and defiantly ignored the resulting condemnation of the World Court; it has steadfastly refused to negotiate and has even violated its own laws to ensure that the fighting would continue.
It is the United States that has shown little interest in peace.
President Reagan's plan threatens to destroy the genuine peace efforts of the Central Americans themselves. The U.S. proposal calls for the Nicaraguans to "shape up" by Sept. 30, a deadline far in advance of the Nov. 7 implementation of the Guatemala plan.
irus, the president can announce that peace efforts have failed before they have even had a chance to begin. If the United States then renews contra financing, the Guatemala plan would be doomed.
The United States is essentially demanding that Nicaragua make unilateral efforts. Other signatures to the Aug. 6 agreement, such as American proxies El Salvador and Honduras, are unlikely to begin reforms before the Nov. 7 start of the treaty.
Moreover, the contra will continue to receive installments of the $100 million in aid approved last year until Sept. 30. While the contra and the Hondurans are free in the meantime to continue to promote conflict, the Sandistas are expected by the United States to reduce tensions.
President Reagan's plan was the best — and only — option available to him. The appearance of peace-making improves the odds of renewed contra aid considerably while simultaneously reducing the chances for a premature outbreak of actual peace in the region. The president is hoping to find that there is no success quite like failure.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Unprofessional coverage
Let me begin by praising the Arts and Entertainment staffs of the Kansan who, for the past five years, have done a responsible job of covering film events affecting KU students. The same cannot be said for the news department.
During the past six months, the Kansan has been irresponsible in its coverage of events surrounding the film "Nice Girls Don't Explode." An extensive series of articles should have been written concerning the major benefits for students and the University that resulted from the production of that film in Lawrence last year.
Instead, we got a front-page article in the April 2 Kansan titled "Movie premiere canceled." Not only did staff writer Paul Belden seem to revel in the filmmakers' misfortune, but he grossly misspelled the names of the co-producer of the film, John Wells, and the coordinator of the Kansas Film Commission, Jerry Jones. He also confused The Kansas Film Foundation with The Kansas Film Institute, which holds an annual festival in Lawrence.
Then we got an "article" in the April 3 Kansan by columnist John Benner titled "Nice Girls bombs in Lawrence debut." This is one of the most juvenile, superficial and vindictive film reviews I have ever read. Most of the review consisted of a description of the plot, accompanied by snide, immature comments. Mr. Benner never examined the merits of the film in any depth, obviously because he lacked the critical skill to do so. I was offended by the article, and I cannot understand how it made it past editorial review and managed to get into print.
Finally, we got a front-page article in the Sept
3 Kansasan entitled "Nice Girls flick fizzles." Staff writer Ben Johnston dwelled almost exclusively on all the negative material concerning the performance of the film that he could muster. He never bothered to mention that it is a common industry practice to release small films gradually in selected markets to give the film a chance to find its audience. Only in the last paragraph did we get the news that the film is scheduled to open in New York City and Chicago on Sept. 11.
Pers. the fact that the film "Kansas" is currently shooting in Lawrence is due in large part to the fact that Lawrence was able to offer a rich variety of people experienced in supplying the needs of a film company shooting on location. The majority of that local experience was gained during the shooting of "Nice Girls Don't Explode."
It seems obvious to me that an article updating the progress of "Nice Girls Don't Explode" should have a headline such as "Nice Girls to open in major markets," and should treat the subject with some degree of fairness and sense of perspective.
Douglas Curtis, co-producer of "Nice Girls Don't Explode," is currently in the process of building Oread Studios in Lawrence. Because of arrangements made with the Theatre and Media Arts Department, KU will be the only university in the United States whose film program has a formal relationship to a film studio.
I feel that the behavior of the Kansan as described above has been reprehensible and, at the least, amounts to shoddy journalism. The Kansan's news department could benefit from healthy injections of professionalism and humility.
Avoid sex, AIDS
Mark C. Syverson, executive secretary, The Kansas Film Institute
A KU professor of health, Philip Huntingstier,
recently wrote a script for a film on how to
get AIDS, according to an article in the Sept. 2. Kansan
Kamba M. Ma. Huntssinger states correctly that sexual abstinence is the best way to avoid AIDS. This is true. Curiously, though, he says that this is not realistic, so it will not be emphasized. Rather, the film will emphasize this so-called "safe sex." Not realistic? We're talking life and death here, but Mr. Huntssinger says go ahead, have sex, just be careful.
In the same issue of the Kansan, staff columnist Jane Zachman wrote an article saying basically the same thing. AIDS is in most cases a sexually transmitted disease, with most other cases coming from drug use. With this in mind, wouldn't common sense dictate that to avoid AIDS you should abstain from these two activities (with the exception of a normal monogamous marital relationship)?
I suggest that possibly Mr. Huntssinger change this script and say to everyone that sexual abstinence is the only realistic answer to avoiding AIDS.
Steve Gantz, Downers Grove, Ill., senior
Thanks, honestly
However, Sunday morning, someone from the library called me and asked whether I had borrowed a particular journal and whether I had left some money in it. After I said yes and the exact amount, he told me that I could come and pick up the money anytime at the library desk. I genuinely appreciate the honesty of the staff in the Science Library. Thanks for giving cash back to another poor student!
I am writing to express my thanks to an anonymous staff member in the Science Library in Malott Hall. On Aug. 25 I checked out a journal from the library. I kept it overnight, and after returning it the next day, I discovered that I had left a $20 bill inside the journal. I considered it gone after that careless mistake.
Elizabeth Soliday, Lawrence senior
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By GARY LARSON
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, September 10, 1987
© 1974 Universal Press Syndicate
9 10
nat evening, with her blinds pulled, Mary had three helpings of corn, two baked potatoes, extra bread and a little lamb.
Kassebaum gives Landon Lecture
State/Local
The Associated Press
MANHATTAN — Alf Landon showed amazing foresight during his inaugural Landon Lecture two decades ago, his daughter, Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan., said yesterday on Landon's 100th birthday, in the 76th lecture in the series.
the four lectures. After reviewing Landon's Dec. 13, 1966, lecture at Kansas State University, "I was struck not only by his specific observations, which showed remarkable foresight, but by what he saw as the flow of events," Kassebaum told about 2,000 people.
baum told me, "First, he spoke of the crucial importance of 'the new nationalism,' as nations throughout the Third World sought independence and self-determination. He predicted that this movement would create great difficulties for the superpowers because it would challenge the authority of both," she said.
both, she said.
Kassebaum said her father also called for normalizing relations with Communist China, "a step we finally took six years later." And, he sounded an alarm about the conflict in
Vietnam.
Those predictions are part of history and something "we must all understand and appreciate as we focus our attention on the events unfolding around us today." Kassebaum said.
It is a remarkable achievement that Landon, a former Kansas governor and the unsuccessful 1936 Republican presidential nominee, has lived to be 103. Kassbaum said.
"It is all the more remarkable when you consider that in just eight days we will celebrate the 200th anniversary of the signing of our Constitution. My father's life covers half of the life of our government," she said. "In the 100 years since my father was born, the world has literally remade itself."
She said that if the United States was to continue its world leadership role, it must "seek to build an era of active cooperation between the superpowers. . . We must be willing to test the Soviets' words in ways that clearly serve our national interests as well as theirs."
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Ginsberg
Continued from n.
nothing of Ginsberg's, but my fiction teacher suggested it."
After fastening his microphone in place, Ginsberg told the audience he would perform works he had written since 1890. He sang three recent songs with death themes. But then he wrote a poem in 1956 and continued to mix the new and the old throughout the evening.
His poems dealt with causes or people such as Nicaragua, Buddhism, Jerry Fallow and plutonium protests. Once, he sarcastically thrashed every ethnic group except Australian aboriginals.
"Let them rule the world," Ginsberg said.
"It was very exciting,very invigor-
berg sau.
Marie Kelly, Tulsa, Okla., junior,
liked Ginsberg's energy.
ating," she said. "I love the way Ginsberg got so involved in what he was reading."
Allen Ginsberg ended his performance with a sing-a-long. The audience clapped and chanted along with him, "all the hills echoed."
Ginsberg quit singing, but the crowd continued. When they stopped, he left to a standing ovation.
River City Reunion activities
■ Book signings by Allen Ginsberg, William Burroughs and Frankie Edie Kerenau Parker will be from noon to 1:30 p.m. at the Oread Book Shop in the Kansas Union.
Readings by Robert Day, Gary
■ John Mortiz of Tansy Press will talk at 1 p.m. in the Pine Room of the university Union about poetry and law in lawrence in the 1960s and 1970s.
Brown, Tamara Dubin Brown and Philip Wedge will be from 2 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union.
p. m. to 9 p.m. at the Lawrence Arts Center, Ninth and Vermont streets.
**Readings by Jim Thomas, Tom Lorenze, Sharon Hansen, Keith Denniston, Bill Holm and John Resmerzki will be from 2 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union.**
Readings by Victor Contoski and others are scheduled from 7
■ Marienne Faithful will perform with Fernando Saunders, Michael McClure and Danny Sugarman from 9 p.m. to 11 p.m. at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St. Tickets are $7.
Club Babaloo West is scheduled to have open-mike readings at 9 p.m. at the rear entrance of Hoch.
Book stores feature beat writings
By a Kansan reporter
With several famous beat authors in town this week for the River City Reunion, why not pick up a few good books to keep up with the beat?
Bill Getz, Oread Book Shop supervisor, said the store was displaying books by beat authors such as Allen Ginsberg, William S. Burroughs and Timothy Leary and poets Michael McClure and Jim Carroll.
And the authors of those books and others will be at the Oread, which is
on the Kansas Union's fourth floor, to sign books throughout the week.
J. Hood Booksellers, 1401 Massachusetts St., also has set up a table to sell beat author's books during the River City Reunion, store owner John Hood said.
The store's display includes books and magazines from the beat movement including Ginsberg, Jack Kerenua and McClure, and Avant Garde
Hood said the 13-year-old used-
book store usually sold literary material on topics such as history, philosophy, sociology and anthropology. Out-of print books increase the store's selection, Hoood said.
Adventure A Bookstore, 836 Massachusetts St., ordered books by beateroa poets to coincide with the River Store store owner Mary Michener said.
She said shelves set up at the front of the store displayed books by Ginsberg, Burroughs, Keroc, Leary.
On Campus
■ "Influence of a Lymphokine on Immunoglobulin Secretion by Rabbit Spleen Cells," a microbiology lecture by Mark Sutherland, is scheduled at 12:30 p.m. today at 6031 Haworth Hall
An organizational meeting of the Society for East Asian Studies is scheduled at noon today at Parlor A in the Kansas Union.
A Retirees Club birthday party is scheduled at 2:30 p.m. today at Summerfield Room in Adams Alumni Center
University Council is scheduled to meet at 3:30 p.m. today at 108 Blake Hall.
A re-entry meeting for all students who participated in study abroad during the 1986-1987 school year is
scheduled at 3:30 p.m. today at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union. "A Comparativist Looks At JeanJacques Rousseau's 'Confessions,'" a lecture by Juliet MacCannell of the University of California-Irvine, is scheduled at 4 p.m. today at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union. The lecture opens the English department's comparative literature conference, which continues through Saturday.
"Returning to Chile," a Latin American Solidarity video, is scheduled at 6 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
"Dealing with that Uneasy Feeling," a Student Assistance Center workshop, is scheduled at 6:30 p.m. today at 100 Smith Hall.
A squash singles organizational meeting is scheduled at 7 p.m. today at 202 Robinson Center. Play begins Sept 15.
A lecture and informational meeting for the KU Undergraduate Philosophy Club are scheduled at 7 p.m. at Parlor C in the Kansas Union
■ An informational meeting about AIESEC's internship program is scheduled at 7:05 p.m. today at 427 Summerfield Hall.
- Pot de la Rentree, sponsored by Le Cerule Francais, is scheduled at 7:30 p.m. today, Cost is $3.
■ In informational meeting on promotions and tenure is scheduled at 7:30 p.m. at the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
TODAY
Showers
HIGH: 83°
60°
Today will be partly sunny with scattered thunderstorms. Showers will continue tonight. The high will be in the low 80s, and the low will be around 60°.
5-DAY
FRI
Showers
78/52
HIGH LOW
SAT
Partly Cloudy
74/49
SUN
Partly Sunny
76/53
MON
Mostly Sunny
80/56
TUE
Sunny
80/58
North Platte
77/49
Partly Cloudy
Omaha
81/56
Mostly Cloudy
Rain
1-Storms
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Goodland
76/51
Partly Cloudy
Hays
80/57
Showers
Salina
82/59
Thunderstorms
Topeka
84/60
Thunderstorms
Kansas City
85/61
thunderstorms
Columbia
84/60
Partly Sunny
St. Louis
83/60
Mostly Sunny
Dodge City
81/60
Showers
Wichita
86/62
Thunderstorms
Chanute
86/62
Thunderstorms
Springfield
86/62
Partly Sunny
Forecast by Kevin Darmofal.
Temperatures are today is high and overnight is low.
Conditions are forecasted for this afternoon.
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Partly Sunny
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, September 10, 1987
7
River City Reunion brings beat poets, artists here
A week for memories
By BRIAN BARESCH
Staff writer
Organizing the River City Reunion has turned into a full-time job for James Grauerholz and Bill Rich.
Rich, who is working on a doctorate in social psychology, has had to take the semester off to organize the Reunion through his specially-formed company, River City Productions. Grauerholz already was involved with the beat poets because he works for author William S. Burroughs, a Lawrence resident who has been part of the beat movement since its birth in the 1950s.
Allen Ginsberg and George Wedge, associate professor of English, were trying to arrange a month-long residency for Ginsberg at the University of Kansas, and Wedge raised some of the money required. Before the arrangements were finished, however, Ginsberg committed himself to another year at Brooklyn College, so he could spend only a week in Lawrence.
Grauerholz said he then suggested the Reunion of beat poets and other artists.
Grauernoz, Rich and Wedge have been arranging for the various artists' flights and accommodations. Most of the performers, including Marianne Faithfull and Husker Du, are taking smaller fees than normal, Grauerholz said.
The organizers are quick to point out that the Reunion is not a nostalgia trip for the older poets. "It's really for the participants," Grauerhauer said, speaking of the
many artists invited to take part. "Memory is a shared commodity."
One special event organized for local participants is the series of readings at Club Babalo West, in the back of Hoch Auditorium. Mike Mader, Great Bend graduate student, said the open-mike readings might prove to be some of the most exciting events at the Reunion.
"Many of the well-known poets are going to be showing up at the readings to encourage people to come and read," he said.
"It's exciting to see people who have grown up with these poets get a chance to meet them and read with them." Mader said.
The readings will be from 8 p.m. to 1 a.m. tonight and tomorrow night.
Poets won't be the only ones at the Reunion events. John Bell, Memphis, Tenn., sophomore, and Rob Mayberry, Leavenworth junior, said they were drawn to the Reunion by the beat poets' influence on the counterculture of the 1960s.
1905. "I think it shows how students today aren't materialistic." Maybury said. "We understand the changes that took place in the '60s."
Bell agreed. "And we appreciate the people who initiated these changes," he said.
changes." They said they would go to as many events as they could afford, concentrating on the free, on-campus events. Both said tey definitely would attend the talks by Timothy Leary, Ginsberg and Burroughs.
TIMOTHY LEARY
Timothy Leary, 66, was preparing for a conservative life as a Harvard psychology professor when he sampled a magic mushroom and became aware of what he called the mind-expanding properties of hallucinogenic drugs. His experimenting with peyote and LSD among faculty members resulted in his getting kicked off the Harvard faculty in 1963.
Leary's continued calls for responsible drug use made him a guru to the counterculture of the 1960s. His phrase "Tune in, turn on, drop out" became one of the most popular phrases — and philosophies — of the decade. He spent time in jail for drug possession, went to Algeria and Europe and now is working with computers and artificial intelligence.
Leary's books include "The Psychicheedal Experience," "Neuropolitics" and his autobiography, "Flashbacks." He will be speaking at 2 p.m. Saturday at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St. He will sign books at noon Saturday at the Oread Book Shop in the Kansas Union.
ANNIE WAILED Anne Waldman, born in 1945 in Millville, N.J., is well known as a reader-performer. Her best-known work is "Fast-Speaking Woman," published in 1975.
ANNE WALDMAN
waiwan said her expressive way of reading poetry was a way of evoking physical or aural imagery from the poem's construction.
Waldman and Ginsberg founded the Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics at the Naropa Institute in Boulder, Colo., where she teaches full time and directs the poetics program.
Motion!" Her video "Ub-Oh Plutonium!" won a blue ribbon at the American Film Festival's Manhattan Video Project. Her other published works include "Baby Breakdown," "Giant Night." "No Hassles" and "Skin Film Bones."
She toured as poet-in-residence with Bob Dylan's "Rolling Thunder Review" in 1975 and was featured in a documentary film, "Poetry In
Waldman is working on prose and more rigidly structured poems, but also is experimenting with ensemble reading performances
She will read from her works from 8 to 11 p.m. Saturday at Liberty Hall.
RIVER CITY REUNION
ANDREI CODRESCU
Andrei Codrescu was born in Romania in 1946 and immigrated to the United States 20 years later. He is best known as a weekly commentator on National Public Radio's "All Things Considered."
"I'm one of those strange pods that blew up in Eastern Europe at the reading of 'Howl' by Allen Ginsberg," he said. "I blew far enough to end up over here in 1966."
His poetry collection "License to Carry a Gun" won the 1970 Big Table Series of Young Poets Prize; other collections include "The History of the Growth of Heaven," "A Serious Morning," "For the Love of a Coat" and "Necrocorrida."
Codrescu teaches at Louisiana State University, where he edits the literary magazine Exquisite Corpse.
He also has written several works of fiction, including "Monsieur Teste in America," and two autobiographies, "The Life and Times of an Involuntary Genius" and "Further Disturbances of an Involuntary Genius."
Codrescu will read from his works from 8 to 11 p.m. Saturday at Liberty Hall.
John Giorno was born in 1937 in New York. He has performed often with Burroughs on such occasions as the Red Night Tour in 1981 and the Nova Convention in 1978.
JOHN GIORNO
Giorno's books include "Grasing at Emptiness," "Johnny Guitar" and "The American Book of the Dead." He originated Dial-a-Poem and founded Giorno Poetry Systems Institute, Inc., which has released several album anthologies including "Life Is a Killer," "Darden Hidden in the Mouth of a Corpse," "Who You Staring At?" and "You're the Guy I Want to Share my Money With" and several video compilations.
MICHAEL McCLURE
Michael McClure was born in 1932 in Marysville, studied for two years at the University of Wichita (now Wichita State University) and eventually landed in San Francisco in 1964. His first reading night was Ginsberg first read "How," with Jack Kerouac shouting in the audience.
oac snorkling McClure's plays "The Beard" and "Josephine the Mouse Singer" later won the Village Voice's Obie Award.
McClure was a close friend of Jim Morrison, leader of The Doors, and he wrote "Mercedes Benz" for Janis Joplin. He has appeared in several films. McClure now lives in San Francisco.
FIRESTORE
He will perform with Marianne Faithfull from 9 to 11 p.m. tonight at Liberty Hall and will sign books at noon tomorrow in the Oread Book Shop.
marianne Faithfull, while bes. known as Mick Jagger's girlfriend in the 1960s and singer of "As Tears Go By" in 1964, has established her own
MARIANNE FAITHFULL
place in modern music. She lives in Boston. Her albums include "Broken English" from 1977 and the latest, "Strange Weather."
She will perform from 9 to 11 p.m tonight at Liberty Hall.
HUSKER DU
Their albums include "Warehouse: Stories and Songs" and "Candy Ample Red."
Husker Du, a three-man progressive-rock band from Minneapolis, Minn., blends the styles of popular and underground music. The band, composed of guitarist Bob Mould, drummer Grant Hart and bassist Greg Norton, has appeared in Gloria Poetry Systems's "Call It It Looks Like Daisy," singing the song "The Girl Who Lives on Heaven Hill."
Husker Du will appear at 9 p.m. Sunday at Liberty Hall.
WILLIAM BURROUGHS
William S. Burroughs was born in St. Louis in 1914, graduated from Harvard University and studied medicine in Vienna. He befriended Ginsberg and Kerouac at Columbia University in the 1940s.
The novel "The Naked Lunch" was printed first in France, but was not published in the United States for objection because of the stricter obscenity laws here.
When it was published, "The Naked Lunch" was immediately seized, and Burroughs was tried for obscenity. His eventual victory was a ground-breaking event in helping to eliminate censorship of the printed word in the United States.
Burroughs has lived in Lawrence since 1982. His books include "Junky," "Nova Express" and "The Place of Dead Roads."
burroughs will sign books at noon today in the Oread Book Shop and will read from his works from 8 to 11 p.m. Saturday at Liberty Hall.
Beat poet still 'Howl'-ing
Allen Ginsberg returns to Lawrence for River City Reunion
Staff writer
Bv BRIAN BARESCH
Allen Ginsberg, the poet who brought the beat movement into the national spotlight by reading "Howl" in San Francisco 32 years ago, is still trying to merge spirituality with the materialistic urges most people feel today.
Now, the co-founder of the hiphi movement is doing it as a distinguished professor at Brooklyn College, teaching heroic, expansive poetry, and history of the Beat Generation. Ginsberg also has taught at the Naropa Institute, a Buddhist college in Boulder, Colo.
Ginsberg, 61, talked at length through a cloud of cigarette smoke Monday in his Lawrence hotel room, fresh from a 10-day meditation retreat in Colorado. He is in town as one of the primary attractions of the River City Reunion. His voice was quiet and measured, steady and deep; he was serious without being somber.
Ginsberg's poem "How!" was a wrathful attack on a sick urban society, he said, which ended in affirmation of compassionate ener-
"A denial of our basic goodness, a denial of our basic intelligence," Ginsberg called the poem.
"The mass media saw it as an angry protest rather than as an affirmation," he said. "It's a gesture of sympathy rather than a rejection in anger."
That poem, because of the raw language that complemented its pacing and wrath, was the subject of an obsessive trial in 1957. Ginsberg won the case, and the victory, coupled with William S. Burroughs' triumph in a similar trial over his "The Naked Lunch," for a while effectively ended literary censorship in the United States.
but now, Ginsberg noted, "Howl" and a lot of his erotic poetry can no longer be broadcast even on alternative radio stations, thanks to the Federal Communication Commission's recent crackdown on "shock" radio.
Under the new Reagan ethos, he said, "Everybody's been sared and inert, and the most aggressive are taking power. It's like Russia, in the sense that you've got congressional wives trying to curb rock 'n' roll; you've got the FCC trying to control, essentially, social commentary, under the guise of some kind of cleanup."
"The answer to all that is humor and some sense of speciousness, generosity, humane manners. We're in a state of panic, basically."
"Most people lack a sense of value, of subjective value, goodness value, cleaniness, a sense of energetic expansion," he said, "and so tend to distort all that into aggressive expansion.
Ginsberg still can see, in the United States, the aggression, fear and anxiety that inspired "Howl" and the beat movement.
aggressive greed, accompanied by panic and anxiety, or when it's done in a spirit of generosity, joyousness, gentleness and tenderness."
Ginsberg remembers Lawrence in the mid-1960s as culturally healthy and lively, with some culturally aware professors and a good local group of poets. That was a time when poetry was rediscovered as a means of social communication. Poetry outside the standa nd message communication of communication such as Reagan reading a script, he said.
"That was a time when rock 'n' roll lyrics were beginning to get really interesting, with the Beatles, Dylan and the Byrds," he said, "and folk music got electric, representing people's thinking rather than the commercialized bubble gum that it became."
“It’s not that I’m against materialistic expansion, but it’s the spirit in which it’s done; when it’s done as an
The lyrical tradition stretched from Sappho, an early Greek poet, to modern artists such as Dylan, Paul Simon, the Fugs and other performers such as Anne Waldman. From the beginning, poetry and music have gone together — the word lyric, he said, shows that the poems were meant to be accompanied by a lyre.
Ginsberg said the attack on rock lyrics, which are the main form of poetic lyrics now, was also an attempt to cut off communication
won the young, who are the largest audience for rock music. This also represents a ludicrous attack on liberty by a government that was supposed to "get off our backs," he said.
The beat poets, he said, did accomplish some things, among them the demystification of the Pentagon, which had once had the final word in U.S. military policy.
After "How!" and his testament to his late mother, "Kaddish," Ginsberg continued writing and traveling. He invented the term "flower power," became guru to the hippies in the 1960s, demonstrated against the Vietnam War and was tear-gassed at the rally of the National Convention in Chicago as he tried to soothe the crowd by chanting mantras.
In 1974, Ginsberg and Waldman founded the Jack Kerouac School of Disembioped Poetics at the Naropa Institute. Ginsberg has worked to expose alleged government corruption and reform drug laws, and championed environmental and sexual freedom causes.
Recently, Ginsberg has been putting his poetry to music. He said he had just finished an album, on which he reads his poems with a musical accompaniment. He also is working on a collection of photography.
Poet Allen Ginsberg reads a selection of his work. About 700 people filled the Kansas Union Ballroom last night to hear Ginsberg and musician Steven Taylor.
CORNELIO MILLEGNO
CC
Lawrence resident Michael Allen is the national champion of bluegrass banjo
Banjo champ's reign ends soon
Staff writer
By JORN E. KAALSTAD
When Michael Allen was a kid, his father laid some musical instruments on the bed and said, "Don't you touch these."
Of course he did, and the young boy, who was tricked into music by his father's use of reverse psychology, is today the national champion of bluegrass banjo.
Allen, a Lawrence resident who has a master's degree in physics from the University of Kansas, won the title last year at the Walnut Valley Festival in Winfield.
Alen is the reigning champion until Sept. 20, when the next festival takes place. But this time, Allen will participate as a judge.
Allen grew up in Crescent, Iowa.
He graduated from Iowa State
University with bachelor's
degrees in physics and Russian.
Crescent was traditionally not a good place for bluegrass. Allen said. He could recall his father, glued to the radio, listening to Nashville, Tenn., bluegrass programs late at night when the reception was good.
nuegrass originated in the rural South with roots in country and folk music. The form hasn't changed since it was invented by Bill Monroe in the 1940s. Allen said
While Allen was still in junior high school, his father, Charlie Allen, wanted to start a family bluegrass band.
Charlie's band was almost complete. He played guitar, his oldest son, Matt, played mandolin and his daughter Mindi played bass.
daughter Minna played sax.
The only instrument he needed was a banjo. So the father told
Michael, who already sang and played saxophone and guitar: "Play banjo!"
Play Band
Soon the Allen Family Bluegrass
Band was formed, and they
recorded an album featuring songs
like "Slewfoot" and "Grand-
father's Clock".
Allen is playing in two groups that have taken different approaches to bluegrass music.
One group is Last Kansas Exit. The band is endorsed and sponsored by the Kansas Arts Commission, allowing it to schedule performances throughout Kansas and in six other midwestern states.
While playing traditional bluegrass with Last Kansas Exit, he also plays Celtic-jazz fusion in a quartet called Gerald Trumble and Satura. Trumble is a Kansas City, Kan., cittern player — probably one of the United States' finest interpreters of the instrument, a 10-string mandolin, Allen said.
Going into different styles seems natural to Allen.
The prize he won in last year's contest may help him do just that. The prize, an electric banjo, is one of the existing in the world. Allen said.
"the only preconceived idea I have about music is not to have any preconceived ideas," Allen said.
Although he said he loved blue-grass for being traditional and unchanged, he thought it was impractical. He tried styles of banjo playing.
Surprisingly, this down-to-earth musician is working for the CIA.
His background in Russian and physics got him a job as an editor for a CIA office that translates Soviet physics and engineering
publications.
publications.
"Someday I plan on living off music full time so I don't have to work with this translating stuf," Allen said, "I'm thinking a lot about that."
"This kind of music is not that big of a business that record companies would seek you out. But, I don't know what kind to open some doors," he said.
Winning the championship did not mean to Allen that the record companies would fight to sign him up for big-buck contracts.
"For the most part, the contest has given me more confidence in my abilities."
Every Sunday from 7 p.m. to 12 p.m. he is a disc jockey for a bluegrass program called "Flint Hills Special," broadcast on CBS.
As a part of the preparation for the radio program, Allen is studying Gaeli to better pronounce Celtic music titles on the air.
Allen has spread his musical talents to reach out to a greater audience.
"Part of my philosophy is to keep learning about the things that interest me," he said.
His musical skill on the air also received widespread attention when Allen was named the best U.S. bluegrass disc jockey at the 1985 National Bluegrass Convention in Nashville with Gerald Trimble and Satura on Oct. 21 at the Jazzhaus, 92%6% Massachusetts St.
---
8
Thursdav. September 10. 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Noted education professor, Karl D. Edwards, dies at 74
By a Kansan reporter
Karl D. Edwards, a University of Kansas professor emeritus of education and 1851 KU graduate, died yesterday morning at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. He was 74.
Dr. Edwards was born Sept. 15, 1912, in Geary County. From 1931 to 1943, he taught at rural schools in Geary County and at Chapman High School. He was superintendent of Enterprise schools from 1943 to 1946.
He and his wife, Helen, moved to Lawrence after he left that position.
Dr. Edwards received his doctorate of education from KU in 1951. He retired from the School of Education at KU in 1978 as professor emeritus of curriculum and instruction.
A square dance caller for more than 25 years, he organized the Barn Dancers Club in 1961, named after an old barn in West Lawrence where dances often were scheduled.
Dr. Edwards was the only Kansan and one of 22 people in the nation who was accredited in 1984 as a "caller coach" by Callerlab of the International Association of Square Dance Callers. He formed two other square dance clubs before retiring from that activity in May 1986.
Services are pending with Warren McElwain Mortuary in Lawrence.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, September 10, 1987
State/Local
9
Legislators continue working in various interim committees
By VIRGINIA McGRATH Staff writer
Kansas' first special legislative session in 21 years is over, but that doesn't mean local legislators will be resting this fall. They will be continuing their involvement with the Legislature during the political off-season.
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, will sit on the interim Judiciary Committee two days a month until January. Solbach said interim committees, which meet in session, served two basic functions.
"Interim committees allow us to look, in an unhurried and unpressured way, at questions facing the Legislature and to make recommendations on how to resolve them," he said.
One issue that the judiciary committee will study this fall is a law dealing with bankruptcy exemption statutes. The law, passed in the last legislative session, provides for the exemption of some assets from bankruptcy procedures. When a person goes bankrupt, some assets are protected from creditors. The committee will decide and then recommend
what monetary limit should be placed on the exemptions.
The committee also will be studying a bill that could improve the procedural regulations for appearing before state agencies.
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, also will be serving on the Ways and Means Committee. He will participate in a long-week tour in late October of state facilities in western Kansas.
Winter, vice-chairman of the Joint Committee on Economic Development, also will be setting up recommended guidelines for the lottery and reviewing ways in which revenue from the lottery can be spent.
State Rep. Jessie Branson, DLawrence, is on the intercommittee for Public Health and Welfare.
"We will be looking at a number of proposals concerning epilepsy and related disorders," Branson said. "That is a very underserved population in the state. We will try to reach some recommendations."
Branson said she also would be making some speeches this fall and would catch up on work with her constituents. She also hopes to attend
a conference on women's issues in December in San Diego. "The conference involves women legislators and should be excellent," she said.
branson also serves on several local and statewide boards and committees and will chair a delegation for pre-session hearings before the next legislative session.
"There's a lot to do, so I'll be very busy." she said.
Solbach said that in addition to his legislative duties he would concentrate on his career as an attorney.
"We're a citizen legislature and have to earn a living. That's especially hard when the governor calls a special session in the middle of a non-election year. That's our only time to be regular citizens and to work." he said.
work, he said.
But the special session won't be the last of Gov. Mike Hayden's proposed highway bill.
"The highway issue isn't going to go away. We'll see it again next session." Branson said.
winter said the failure of the session was unfortunate." "It feeds peoples' skepticism of politics and politicians."
Copyrighted material. No use without permission.
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10
Thursday, September 10, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Student Senate welcomes new committee members
By BRAD ADDINGTON Staff writer
Staff writer
Student Senate leaders were surprised last night by the large turnout at an orientation meeting for students appointed to Senate committees.
"I'm really encouraged by the turnout." be said.
The turnout was so great that there weren't enough informational packets for everyone. Nor were there enough cookies, said Jason Krakow, student body president.
At the meeting, in the Kansas Room at the Kansas Union, the 150 students learned about the structure of Senate and the University governance system and learned which committees they would serve on.
Krakow said that all 290 students
who applied for an appointment received one from the Senate committee board, and that about 75 percent of the applicants received the committee of their first choice.
The standing committee of the Senate are cultural affairs; minority affairs; university affairs; finance; and student rights, privileges and responsibilities.
Krakow, along with student body vice president Stephanie Quincy, Student Executive Committee chairman Roger Templin and London Bonds, assistant director of organizations and activities, advised new committee members about challenges they would face and how they should face them.
issues." Krakow said.
"The issues that are going to be important, the issues that are going to be prevalent, are funding
is Bonds advised, "Remember that working together you can accomplish more than working alone."
During the meeting, Bonds conducted a seminar on team-building, leadership and decision making.
Michael Foubert, committee board co-chairman, said it was the first such meeting to take place at KU since he became involved with the Senate four years ago.
"Michael Foubert really came up with the idea, and the committee board developed it," Krakow said.
Foubert will resign as co-chairman of the committee board Wednesday and will be succeeded by Stacey Walsh, the current cochairman.
Most Kansans will only experience Pope John Paul II's 10-day tour of the United States through the media. But some Lawrence residents will participate in the papal visit.
By AMBER STENGER
Lawrence residents to see pope
Staff writer
opera
The Rev. Vince Krische of the St.
Lawrence Catholic Campus Center,
1631 Crescent Drive, will meet the
pope in Miami today, and 14 people
from Haskell Indian Junior College
will see him Monday in Phoenix,
Ariz.
president and Nancy Reagan will greet the pope when he arrives in Miami at 2 p.m. today. John Paul will travel from Miami on Friday to Columbia, S.C.; New Orleans; San Antonio, Texas; Phoenix, Ariz.; Los Angeles and Monterey, Calif.; San Francisco; and Detroit. Before returning to the Vatican, he will fly Sept. 20 to Fort Simpson in Canada's Northwest Territories.
Krische will hear the pope deliver a message to U.S. priests at St. Mary's Cathedral in Miami later today.
Krische, who is president of the Priest Council of the Kansas City Diocese, and The Rev. Tom Culthane of St. Anne's Parish in Mission, are representing the Kansas City Diocese.
The Rev. Dave Gottschalk of the St. Lawrence center, said that Krische, who left earlier this week for Miami, was looking forward to hearing what John Paul had to say to the priests. Krische then will travel to New Orleans on Saturday, where the pope will meet with black leaders and Catholic college leaders.
The group from Haskell will see the pope Monday when he addresses the Tekakwitha Conference, an annual Catholic Indian convention.
Most of the Pope's stops are in the Sunbelt, where the Hispanic population plays an increasingly large role among the nation's 53 million Roman Catholics.
The Rev. John Cousins of the Haskell Catholic Campus Center said the Pope's visit to the United States was important.
"We have a special emphasis on recognizing and honoring our spiritual leaders," he said. "It means a lot to be able to go. Granted, like a football game, you can see more on TV. But people still go to football games. There's the excitement of actually being there."
The group will fly Saturday to Phoenix for the beginning of the conference. The group received grants from the Marquette League, Capuchin Province of Mid-America, and the Corpus Christi and St. John's parishes in Lawrence.
Couns said financial limitations had prevented more than 10 students from going. The students were chosen on the basis of church and school activities. Four adults will accompany them.
"We had to make a decision based on the leadership potential and involvement of the students," Cousins said.
The Associated Press supplied some information for this story.
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11
New Lawrence bookstore is a mystery to customers
Bv JENNIFER ROWLAND Staff writer
Have you ever kept yourself awake at night wondering if Sherlock Holmes will crack the case, expose a thief or snare a murderer at the end of a trail of blood?
If so, Lawrence's newest bookstore may be where the answers lie.
Half of the books at The Raven Bookstore: Mysteries and More, 8 E. Seventh St., are just that — mysteries. Although the bookstore also has books about cooking, gardening, travel and self-help material — such as how to live with your teen-ager — mysteries are its main line. The store also sells greeting cards, games and puzzles.
Pat Kekeb, co-owner, said the store sold spy and detective novels as well as thrillers and non-fiction fiction. Mystery novels by John LeCarre, Ruth Rendell and Jim Thompson are a few of the most popular, she said.
"We think that our audience is primarily people probably 30 and up." Kehde said.
Those people are "reading for fun, reading for pleasure, reading for their own interests," she said.
Kehde, who is coordinator of KU Information Center, said some of the reasons mysteries had been featured in the store were customer interest and lack of availability.
"There are lots of mystery book stores in the United States, but there
are few in the Midwest, " Kehde said.
Both Kehde and her partner, Mary Lou Wright, a member of the Lawrence School Board, have been pleased with community response to their goods since the store opened Sept. 1.
Wright said many of the people who had visited the store since it opened had been "testing" the store for specific types of books.
"So far, we've pretty much passed most of the tests," she said.
Kehde said she had attended an American Booksellers Association meeting a few years ago, where she decided to open a bookstore.
declared to open a booth.
"We'd been thinking about it for several years," Kehde said.
SAVE YOUR MONEY,
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ECM Center Events
Sept. 11: Friday Night
Free Movie
"Brighton Beach Memoirs"
7:30 p.m.
Sept. 13: Sunday Evening
Worship and Supper
5:30 p.m.
Sept. 15: Seminar
"Liberation Theology"
The Gospel, Human
Freedom, and People of
Europe 30-40
Sept. 16: University Forum
"Childhood Socialization and
Teen Sexuality"
Key McCuney-Faucet
Speaker
Orest Dread
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, September 10, 1987
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1631 Crescent Road
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Is everybody comfortable?
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There are some things the car and you just were not made to handle. And a higher loan rate than necessary is one of them. Stop in and let us introduce ourselves and our loan services and discover how comfortable you'll feel in the driver seat of low-interest ownership.
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PRE-MED STUDENTS The Annual Junior/Senior Pre-Med Meeting is:
Thursday, Sept. 10 at 7:00 p.m.
Alderson Auditorium - KS Union
- Application Information
- Video - "The AMCAS Story"
- Video : "Passage To Physicianhood"
- KU Med representatives in attendance
ALL PRE-MEDS WELCOME!
Representatives from KU Med will be on campus to meet with students individually on:
Sept. 28
Oct. 5
Oct.12 Oct.19
To make an appointment, see the Pre-Med Secretary in Room 106, Strong Hall, 864-3667.
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12
thursday, September 10, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
State/Local
NAACP says Hayden answer incomplete on some issues
The Associated Press
MANHATTAN — The NAACP complained yesterday that it had not received a complete response from the Kansas governor's office to eight issues raised last month during a private meeting with Gov. Mike Hayden.
Timothy Sullivan, a spokesman for the Kansas National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, said the governor had made a partial response to the争议 discussed Aug. 24 during a meeting in Hayden's office.
An NAACP news release said concerns raised at the Aug. 24 meeting included the establishment of a black advisory committee similar to the Hispanic Affairs Advisory Committee established by former Gov. John Carlin, greater emphasis on black history in schools, state cooperation in NAACP educational programs, greater cooperation with the Small Business Administration in the encouragement of black business ventures, the number of blacks in state government and drug and teen-age pregnancy education.
Sullivan said Hayden promised the NAACP Steering Committee Coalition, headed by Louisa Fletcher, also the state NAACP president, that he would have a response "in a couple of weeks."
Sullivan said the two weeks were up and that NAACP officials had received responses to just a few of the points issued by the meeting. He said Joe de la Torre, publication to the governor for minority affairs, told him Tuesday that he could not give a timetable for the governor's response.
governor's response.
Sullivan said yesterday that NAACP officials were not seeking another meeting or making demands. But they would like a response, he said.
like a response. Kathy Peterson, Hayden's press secretary, said the group was willing to work with Fletcher and other NAACP officials if they were not satisfied with the response they had received.
"We'll just keep working with them. We've been willing to work with them anytime. We very much have an open-door policy," she said.
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Register and pay $15 materials fee by noon on Sept. 14 at the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall.
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STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
AIDS INFORMATION
The Public Health Service recommends the following steps reduce the chance of contracting or transmitting AIDS. Do not have sexual contact with people who have had the virus or who are suspected as having AIDS, or known to be or suspected of having the virus, or who are positive for the AIDS antibody test.
2. Do not have sex with multiple partners, or with persons who have had the virus or who do not inject illicit drugs. If you do inject drugs, your risk may be lessened by not sharing needles or using sex with people who inject drugs.
4. Do not have sex with people who inject drugs.
5. Do not have infant nitrates (popular inert alcohols). Their role as a cofactor for Kaposi's Sarcoma is being investigated.
6. Have an intercourse. Studies suggest that the passive partner may be at greater risk for AIDS.
7. Protect yourself and your partner during sexual activity. If you have been exposed to the AIDS virus:
- Avoid condoms, which may reduce the possibility of transmitting the virus.
- Avoid practices that may increase infection or rips in the tissue.
- Avoid oral-genital contact.
- Avoid open-mouthed intimate kisses.
- Avoid contact with any body fluids (semen, blood, feces, urine, etc.)
EMERGENCY PROCEDURES CLASS
Learn how to intervene quickly and effectively when an emergency strikes! An emergency procedure class is being offered on September 21. f rom 3:00-5:00 p.m.
Call to register.
SPORTS MEDICINE CLINIC
Monday - Friday 8:30-10:30 a.m.
injuries such as sprains, strains or contusions related to sports, running, or other activities are evaluated and treated, as are problems such as obesity or diabetes and their relationship to activity. A physician and physical therapist work together for examination, evaluation, treatment and rehabilitation services. Call 864.9500 for an appointment.
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There are two Hypertension Programs now being offered at Wakima Memorial Hospital. One is for screening and the other is for treatment. The Blood Pressure Programs will be conducted every Thursday between the hours of 1:30 and 3:00. The screening program is designed to assist any student interest in or concerned about their blood pressure. The Hypertension Clinic, staffed by a board certified intern, provides treatment and medical intervention to students who
Have you ever stopped and questioned yourself about drinking?
— do I drink too much?
— do I drink uncontrollably?
— do I drink for the wrong reasons?
Most college students have a tendency to believe they do not have a drinking problem because "drinking is the way of life on campus" or, "that problem only happens to someone else."
STADIUM BARBER SHOP
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The Diabetes and Endocrinology Clinic hours are 9:30-11:30 a.m. on Tuesdays. Appointments should be made in advance, but walk-ins will be seen during clinic hours. The purpose of the clinic is to assist diabetic students in the total management of their diabetes.
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University/ Daily Kansan / Thursday, September 10, 1987
Sports
13
Garner sees season as last chance at important goals
By CRAIG ANDERSON
Staff writer
Going into his senior season at Kansas, strong safety Milt Garner said there were important goals that he and his senior teammates wanted to accomplish before they finished their Javawk football careers.
"We've got lots of seniors this year," he said. "We have to go out this season and get something, because it's our last chance."
"If we beat the teams we're supposed to, and (upset) a couple of other teams, we're going to make it," he said.
Garner said making it to a bowl game was the Jayhawks' biggest goal. Kansas hasn't played in a bowl game since the 1981 Hall of Fame Bowl. In fact, that season was the last time a Jayhawk team finished with a winning record.
"It's been tough," he said of the losing records. "I can't say I'm disappointed, though. You have to go out and believe in yourself, and I think the team has played with that kind of attitude."
Despite playing on losing teams during his first three college seasons, Garner said he wasn't discouraged with the KU football program.
Because he has started on defense since midway through his freshman season, Garner said he tried to use his experience to help less-experienced players. Being a senior, he said, meant that he had to take on added leadership responsibilities.
"I try to be a team leader, especially on (defense)." Garner said. "I tell the guys that if you want to be the best player you can be, you have to play against the best competition."
Garner said he wasn't always sure of his role on the team. When he came to Kansas as a freshman, he said he was a bit scared because there were so many people he didn't know in his class. Kansas City, Kan., said he knew the first-year butterflies were something he would overcome.
"The main reason I came to Kansas was so that I could be close to home," he said. "I like the idea of being able to go home anytime I want so I can see my family. I'm just a home boy."
Another change that Garner wasn't so sure of at first was his move to the punt return team. Garner began returning punts last season.
"I started to enjoy it when I broke a couple of long ones for touchdowns," he said. Garner had returns of 73 and 58-yards for scores last year.
Garner made a another switch this year when he was moved from cornerback to strong safety. He said he liked the move from the beginning. Garner said he liked the idea of covering the slower tight ends instead faster, faster forms. Garner said felt that in some of the defensive formations he had more freedom to roam around and make big glays.
coach Bob Valesente has increased his stance on academics, Garner, a personnel administration major, said that was something that had improved the football program. He said the emphasis on academics had been a little lax before Valesente became head coach.
"Now, if we don't go to class, we don't play." Garner said. "If everyone goes to class and concentrates, they can do well with their grades."
Off the field and in the classroom.
Garner said that when he had time away from football and classes he liked to play basketball and go fishing. While at Washington High School in Kansas City, Kan., Garner averaged 20 points per game his senior season on the basketball court. During his freshman and junior seasons, he played for the KU minor varsity teams. Garner, 5-11, 195 pounds, said, however, he never regretted choosing football over basketball as his main sport.
"I like to play inside when I'm playing basketball, so I can mix it up," he said. "I knew with my size, though, that I could go further in football."
Garner said he was concentrating mostly on his immediate college football future. When the time did come, he said, he would play in the National Football League.
"I'd like to give it a try after college," he said. "If 'I don't make it, I'll just get my degree and start something else in the working world."
15
Brenda Flory/Special to the KANSAN
Strong safety Mitt Garner is one senior KU football player hoping for a winning season this fall. The Jayhawks' first game is Saturday at Auburn.
NCAA chief plans to quit next month
The Associated Press
Poor field conditions a tough match for soccer club
MISSION — Walter Byers, the NCAA's first executive director, said yesterday he would turn his duties over to his successor on Oct. 1, much earlier than expected.
Byers, 65, who has been chief operating officer of the NCAA for 36 years, announced his retirement last year and said at the time he would work with his successor for at least a year.
In a news release issued yesterday, the NCAA said Richard D. Schultz, 59, would assume the post of executive director the same day Byers stepped down. A search committee chose Schultz, in June.
Byers said Schultz was ready to handle the job.
"I recommended the prompt appointment of Dick Schultz to the director's position as soon as convenient," he said. "We feel comfortable in working together, and I will be available to assist Dick through next August."
The NCAA said Byers would become executive director emeritus. His primary responsibility would be development of a foundation for the NCAA and college athletics, said Thomas J. Frericks, the NCAA's secretary-treasurer.
By ROBERT WHITMAN Staff writer.
Staff writer
The coach of the KU men's soccer club said the condition of the soccer field at Shenk Complex, 23rd and Iowa streets, was so poor that it has contributed to the injuries of four players during preseason practice.
The playing surface is hazardous enough in the opinion of coach Glenn Shirtliffe that it is one of reasons he has also scheduled four of the team's seven home games this year at Memorial Stadium, including Sunday's season-opener against Missouri.
Shirtliffe said the most serious injury at Shenk was an ankle ligament
strain that would keep one player off the field for about two weeks.
He said the team also played at the stadium to eliminate the possibility of a team traveling to the University to play a game, only to have the field at Shenk closed because of too much rain.
Playing on the practice field at Shenk means playing on a bumpy clay surface suffering from lack of maintenance. Shirliffe said.
"In fact, it was played on last spring when it was pretty wet. It has not been rolled or aerated." Shirtliffe said.
Cleat marks made last spring were still visible now because they had, in
I'd say it's 100 percent clay. They seeded it in the spring, but not very much of it took, because the ground is very hard.'
Glenn Shirtliffe Soccer club coach
week and seeding and fertilizing twice a year, said Jim Mathes, assistant director of landscape maintenance.
essence, been baked into the clay surface by the sun, he said.
The only maintenance done to all the fields at Shenk is moving once a
"We really don't have time to do anything more to them." Mathes said, although he added that particularly bare spots on the fields were given slightly more seed or fertilizer.
Mathes said that because his department was responsible for all landscaping on campus, the fields at Shenk didn't get the amount of attention they needed for the amount of use they had.
But Shirtlife said seeding the soccer practice field wasn't as practical as on other fields at Shenk because of
the lack of topsoil.
"I'd say it's 100 percent clay. They seeded it in the spring, but not very much of it took, because the ground is very hard." Shirtliffe said.
Allan Heinze, director of facilities for the health, physical education and recreation department, said he was told the topsoil had been removed from the soccer practice field and was among the other fields at the complex
The field slopes from north to south and west to east and also needs regrading, Shirtliffe said.
While the problem of where to play
See FIELD, p. 14, col. 1
Student chooses finals over chance at pro soccer
Staff writer
By ROBERT WHITMAN
Final examinations turned out to be more important to Allan Klenke than a shot at playing professional soccer in May, but don't be surprised if Klencle makes some arrangements for soccer next May.
team in Canada.
Klenke had a chance to tryout with the Ottawa Pioneers, a professional
"I'm going to talk to my professors and see if I can get some test days changed," Klenke, a junior, said yesterday before he began practice with the KU men's soccer club at the Shenk Complex, 23rd and Iowa streets.
"I had it in the making for a tryout, but the tryout was the first week of finals. After my last final, the first week of the tryout had happened and they had already started offering contracts." Klenke said.
If Klenke signed a professional contract, the club must be affected the session.
"It would be just like a summer job to me." Klenke said.
Klenke said his duties off the field as president included some public relations work, setting up travel and hotel arrangements when the team traveled, and taking care of other details such as arranging for referees.
In addition to playing sweeper for the KU men's soccer club, Klencke also serves as vice president. He will be a designated president at the end of the spring season in May.
On the field, Klenke learned a new position last year. He played sweeper, the last defender between the opposing team and the goalie, for the first time since he has played soccer.
Klenke said he was a starting midfielder for three years at Clark High School in San Antonio, Tex. He said he also played forward and midfield
for select teams in Texas during the summer.
"When I came here, I didn't know anyone. When I came to practice, they had a lot of good midfielders, so we tried to just try you sweeper," Klenke said.
So the club found a sweeper and someone who grew to like the position
"You have to be able to read the other team's offense. Playing forward and midfield all those years. I know what they are thinking and they're only their opinions," Klenke said.
Klenke said he needed goo-
tootsped to play sweeter. Last year,
he was sweeter than he was in
2013.
forwards were a little faster than he was.
"Last year, we had the best defense going in the Midwest," Shirlttie said. "We had tremendous defense and a tremendous defensive line. If we just had offense, we'd be a great team."
As it was, the club had a 7-4-4 record last fall. The team gave up 15 goals in the 15 games, but scored only 33, just
See SOCCER, p. 14, col. 3
Former KU football players find jobs scarce in the NFL
By DARRIN STINEMAN
Staff writer
several former Kansas football players were in National Football League camps this summer trying to earn jobs. Some of them will be spending their Sunday afternoons watching the games on television.
Although few players who are drafted beyond even the fifth round have a good chance of making an impact, that's not news on Monday wasn't shocking.
One KU alumnus who will be involved with the action this season is Paul Oswald, the Jayhawks' center from 1983-86. Oswald was drafted in the 11th round by the Pittsburgh team and survived the final cut Monday.
Oswald said he thought his versatility was a key in helping him land the job. He said he could play offensive guard as well as center, and he had been working on being a long snapper for punts and place kicks.
"I wasn't surprised," he said in a telephone interview. "I had confidence in my ability. I came in knowing I had to work hard, and I did."
Former KU player Johnny Holloway, who had played for the Dallas Cowboys last season, was released by Dallas and then picked up by the St. Louis Cardinals. But yesterday, the Cardinals announced that Holloway had not passed the team physical, and he was released again.
Other players who have survived the preseason and their teams are: Paul Fairchild, guard, with the New England Patriots, and Mike Norseth, quarterback, with the Cincinnati Bengals. Offensive ineman Broderick Thompson, who played with Kansas in 1981 and 1982, was released and then reclaimed by the San Diego Chargers.
Alabama officials give up attempts to restore basketball star's eligibility
Bobby Johnson, a former KU wide receiver, was traded by the New York Giants to the Chargers in the off-season but was cut by the Chargers. Steve Nave, a linebacker at Kansas from 1982-86, was a victim of the Washington Redskins' final cut.
Even though his place on the team
seems secure. Oswald said his life was more hectic now.
Norseth made his team indirectly. After being released by the Cleveland Browns, Norseth was picked up by Cincinnati.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. — Alabama officials said yesterday that the school would not try to restore the eligibility of 6-foot-9 center Derrick McKey, who was barred from playing his senior season after it was revealed he had dealings with a sports agent.
The Associated Press
McKey now is expected to leave the school to pursue a professional career with the Seattle SuperSonics.
Alabama coach Wimp Sanderson had said he might appeal McKey's loss of eligibility based on an NCAA decision in another case, and McKey recently enrolled in school
But Alabama Athletic Director Steve Sloan issued a statement yesterday that said the university had notified the NCAA and Southeastern Conference that efforts to restore McKey's eligibility had been terminated.
1983
WESTERN ISLANDS TENNIS CLUB
Dave Niebergall/KANSAN
This is the first year on the team for KU tennis player Jeff Gross.
Staff writer
Year on the sidelines readies tennis player to play the baselines
By DARRIN STINEMAN
Last year, Jeff Gross watched the Kansas men's tennis team from the bleachers. This year, he and another newcomer, John Falbo, may fill the bleachers with fans eager to see a Big Eight championship.
Gross was redshirted last season when the men's team finished second in the conference.
"I thought we had a lot of depth a year ago," said tennis coach Scott Perelman. "There were certain parts of (Gross)' game we wanted him to work on. We thought it would be best just to tell him up front and let him work on different aspects of his game."
"At first, I wasn't real sure what it was all about," he said. "Once I thought about it and started thinking about it, it was real good for me; I had a whole year to work on my game. Plus, I got to see what the competition was like."
Gross said he thought sitting out a season was beneficial to him.
Perelman said he was eager to have Gross looking at the competition from the baseline rather than the sideline this year.
One of the things that made the summer a good one for Gross was his performance in the Jayhawk
Open at Topeka. Although he lost in a three-hour semifinal match to Nigel O'Rearke, Topeka tennis pro, he deflected former KU standout Michael Center, the No 2 seed in the tournament, in an earlier round.
"He's part of the cornerstone," coach Scott Perelman said. "This year Falbo and Gross are the cornerstone. (Gross) has had a good summer and he's eager and ready to play."
Gross said he wasn't surprised by his success.
"I think other people were more (surprised)," he said. "I felt going into the tournament that I could do well, I just tried to play my game and concentrate — that's what I did and I did pretty well."
Gross and Jim Secrest won the doubles title.
Although Perelman said he saw Gross as an important cog in the team's drive for a conference championship, Gross was more modest about his importance to the team.
"My main goal is to make the top six and travel with the team," he said, "and to contribute as much as I can with the team."
He said he was excited about the team's prospect of winning a Big Eight title.
"I think it would be great," he said. "I think we can do it, too."
Pereman said he was impressed with how much Gross had improved his game in one year.
"I heard he'd been playing well, when I saw him himself, I was convinced," he said. "He has come a long ways and he's still coming. Right now, he's playing on the national level."
14
Thursday, September 10, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Sports
Evert loses, Lendl advances in U.S. Open
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Chris Evert's U.S.
Open streak collapsed yesterday,
while Ivan Lendl's kept building
Lendl extended his Open winning streak to 19 matches last night by beating John McEnroe in the men's quarterfinals.
Lendl, the top seed and two-time defending champion, blitzed eight-seeded McEnroe 6-3, 6-3, 6-4 with a
flawless performance that featured unreachable lobs and blazing passing shots.
Lendl, who will reach his sixthstraight Open final if he beats Jimmy Connors in the semifinals, hasn't lost at the Open since McEnroe beat him in the 1984 title match.
Evert, 32, cited age as a factor in her 3:6, 6:2, 6:4 loss to McNeil.
"I didn't have control over any of my shots," said the six-time Open champion and No. 3 seed. "I guess that happens when you get older. You have a few more bad days. And today."
was a bad day."
Joining No. 11 McNeil in the women's semifinals are top-seeded Steffi Graf and No. 2 Martina Navratilova. Graf beat no. 5 Pam Shriver 64, 6-3, while Navratilova downed 0. B Gabriela Sabatini 7, 5-6, 3.
Connors, the No. 6 seed, became the first men's semifinalist with a 4-6, 6-3, 6-4, 6-0 victory over No. 13 Brad Gilbert.
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Field
It's the 13th time Connors, seeded sixth, has made it to the semifinals at the Open, a tournament he has won five times.
"Getting to the semis is good, but it's not satisfying," said Connors, who hasn't won a tournament in three years.
Continued from p. 13
The short-term solution may be moving soccer practice to the football practice field at the western end of the complex when the football team finishes its practice, Shirtliffe said.
the soccer club's games has been solved in part, the problem of where to practice has not.
In other men's matches, No. 2 Stefan Edberg, No. 3 Mats Wilander, No. 5 Miloslav Mecir and unseeded Ramesh Krishnan moved into the quarterfinals.
The long-term solution was to repair the soccer field with regrading, aerating — which is adding topsol to surface and grinding it into a fine material that would fill holes and rough spots — and either seeding or sodding, Shirtlife said.
He estimated the cost of repairing the field at $30,000-$40,000 and said it would make the field unavailable for about a year.
The soccer club rented the stadium
Soccer
"That's very reasonable, but it'
we have we to bear." Shirttie said.
Still, Shirtliffe said he would prefer to play on a grass field that was at least 70 yards wide. Soccer games in the stadium would use the dimensions of the football field, 120 yards long and $53 \frac{1}{2}$ yards wide.
from the University of Kansas
Athletic Corporation for $30 a game.
"It is an artificial game played in the stadium. It's like playing indoor soccer on a bigger field," Shirtliffe said.
Evert's loss marked only the second time in 50 Grand Slam events that she failed to make the semifinals. She was beaten by Kathy Jordan in the third round at Wimbledon in 1983.
Shirtliffe said he had been checking around Lawrence to find the available fields the club might use, such as Holcom Sports Complex and the Douglas County Fairgrounds.
a little more than 2 goals a game
a little more than he
"The four ties tells you a lot about
our offense." Shirliffe said. "Three
of our five losses were by one goal."
Continued from p.13
Tryouts for the team were going on this week, Shirtlife said. The team's first game is 1 p.m. Sunday against Missouri at Memorial Stadium.
Shirllife said there were about 35 players competing for about 22 spots that he would use in games. The players who don't earn a regular spot are welcome to keep practicing with the team but are not guaranteed any playing time in games.
The team will practice Thursday and Friday and have a scrimmage Saturday. Shirtlife said he would select a team for Sunday's game from the practices and the scrimmage.
Scoreboard
Baseball
American League
American League
Oakland 11, Texas 7
Seattle 9, Cleveland 4
Detroit 7, Baltimore 4, 1st game
Detroit 6, Baltimore 2, 0nd game
Boston 5, New York 3
Minnesota 2, Chicago 1
Milwaukee 6, Toronto 4
National League Pittsburgh 4, Chicago 3 Atlanta 3, San Diego 2 Cincinnati 4, Los Angeles 1 Montreal 8, St. Louis 3 New York 11, Philadelphia 5 Houston 4, Francisco 5
SAVE
PROFESSIONAL ENGINEERING FRATERNITY
FOR MEN AND WOMEN
FRI., SEPT. 11, 1987 HOLCOM PARK
INFORMATIONAL MEETING AND PICNIC
NEED A GREAT PAIR OF SUNGLASSES OR SKI GOGGLES AT 15% OFF RETAIL? bollé at K.U.
O.I.
ALL ENGINEERING STUDENTS WELCOME
Featuring IREX 100 Sunglasses Prices Range from $15 to $115 CATALOGS AVAILABLE
For more info. call: Jon Hofer 842-3338 Sean Butler 749-2870 Kelly Milligan 841-7429
TONIGHT: dime draws $4.00 cover
THE ANSWER
IS AT THE
WHEEL
$2.00 cover
THE
ANSWER
FRIDAY AFTERNOON
and
EVENING SEPT. 11th
THE WHEEL
LAWRENCE, KS.
THE ANSWER
You Make Some Of Your Best Friends In College At Computerark
1978
You won't find too many other friendly willing to help you write papers, supply these impressive systems and then correct your spelling errors - especially at an advanced level. You'll be satisfied with the support of a hard drive or a handheld PC with special interface devices.
FREE PRINTER*
Plus $100 Educational Discount
Faculty, Staff, & Students
*With purchase of system-Limited time only
KAYPRO COMPUTERS
Computerark
SERVICE*KNOWLEDGE*EDUCATION
23rd & IOWA
841-0094
Mon.-Thur. 10-7
Fri.-Sat. 10-5
THETA TAU
Student Dividend Payments Begin
NOW!
Bring in your receipts from last semester's cash purchases at the KU Bookstores and receive a 60% cash rebate.
receive a 6% cash back
Redeem your period 81 receipts with your
student i.D. at the customer service areas
of either KU Bookstore location.
Always save your cash receipts from the KU Bookstores because they mean money in your pocket every semester.
Period 81 receipts renewable thru 12/31/87
KUBookstores Kansas Union Burge Union
KU
ClassifiedAds
ANNOUNCEMENTS
COMMITTERS: Self Serve Car Pool Exchange.
Main Lehky, Kansas Union
Main Lobby, Kansas University
**WITH DEALING WITH TUMMY UNLEASH FEELING**, which commonly occurs when you walk into a room with your face scanned, you see someone you'd like to know...you're waiting for an interview to begin, or many other social situations. Thursday, September 10, from 6:00-8:30 p.m. at the Hall. Free/inregistrate with Assistance Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hill, 841-4044.
MUSEUM GIFT SHOP Museum of Anthropology Univ. of Kansas
ETHNIC ARTS & CRAFTS from around the world
Mon.-Sat.
10-3
Sun.
1-4
Heading home for the holidays? FLY CHAP
Call us now. Carpenters Travel, 843-5698
Just starting and you're already stressed out?
Get the knits on at Lawrence Massage Therapy
Gift certificates available too! Tell you
the story of how your friends Brace
and Alice at 843-6022 or its knits to you!
HILLEL
Hillel invites you to
invites you to
Shabbat Dinner and
Services, Friday, Sept. 11
at 6 p.m. Hillel House
940 Mississippi.
RSVP by
RSVP by Thursday, Sept. 10.
Donation of $2 requested.
For rides and more info.
call 749-4242.
Volunteers needed. Headquarters Crisis Counseling Center. Training provided. Information meeting, Wednesday, September 9, or Sunday, September 13, 8-9 p.m., 1419 Massachusetts
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? *See our list of its tutors. Student Assistance Center, 121 Stirling Ave.*
Overcoming Math & Science Anxiety
- Does the sight of a
- Does the sign mathbook cause you to tremble?
- Do you avoid enrolling
- Do you avoid enrolling in your required science classes?
- in your required science classes?
- Do you want help overcoming your anxieties?
overcoming your anxieties?
* If math and science are
if math and science
“not your thing”
this workshop is for you.
this workshop is for you
Tuesday, September 15, 1987 7-9 p.m.
Pine Room, Kansas Union
Facilitators:
Facilitators:
Chico Herbison, Counselor,
Supportive Educational Services;
Barbara Ballard,
Director, Emily Taylor
Women's Resource Center
运动会
Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 218 Strong Hall. For more information, call Shelley at 894-3552 or 894-3552
MALAYSIAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION. An annual General Meeting for present and prospective members; September 12, 1987, 2 p.m. at Woodfair, Auditorium, Kansas Union, lawn parking for the Fall and spring seminars. Information-call Mr. Lai Ah Wah at 843-7216
Independent LAUNDROMAT Open 24 hours 9th & Mississippi
NEED A RIDE/RIDER* Use the Self Server Car Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union. Reading for Comprehension and Speed Workshops Monday, September 14, 21 and 28; 3:00-5:30 p.m. Materials fee $1. Register, pay fee by noon, September 14, Student Assistance Center, 121
Just Opened! Ethnic Fashions
733 $ \frac{1}{2} $ New Hampshire
Featuring dresses from Africa and Asia, unique jewelry, fine leathers and quality folk arts.
Hearsey Paper Workshop. Examine topic soil ecology, taking soil samples. Write a research paper, 15, 7. 8 p.m., W 602. Westoe Student Assistance Center, I12. Strong.
Graduating this year?
Hoping to find a job?
If so, plan to attend the Career Employment Workshops at the University Placement Center. Watch for the large ad in Friday's University Daily Kansan, or come to the Placement Center, Level 1, Burge Union for the schedule.
TUTORS: List your name with us. We refer student inquiries to you. Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall.
Leaving Town?
Airline Tickets
At airline counter prices no extra service charge
Make your travel arrangements on campus
See Maupintour Travel Service for:
- The lowest airfares—Complete travel arrangements
lowers the fares. Complete travel arrangements.
* Eurail and Japan Rail Passes
* Car rental—Hotel confirmations
* Travel insurance
* Travel Insurance
ON CAMPUS LOCATION in the Student Union and 900 Mass.
Maupintour travel service 749-0700
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, September 10, 1987
15
INTERNATIONAL INTERNSHIPS
Available for KU Students through AIESEC
Informational meeting
Thurs., Sept. 10 7:50 p.m.
427 Summerfield Hall
Regrets only,
call Dr. Garland
at 864-7512 or 864-7114
WHITE ELEPHANT SALE! **Parkside Café**
Restaurant equipment, Glimmer, Clothes, Unisex
Novelties, 8 a.m. 4 m.p. m. sat. & Sun 12th and 13th at
731 Miauser Hall, Next to Adelpase.
ENTERTAINMENT
At your request is Lawrence's Best and Most Affordable D.J. Sound and Lighting for Any Occasion. 841-1485
ULTIMATE ENTERTAINMENT
Ultimate Mobile DJ System for All Occasion
Events
WANTED: LEAD SINGER for established rock
band. Send resume to HR, DirecTor
DirecTor Steve L. Call us at 841-9605.
mailto:steve.direcor@vocab.com
MOBILE MUSIC/DISC JOCKEY
SERVICE
DJ MUSICIAN
KIP WALKER
Serving Lawrence, Topeka,
and Manhattan for
over 6 years!
P.O. BOX 1581
LAWRENCE, KS 66045
(913) 842 3112
FOR RENT
1 bedroom apt. sub- rent, $200/mo. Close to campus, furnished, water paid, no pets, 864-4211
Available immediately? 2 br.apt; convention to
shopping & curtage, 6/10/09, 1:481-8789.
1:481-8789.
Available immediately: bedroom very close to campus;
$125/month and very low utilities.
1-341-9642.
BRAND NEW completely furnished 4 bedroom
BRAND NEW completely furnished 4 bedroom
in walking distance of KU. Call 749-4266
www.brandsnew.com
r-eusing cramped? For rent a large 3-bedroom house, living room, family room with fireplace, large kitchen with dining room, stove, refrigerator, garage, fenceed yard,$40/month. 1-131-381-4247
842-4353.
****************Master Craft Management*****
Female roommate needed non-smoker,
stuinson $1000 per month 1/4 hrs/Life.
Campus 4/9, 7/9.
Female roommate (s) wanted, furnished 2 bpt at Pinochez. $162 plus 1/2 utilities
@ 500 per night
For sublet, 1 br ant with microwave,
2 br ant with microwave on bus route,
pool facilities. Call 842-0197 after a
Furnished room with shared Kitchen and bath.
Room has free Wi-Fi on street parking.
No pet please. 841-5500
GUARANTEED BPACE at Nissimhall Hall for '88
Guest Lecture: Paul R. Warner, Ph.D.
Call Matt. Babbit 84213 for details now
Furnished two bedroom apt. one block from the University with off-street parking. Ne pet,
Hillview Apartments 1733 W.24th 841-5797
NOW LEASING
Starting at $250/mo.
Starting at $250/mo
- water paid
- off street parking
- on bus route
* water noid
- rental furniture available from Thompson Crawley
HUSE FOR RENT Rent share large 5 bdm/2 bath house CLOSE TO CAMPUS with LAUNDRY IN BASEMENT and 6 bdm or bth床. Two loving and responsible adult homes willing to share rent and bills at the lath and Keutkenty. Contact Darryl at 904-723-8696, daydied 1277. 1 Ntoaea. Wichita. KS 67214
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARENTMENTS
A FEW 2 BR APTS.
- KD BUS KOVJ
* CENTRAL & HEAT
* EQUIPPED KITCHENS
* LOWEST UTILITIES IN TOWN
* REDLIGHT SECURITY DEPOSITS
CALL 843-4754 FOR DETAILS
SUNRISE PLACE
SUNRISE PLACE 9th & Michigan
sleeping rooms. 2 bdmr. apts. close to campus
summer & winter lease. No Pets. Bd4-8971.
Sunrise Apartment
Offering luxurious townhomes
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.
Glenhaven Apartments walk to class
2/3 blocks from Union 1135 Ohio, bedroom and large loft, 1/2 bath. Exciting energy efficient design. All appliances in the room, winded, Wind for cable.
841-5797
FOR SALE
13' Syllavia remote control color TV and stand.
Call 641-7897 after 6 p.m.
$1250 Perfect condition!! Call 749-3523.
5 piece white pearl drum set. Excellent condition
Best offer over $600 4 concert tennons "8", 10", 15"
Best offer over $900 4 concert tennons "8", 10", 15"
Best offer over $900 4 concert tennons "8", 10", 15"
Call 749-Call 841-1481
An absolutely Awesome Array of Antiques, an absolutely great and stuff weave* - hardback and 1/2 price paperback books, full line of new comic books, Playbags, Penthouse, etc. of antique toys and games.
que, indian, and costume jewels $25 good staff), the right vintages ($40, good staff), the glass doll house furniture, miniatures, fiesta, and the best selection of artisan goods. Market, 811 New Hampshire, Open Sat. & Sun
Bargain Sale Winsulfing-windshield and accessories;
clean *k10* rug; one C.B.; radio receiver. Call
866-534-9722.
bookshelves. Hover vacuum, floorlam, pictures,
coffees tables, 81-109.
CHEAP SF_ 40 classics -Asimov to Zelazny Call Dzhb at 841-2357 after 5.
Fender Rhodes, suitcase model, excellent condition,
$590. Call 1-722-0887.
Tun 600b
1858 Kawasaki Ninja. 600 R, clean.
Must sell! App. 248-594-0541
For Sale: Fisher CD player, 842 one song and
receive $125-negotiation, 842-4594.
For sale: classical record collection -400 LF's
$2 each. Excellent to mint condition. Bob at
hb-english.com
FULLY IBM PC/XT COMPATIBLE fountain computer 1200/300 band internal MODEM
Introductory offer. PC compatible computer features monitor, mouse, 512K, disk storage, 6MHz MdDOS, software, GEM, basic, 1 year warranty. 842-8121 after 5 p.m.
KORG. Digital drums, digital percussion units.
Professional sound, all accessories; only $100
Korg Microrepress synthesizer, M-500 $200. Call
1-913-728-0887.
Migata 25" Grandouring bicycle: both racks,
fully equipped. New is $650, must sell at $300
OBO. 804-2960
Mint 65 Shiwan Super Sport. Shimano 600
pommets. Give $47, sell at $28, 602-8184 after 5
months.
**** MOTHBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE.
Monday-Friday 10:50 p.m., Saturday 12:0 p.m.
5'1" Ft. 69h 749-4961
Moped Honda Express 1903, baskets, clean, clear $175.
Also, 1937 Gran Torino 2002 OBO. 814-005
**D**
**B**
**C**
Nishiki 18-speed with Shimano Comp. Beautiful
less, than 50 miles, $150, M4-3646.
Pioneer stereo (receiver, cassette, turbable,
HP40 music) Recent albums, tapes-all
Facing bicycle 22 pounds $800 one year ago, participation at 400 814.0886
Sailboats: BIC 2005 Funboard with 5.7 foot
sea-ship $270 VINTA 296, 110 liter 0.62 m S sail,
adjustable boom $480 or will separate, 1-642-6223
Sleep sale! Your choice! Complete waterproof $295
and m mat & box w/frame $99. This week only M & Q Furniture Warehouse. 728 New Hampshire.
Sola sale! All livingroom 40-70% off retail Mark &
Quain Furniture Warehouse, 738 New York
Tandy 1000, 128K, memory expansion optional. One disk drive, second disk drive optional. Dot matrix printer, built-in modern, and green monitor. Price $1100 or best offer. Call collector.
Totale review course for all four parts of CPA exam for $300. (A new item is $550). Used once to pass the CPA exam on the first try. Call after 5 p.m. at 316-329-5684.
Twin mattress, box springs, and frame. Like
new. Fax: 529-5108, Call: 34-30 m. n.
Vaccums-Save big money. Reconditioned with 3 months guarantee. Prices start at $149. Lawrence Vacuum & Sewing Center, 916 Mass., 943-287.
Why rem? Buy my 1470 mobile home for only €25 a month.
Buy mine with A.C.F. ready for cash on graduation!
B.A.C. need ready for cash on graduation!
AUTOSALES
Dalianatum pickup. Silver 5-speed.
180mm cassette and new AM/FM
cassette sterear and near New Toper jack.
1973 Honda 350 only 16,000 miles, new battery,
good condition. Bid优久 841-962, Paul
good condition. Best offer. B41-6623, Fdul1
1972 Fontaine Catalina PB, PS, A/C, radio,
extra speaker
14930 for LTD Ford, VG/A, J/C, PS, PB, SW, 24 MPG!
$2990, or best offer, CA84-75892
CARS SELL for $155 (average!) Also jeeps
available. 808-608-6007 Ext.
SILVER details for
87 Mustang convertible $4500 81-3760 First
89.00 or less other. Call 81-3760
HONDA Civic, blue, energy-ev A/C PS, Sony AM/FM cassette,
blue, fuel-ev 100,000 mile highway miles. Carefully maintained and very reliable. $2900. Dan at 935-0611.
74 VW Super Beetle new parts. Good condition.
$150 or best offer, 841-8752
FUN SPORTS CAR-1967 TRF, great condition,
$150.00. Call 189-6947 (Lenexa).
Toyota Celica. Manual standard features wr/conditioning, stereo, etc. Good condition
LOST-FOUND
good condition. 841-469-500 or 381-474-242.
BUY NEW CARS, NEW TRUCKS $250-$1,000 OVER
$1,000.
wair-cut feature
Best offer. Call 842-4827
FY15-1904. 1904 leather interior lift.
31K
Tune up your import car. $35. Parts and labor include satisfaction guarantee. Call Aaron.
Found-black dog, mixed breed, female, 19-20 inch
Temperate to lowland. Found on Friday at
Lewis County Call 844-321-6755
Bertone XI-9/184, leather interior, loaded. 31K,
good condition. 841-469 or 381-4742.
Found: watch near Green Hall on Friday,
September 4. Call 788-4205 to identify.
bakery sale/scleaning. One for Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday, and one for Sunday, and two for Monday. 3 weeks paid vacation after year. KU grad student preferred $4 per hour after training. Apply at Munchers
HELP WANTED
$10-$650 Weekly w/paper mail circulars Rush self-
delivery. $15-$350 Monday through Friday
Wildlife Blvd, B20, Dept 229, Q. Beverly Hills CA
90210
Little grey kitten with paws and chest. Male half-grown. From 1618 Kentucky, 841-246.
Lost Thermodynamics book at 24th & Ridgecourt.
Please call Said at 864-3690 or 843-6517.
ATTENTION: STUDENTS! Nat'l firm preparing
ATTENTION: students for college, carp. scholarships are awarded, interns
are possible, & you may earn 2, 3, 4,
467-9728 (phone) Must apply now.
467-9728 (phone) Must apply now.
River City Reunion Collector's Corner, 810 E. 13th. Books-Ephemera-Art. Call for appointment, 842-7853.
Buffalo Bob's Smokieshouse and Mass. Street Deli
food service and table service employees. Food service starting wage $4.00 per hour, table service $2.01 plus tips. Must have experience and some lunch time availability. Apply at 719 Mass., above Buffalo Bob's Smokieshou
Bike mechanic with Shop Experience. Call Gary at 842-6363.
DISPERATELY SEEKING_WORK STUDY
STUDENTS for 3 positions at the Spencer Art
Museum. Reqs: BS or equiv in Communication,
Information Technology or Telephone Assistant.
Inquire at the 5th floor of Spencer Art Museum
D-BASE PROGRAMMER: 25% position to write and maintain student record programs in D-BASE III; good writing in D-BASE III; complete programming in D-BASE III; good writing in D-BASE III; complete application at the Applied Computer Science Department. Complete application at the Applied Computer Science Department.
Child care needed for local church for Sunday and Wednesday evenings. Also, some child care needed for special occasions. Good pay. Call Christy at 814-9613 for Saturday interview.
Church secretary to work two mornings a week.
Requires typing and general knowledge of church
morning schedules.
Fragrance model-demonstrate available Saturdays. Approximately 14:14 hours total. Please call 800-237-5699.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $18.90-$59.20/yr. Now Hiring. Call 805-687-6000 Ext. R-9758 for current federal list
H wanted a H A R D W
Wanted a chair for a little extra cash.
He joined the fun of working on the turnipkin!
Hardie's now accepting applications for all shifts.
Good pay, flexible hours, meal discounts, free staff allowance, and a pleasant atmosphere for yours by appointment.
His girl did it earlier? Ask anytime. #84 8303 881
HIRING! Government jobs-your area.
815.000-658.000 Call: 602.928-8357 Ext. 4055
Local advertising agency seeks account sales representative. Call: 843-1911.
Now hiring for part-time video route position.
Will maintain, repair and collect video games.
must have experience and credible references.
Starting wage $4.00 per hour. Apply to 719 Mass
Applications.
need help with fall harvest and wheat planting.
Prefer experienced combine operator. Call after
rescheduling.
Need cooks for day shift. Apply in person 2-6 p.m.
Hawaii, Hawaii
Now hire experienced line cooks and prep cooks. Wage commensurate with experience. Must have some daytime availability. Apply at 709 Mass ave. Buffalo Bills Smokehouse.
Part-time graphic designer wanted. Apply at J-
Hawk Spirit from 10-1.
REPORT HOTELS. UPCOMING:
Writing internships for summer jpmts, internships, and career positions.
For more information and an application; write
P.O. Box 8694, Buffalo, NY 14203;
Buffalo Heights, SC 29588;
8694 Buffalo Head, SC 29588
Part-time screen printer wanted Work experience help. Apply at Jawahry Spirit from India.
Sales-gift company needs 2 salespeople to sell a great line of over $250 gifts locally. P/T charges $2.00/hour plus commission (to start) and $14.99/hour per gift. Call Mr. Nawr on 842.9833, 3-p.m. only.
Person to sit with 8 year-old after school Alvarmar area. 749-358 after 6 and Saturdays
S.T. Lawrence University
S.T. Lawrence University
S.T. Lawrence University
Carmichael Center for
Carmichael Center for
Carmichael Center for
Carnegie Cancer Institute
Carnegie Cancer Institute
Carnegie Cancer Institute
The Art & Design departments are hiring part-time Student Gallery Monitors. These are work-study positions. Gallery hours are between 8:30 and 10:45 a.m. (Saturday). Students Simmons, 300 Art Design Bldg, 864-4401.
Videostore Help!* Retail sales experience a
preference for Videostore preference
Videolesspress, 1447 W 22rd. St.
Austin, TX 78705.
Want your own business? Now is the time to start earning as an avon representative. Call Julie at (800) 652-4973 or visit us at www.avonrevenue.com.
WANTED: Campus representative to promote Christmas and Spring Break Shi & Beach trip packages. Earn FREE TRIPS & CASH!! Call Sunchure Tours 1-800-321-5911.
We have openings in carpentry, electrical and general labor crows. We work at least two shifts, either 8-12 hrs, 1 M-F, we would like you to apply. Housing Maintenance Shop, 2303 West 15th,
WORK STUDY position available in the Study Abroad Office. Must be able to work Monday and Wednesday: 9:30 a.m.-12 m. t and 1 p.m.-3:30 p.m. There are no restrictions on telephone, giving out general study abroad information to students, some typing mail out, others visiting libraries and attending the At of Study Abroad, 203 Lippincott.
MISCELLANEOUS
Jesus cried and said, "He that believeth in me, believeth not in me, but on him that sent me. And he that seeketh seeth, seeketh Him that sent me. I am not so believing in you, as I believe in me that should not abide in darkness. And if any man hear my words, and believe not, I shall not come not to judge the world, but to save the world."
SKI KEYSTONE for Thanksgiving, November
25-29. Low package prices, includes air/hotel/ski
rental/transfers/lift tickets. Call 843-9698.
Package available without air.
$10-$35 Weekly/Lp, mailing circulals! "Quaos/botes, information: RUSH itself addressed envelope. CM/NA-CDQ POLB 7730, Rockford, IL 61126.
$25 per month
SEMESTER
MEMBERSHIP
IDEA/RHYTHMIC AEROBICS
- Individualized Weight and Toning Programs
- Certified Instructors
PART-TIME BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
- Exclusively For Women
- Body Toning Classes
ROLL OUT
THE BARREL
PHOTO PRODUCTS
PERSONAL
FITNESS CLUB
WANTED STUDENT INTERESTED IN
OWNING AND OPERATING A
PARTY PICTURE BUSINESS in THE
LAWRENCE and KANSAS UNIVER-
SITY AREA. PERSON NO.
GEOGRAPHIC EXPERIENCE. IF YOU ARE
INTERESTED SEND YOUR NAME,
ADDRESS, TELEPHONE NUMBER
AND A RESUME OF YOUR PHOTO-
GRAPHIC EXPERIENCE TO PARTY
CORE. EMPLOYMENT AS A BADWIN
CITY, KANSAS 66006.
SMALL INMOBILE IS REQUIRED.
ONLY SERIOUS INQUires PLEASE.
THANKS.
Hours:
M-F 8:30-8:30
Sat. 9:00-4:00
Sun. 1:00-4:00
843-4040
- Shower Facilities
Small small established foreign car repair shop for sale in Lawrence. Inquiries: 841-5496
We have a new store that can get cash on almost anything of value. Also, good buys on cameras, jewelry, stereo equipment (auto & home), guitars, amplifiers. Stop! inawahk @ www.anawahk.com
- Membership Transferable to 2500 Clubs
Refill your "HAWK" glass only
- Sauna
Air Conditioned Hourly Classes
It Could Only Happen At...
BodyShapes
APPIp-Let's keep the Greek Week trophy in OUR case! -The General.
Alicia—we will make to make friends, but having once made them, neither life nor death, misunderstanding, distance nor doubt must ever come between them. Love, Kristin.
Monday thru Thursday
Bi-WM attractive and athletic. Would like to meet you at your place. Send letter, letter and phone to: PC G. P.
BUS.PERSONAL
(NOT DESPERATELY) SEEING INTIMACY
(NO DESPERATELY) MINIMAL minded, self-
fulfilled lifestyle-seeking and
relationship/friendship with an intelligent, self-
thinking individual. honest, thoughtful. Phone
free-thinking, honest, thoughtful. Phone
Intelligent, good-looking guy who interested in technology, caring about the environment, etc. is lookin for intelligence, attractive, nature, interest. Never been married with same interest. Please inform your girlfriend of your desire to self-meditate or you do not but to answer. J, P. O. Xoo
Two attractive young ladies seeking very in
tallere hot pot quality gentlemen. More in
tallere hot pot quality gentlemen. More in
Julie (Com. grad): met you in K.C. weeks ago would love to meet you again. The pre-schoolers are driving me crazy and I need adult supervision. Respond here. Signed I dance with you
THE HAWK·1340 Ohio
**Wike Workshops:** Our mechanic will teach you how to change flats, true treads, main steering wheels, or all 53 sessions, 85 each. Saturday, 10 a.m., begins September 19. Sunflower, 804 Massachusetts
DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
844 MASSACHUSETTS
913-749-4211
LAWRENCE'S FINEST SELECTION OF RECORDED MUSIC
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
Rare and Used Records. Buy, Sell, or Trade
Quantrill's 811 New Hampshire.
Pregnant and need help? *Call Birthright at*
843-821-2 Confidential help/free pregnancy
information
SKIP FREER AT VAIL/BEAVER CREEK! 4 day
ski trip. Visit Beaver Creek, just $150
and free skiing. Add extra nights, just $150
HEADACHE, BACKACH, ARM PAIN, LEG PAIN? Student and most insurance accepted. For complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Mark Johnson #439-3097
PENYLANE
CONNECTS • COMPUTER DOCS • RECORDS • VIDOS
--not pedigree, count most.
You know it!
NOW PPROCLAIM IT
Sunflower Mt. Bike Workshop- Learn how to repair & adjust your Mt. Bike-Tuesday evening, 6:4 p.m., begins September 17, $5, 804 Massachusetts, Lawrence, 843-5000
(poocn, kiss, oner pet boy/girl friend) by way of an Individualized and Distinctive
GREENS
I L" Y^A' A^Y A^N (TM)
Certificate
Send (please print):
Your name, address, zip
Pet's name*
Owner's name*
*(shown on Certificate)
$5 check/money order, to
I F P
Bras for Proper
Box 1075
Lawrence, Ks 66044
SERVICES OFFERED
The Coldest Beer Around
800 West 23rd
GREENS PARTY SUPPLY 808 W.23rd
"CRIMSON SUN PHOTO" is looking for young
players aged 15 to 24. A modeling portfoli
15% over cost. Can apply to:
age/weight/height.
COMPUTER CONSULTING: Tutoring and programming for elementary students on advanced civil engineering, projects and other works. Reasonable prices for individuals and groups.
Weekly Beer Specials
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K U students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749.
FLASHRACK PHOTO fast and dependable party picture service. Call 844-8770 to book your next
Sept. 9-Sept.15
GRAPH / Scientific and statistical illustration,
color/editing aid, editing aid, also water-
courses. Phone 866-249-3000.
Michelob 6 pk. $2.99
Coors Light 12 pk. $5.29
Budweiser 12pk. $5.49
Miller Lite 12 pk. $5.29
Old Style 12 pk. $3.69
Busch 24 pk. $7.69
Hammann 12 pk. $3.19
J6M FAVORS for all your party favor needs. Hats, shirts, paddles, glasses. If you have a unique favor idea, call us and we'll find it for you. 843-8770
Have Dives- Will Travel. Mobile Sound Service Complete selection of dance music including Progressive,声乐 and Top 40 dance music. Experienced DJ. Quality Equipment. Affordable DJ.
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ekatchrone
processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W services.
PASSPORT $6.00 Art & Design Building,
Room 206.84-4767
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $/hr, 843-9032
(p.m.)
LAWYER
HARPER
MATH TUTOR. Algebra through multivariable
calculus (000-143). 5 years experience. $8/hour
for 1 student. $6/hour for 2 students. $4/hour for 3
students. Get the very best! 814-0148.
MUSIC™ MUSIC™ MUSIC™ MUSIC™ Red House Audio-Mobile Party Music. 8-track studio P.A. and Lights. Maximum Audio Wizardry. Baldary 749-1275.
Now in Lawrence – inexpensive + 4 track demos.
Private, company, private music and bass lessons. Basic for piano and guitar.
PRIVATE
Villages Overland Park. (913) 491-6878
Vices. Overtaxation Fails. (A/V, A/B, R)
Prompt contraception and abortion services in
TILE DVE!
THE DYE!
Shirts in sunburst,
spiral, and 5 color
kaleidoscope patterns.
Barb's Vintage Rose
927 Mass M-5-10-5.30 Th, tif 8' B4-7-4.5 f'
610 Mass M-5-10-5.30 Th, tif 8' B4-7-4.5 f'
QUALITY Tutoring, Statistics, Economics, and Math. All levels. Homework assistance, test preparation, or general review. MA with 7 years of experience in classroom teaching. SEWING ALTERATIONS-love to sew for others, reasonable rates. Please call Julie at 842-4900. SUNFLOWER DRIVER School. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided.
Warm, caring people who like children ages three to five are needed at Heartland for volunteers as a group. Between 7:30 and 3:00 Monday thru Friday Daycare volunteers needed from 12:30 to 5:30, for volunteer duties.
2500 W. 6th Street 841-7230
TYPING
Graystone Athletic Club
Special Student Membership
$150 per semester
Fitness教练
Exercise Equipment
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing.
burez. 842-7945 or Lisa. 841-1915
A-1) reliable professional typing; Term papers.
These. Theses. Recommendation. reasonable IBM Elem.
documents 824-326.
http://www.ibm.com/us/en/microsoft/english/a-1/
AA absolutely Fast Typing is Back! Dependable, Reasonable Rates. Late Night Typing Available Kathryn 841-2049 days, 749-5264 days
ACT NOW. PAPERS- THESES- RESUMES
Writing LIFEFIT, 841-3469.
2 Smart Word Processing, Spelling Corrected.
2 Very Reasonable. Call Foster 749-2740
WRITTEN BY LEE HARRY 94 %
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS
MOMMY'S TYPING is back from Australia !!
8423 3787 pm, 9 pm please.
1: Der woman word processing. Former editor will transform your scrivibile into accurately spelled and punctated, grammatically correct pages of letter quality type. Call 843-2683 days or
for professional typing/word processing, call
Myra 841-4000. Fall special $1.20/page, double-sneeze
nica.
KU SCECFETAKY Typing and word processing
KU SCECFETAKY Typing and word processing
KU SCECFETAKY Typing and word processing
KU SCECFETAKY Typing and word processing
Donna's Quality, Typing and Word Processing. Term papers, letters, dissertations, letters, resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter quality printing, spelling correction. 842.7474
Quality Typing includes excellent spelling, punctuation, grammar, editing. Fast reliable service. Pickup delivery available. 843-027-9
TOP-NOITCH SERVICES professional word processing, manuscripts, resumes, theses, letter quality editing etc. #843.5062
*quality typing or word processing for theses, dissertations, resumes, term papers, applications.* Professional editing, composition available. Have M.S. Degree.
WRIGHT'S TYPING SERVICE: Term papers,
thesis, miscellaneous. IMB Selective. Spelling
rules.
WANTED
Band needs secure basement or garage in which to practice and store equipment. We practice a week for 3 or 10 hours per week at Erie at 843-2797; female upperclassman desired to share 2 BR apt. at Harvard Square. $200/mo per 1/2 electric and phone. Pole, KU bus route. Available immi-
Non-traditional, non-smoke mature male graduate student to look in share rent with mature female grad student. Please call 843-560-156 for Fred. Fri. furnished upon request. Ward prefer
- Policy
Pianist for Lawrence Wesleyan Church. One hour Sunday morning, two hours during week for rehearsal with solosists. Compensation is use of a personal rehearsal. 842-391-7836.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Urgent. Need a non-smoking mat room toateh in your building. Contact Caital at 842-966 (842) or 842-1252 for utilities. Call Caital at 842-966 (842) or 842-1252 for utilities.
Wanted: All Sports Ticket. Will pay well for it!!
Call 842-7095
Wanted 2 female roommates $170 and 1/3 utilities.
Trailridge. Call 842 6541.
Wanted: Roommate for 3-bedroom duplex, fully furnished except bedroom, $140 plus 1/3 utilities.
827-8900
Cain 091-760-850
Wanted:
A master drawer file cabinet in good condition.
www.091-760-850
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
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No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect
assignment.
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Tear sheets are NOT provided for classified advertisements. Found ads are free for three days, no more than 15 words.
Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Daily Kansan
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| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 0-15 | 2.85 | 4.20 | 6.00 | 10.00 | 14.95 | 18.90 |
| 16-20 | 3.35 | 5.00 | 7.05 | 11.30 | 16.55 | 20.75 |
| 21-25 | 3.90 | 5.80 | 8.10 | 12.60 | 18.10 | 22.60 |
| 26-30 | 4.40 | 6.55 | 9.15 | 13.90 | 19.70 | 24.40 |
| 31-35 | 4.95 | 7.35 | 10.20 | 15.25 | 21.25 | 26.25 |
01 announcements 300 for free 800 help wanted 800 services offered
100 entertainment 310 auto sales 700 personal 900 tipping
100 music 400 travel 600 sports
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Date ad begins. ___ Make checks paid to:
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Amount paid ___ 119 Staffer-Flint Hall
Credit ___ Lawrence, KS 66045
---
16
Thursday, September 10, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
--supports
**Collar** (2 wks) - Tundra; October 20 and 27
- 9.9 p.m. must know how to chain and single crochet
- 10.3 p.m. must know how to tie the collar
FALL CLASSES
Beginning Knitting (6. wkls.)-Thursday, October 11
Should be done prior to the first class with help from a
teacher who is familiar with knitting techniques.
**Intermediate Knitting** (B wk-1).-Monday, September 28-
November 16. 7-9 p.m. Take advantage of this opportunity to select your own project and challenge yourself. Must know how to knit, pull and cast on $20.00.
Norwegian Knitting (8) wks1—Wednesday, September 30-
November 18, 7-9 p.m. You will learn new techniques.
A variety of projects and patterns will be available $20.00
plus supplies.
Beginning Quilting (6 wks) - Monday, September 28, October 19, November 30 and December 7. Both classes are offered on the same day. You will be offered: The first class (September 28) will be three hours, morning 1 a.m. and p.m., evening 6:30 p.m. You will be required to have completed Quilting 6 wks.
**Intermediate Quitting** (one class per month)—Monday, September 21, October 26, November 16, no class per week.
The quitting package includes project and pattern are of your choosing. This is a 6 month commitment. $3.50 per month plus supplies.
White on White Quilt (10.classes per month)-Mon-
Fri 9 a.m.-Sat 2 p.m.
12:46 february 22, 1:3 p.m. The quilt is designed and taught
by the Artist of the Month.
Quilt in a Day Log Dog Demonstration—Tuesday, November 10, 7:9 p.m. You can be shown how to make a quilt by machine in a very quick and efficient method. The method is adaptable to many quilt patterns. $4.50 demo
Crocheted Heart Rug -Monday, October 12. 7-9 p.m.
Must know how to chain and single crochet $5.00 plus
charge.
Bag Back—Coll Method—Tuesday, October 6, 7-9 p.m.
Oct. Wednesday, October 28, 7-9 p.m. Turn remnants and fabric strips into useful and colorful hakes. $5.00 plus supplies.
March 1 Applegate Sweatshirt Demonstration - Tuesday
June 5 6-9 $4.00 demonstration only
October 6, 7 p.m. $4.50 demonstration only
Collars and Necklaces for sweatshirts Demonstration,
Tuesday 10, 3 p.m. $4.50 demonstration only.
Beginning Cross Stitch - Monday, 5, 7
p.m. $5.50 supplies provided
Counted Cross Stitch with Waste Canvas—Wednesday
**Counted Cross Stitch**
1. 9 x 7.9 in. $0.50 supplies provided.
**Advanced Counted Cross Stitch - Ticket:** October 9 and 16, 2018.
16. Ten different cross stitch designs. Class project is a bookmark titled "Kansas Class." Designated and taught by Kathy Murphy. $0.50.
plus supplies.
Beginning **Stenling**—Tuesday, November 3, 7-9 p.m.
Monday.
Lamphade (2 - wcks) Wednesday, October 7 and 14, 7:00 p.m. you may select a stained, cut and pierced, or unstained lamphade.
scaled design. $85 plus stipulation.
Pillow Finishing Design. Tuesday, November 12,
Friday, November 14. $4.50 demonstration only.
CHILDREN'S CLASSES
Children's Knitting (4 wks)- Saturday, October 10-31,
10:00 am. Minimum age. A fun project is planned for beginning knits $12.00 plus supplies.
Children's Rag Making (5 weeks) - Monday, September 5, 9:30-11:30
of fabric to make great Christmas gifts.
Minimum age 8. $5.00 plus supplies.
Children's Age 10. $7.00 plus supplies.
Children's Stenciling - Saturday, November 7, 9:30-11:
am. Fun program planned for children. Minimum age 10.
10% DISCOUNT ON CLASS MATERIAL Look for our coupon in the Lawrence Book
Stitch On Needlework Shop
926 Massachusetts 842-1101
MON MENU LINE
864-
4567
Find out the daily specials at the
Kansas and Burge Unions
UNION MENU LINE
864-
4567
Find out the daily specials at the Kansas and Burge Unions
Uppercut
"Our Success Goes to Your Head"
841-4894
9th & Mississippi
---
Uppercut
"Our Success Goes
To Your Head"
841-4894
9th & Mississippi
Class Act Hairstyling
841 New Hampshire
749-4517
$30
Permanent Wave
includes set & style
or
Frost
includes cut & style
or
Relaxers
includes set & style
Contact: Vicki Lavera or Terri
Nexus
(Full line
sold here)
The sandwich that launched a chain of restaurants.
The famous Runza sandwich. Good eating. Good nutrition. And impeccably good taste. Warmly.
The famous Runza sandwich. Good eating. Good eating.
Here's why.
Lean 100% American ground beef-fresh, not frozen. Small, young heads of cabbage hand-picked to guarantee perfect flavor and texture. Tender dough made fresh every day with 100% duram flour. The finest in imported and domestic spices.
Choose an original Runza or one of our cheese or Italian varieties. Add an order of fries or a garden-fresh salad. It's a good meal for the entire family.
The Runza sandwich. So good we named our restaurants after it.
At Runza, we start fresh so everything ends up good.
RUNZA
DRIVE INN
RESTAURANT
2700 Iowa St.
LAWRENCE
Video Player
Four Movies
Two Days
$9.95
(Higher Weekends)
Videoxpress
1447 W. 23rd
Open 9 a.m.-10 p.m. Daily
Video Player Four Movies Two Days
JAYHAWK
Pawn & Jewelry
"Money To Loan"
Buy • Sell • Trade
Cameras • Typewriters
Stereo Equipment • Jewelry
Guitars • Amplifiers
1094 W. Gt 749 1019
1804 W. 6th 749-1919
WILL YOUR SCORE BREAK THE RECORD?
Give it a boost with the test taking techniques and educational review that have been proven for over 40 years—Kaplan.
KAPLAN
STANLEY H. KAPLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER LTD.
CALL 842-5442
1012 Massachusetts Above Morris Sports
BREAKFAST AT TIFFANY'S
Bikke Edward
In one of the screen's classic romances, Audrey Hepburn pushes herself spirit and George Peard, a frustrated young writer. In this funny, offbeat love story, Edwards exposes the power of loving (1961, 115 min/Color) 7 p.m.
Thursday, September 10
Breakfast at Tiffany's
Director:
Brika Edwards
PLUS:
"News Parade of 1961"
SUA
Before you choose a long distance service, take a close look.
Basil Ripleton as Sherlock Holmes
Rolling World Productions, Inc.
Think again.
You may be thinking about choosing one of the newer carriers over AT&T in order to save money.
Since January 1987, AT&T's rates have dropped more than 15% for direct-dialed out-of-state calls. So they're lower than you probably realize. For information on specific rates, you can call us at 1 800 222 0300.
And AT&T offers clear long distance connections, operator assistance, 24-hour customer service, and immediate credit for wrong numbers. Plus, you can use AT&T to call from anywhere to anywhere, all over the United States and to over 250 countries.
You might be surprised at how good a value AT&T really is. So before you choose a long distance company, pick up the phone.
AT&T The right choice.
---
Semi soaked
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details page 6
Friday September 11,1987 Vol.98,No.15
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Koplik wants to increase admission standards
By NOEL GERDES
Staff writer
The executive director of the Board of Regents said yesterday that he would recommend that some of Regents universities raise admissions standards and some retain open admissions for Kansas residents.
`i will point out to the board that there are options other than open admissions." Stanley Koplik, the executive director, said The New York Times on Friday that open admissions at 9 a.m. on Tuesday in Topeka.
Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, said the Regents would consider four options: open admissions at all state universities; selective admissions at the University of Kansas, Kansas State University and
Wichita State University; selective admissions at KU and K-State; or selective admissions at KU only.
sides at S. Kansas has operated under open admissions since 1915. Under the policy, any Kansas high school graduate with a diploma is accepted at any state university. The other Regents universities are Emporia State University, Pittsburg State University, Fort Hays State University and the Kansas Technical Institute in Salina.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said yesterday that if the Regents recommended selective admissions, they would consider the standards of an ACT composite score of 23 or better, or completion of the Regents recommended high school
curriculum, or graduation in the top third of a high school class. He said the Regents probably would include a clause that would make exceptions for those with special talents, such as musical ability.
The state Legislature must approve any actual changes in state admissions policy.
The Regents recommended high school curriculum is four years of English; three years of social studies, mathematics and science; and two years of foreign language.
o college. She said KU could deal with both issues —
without abandoning open admissions - by making sure students were informed about admission application deadlines and about the Regents recommended high school curriculum.
"People think of selective admissions as a quick fix," she said.
She said KU supported open admissions because it was state-supported and because the people of the state had a right to attend any state university.
"This school is thought of as the flagship campus already." Ramaley said. "With selective admissions, KU might be considered an elite school, pulling away from the traditional core."
Regents schools should cooperate to provide the state with the best combination of education programs, she said.
"The Regents schools should be viewed as a family and should be treated similarly," she said.
Ramataye said she was not surprised that the Regents and the University Council were discussing selective admissions but that she was surprised about the timing of the meetings. KU was planning to discuss the effects of selective admissions this fall, she said.
"But we hadn't planned to do that in the next two weeks," she said.
Woman found dead in wood box in shed
Police hold suspect; arraignment to be today
By JAVAN OWENS
Staff writer
Lawrence police said yesterday they were holding a suspect in connection with the death of a 32-year-old Lawrence woman found Wednesday in a wooden box in a shed at her home.
The suspect is scheduled for arraignment in Douglas County Court on Chaffee County murder slaughter.
Lawrence police received a call at 9:30 p.m. Wednesday from Carl Kemp. 39. Kemp called to summon police, who found the body of his wife, Judy Kemp, in a box in a shed adjacent to their trailer home at 101 Michigan St.
A Douglas County ambulance transported the body to Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Alan Sanders, Douglas County Coroner, conducted a preliminary autopsy yesterday.
Sgt. Don Dalquest, Lawrence police spokesman, said yesterday that Sanders had not yet determined the cause of death. Police officials think that the state of decomposition of Kemp's body indicates that she died about a week ago, Dalquest said.
Carl Kemp was admitted to Lawrence Memorial Hospital at 1 p.m. yesterday, said
Judith Hefley, the hospital's community relations director. His low blood pressure is being observed. He is in fair condition.
Some neighbors in the Kemp's trailer park didn't seem shocked yesterday about Judy Kemp's death. One neighbor, Linda Buckner, said she thought the police visit Wednesday night was just another incident of domestic violence in the Kemp household.
Buckner said yesterday that just a few weeks earlier, police had come to the Kemp residence to quiet a domestic dispute.
Buckner said that on that night Judy Kemp had decided to leave her home and stay at the Holiday Inn Holdme, where she was a desk clerk. Once the manager to keep her when she became she was moving.
"The night she brought over the kitten, she had packed her clothes and left." Buckner said. "That was the last time I saw her. I've still got the kitten."
the kitchen.
Larry Rodecap, who lives next door to the Kemps, said he hadn't noticed that Judy Kemp was missing because she was a "loner."
"It's kind of strange. We hardly ever saw her at all." Rodean said.
Transportation Board discusses Secure Cab
Staff writer
By BRAD ADDINGTON
Concern about abuse of the Student Senate's Secure Cab service was a main item of discussion at last night's Student Senate Transportation Board meeting.
The service, which was started in March 1986, is designed for students who might not be fit to drive home from parties or who do not feel safe walking at night. The service is free with a valid KUID from midnight to 3 a.m. weekends and from 10 p.m. to 3 a.m. weekends.
weekends.
Coordinator Charles Bryan said he suspected that some people were using the service merely as a means of free transportation. He cited the case of a person who had recently used the service three times in three days.
Bryan also said some students might be using the service to go from one bar to another. Although Secure Cab drivers are supposed to take students only to their residences, Bryan said some students might be claiming to live at residencies that are close to bars.
resources that we need." "We're going to have 300 people living in that house across the street from Dos Hombrés," Brvan joked.
Bryan joined. However, Bryan estimated from Secure Cab records that about 80 percent of students using the service were not abusing it.
"The reason that this is coming up now is that it's the beginning of the semester, and we
can work on it over a period of time," Bryan said.
The board at one time considered creating a definition of abuse.
"We're still trying to hold off on that," said Bryan. "If we define it, there's going to be a loophole."
Student Senate finances the service by paying Union Cab Co., 1045 New Jersey St. $2.50 for each ride the company gives to a student. The student would could pay about $20,000 for the rides this year.
Since Aug. 18, the company has provided 638 Secure Cab trips, according to Ward Thompson, president of Union Cab's sister company, Yellow Cab Co., 1045 New Jersey St.
Ritchie said the company had once taken him from one bar to another, violating contract terms. Ritchie also said the cab drivers didn't always check his KUID.
Board secretary Greg Ritchey expressed concern about whether Union Cab was adhering to its contract with the Senate.
Margaret Patterson, night supervisor at Union Cab, said, "As far as I know, all of our drivers have been seen to see that I.D."
Jason Krakow, student body president, said,
"I think we should beef up communications with the residence halls and the cab company."
As for driving students from one bar to another, we have a great bridge hope of our drivers has ever done that."
公
Dave Niebergall/KANSAN
Check it out
Scott Ashby, top, and David Mukerjee, both Kansas City, Mo., residents, play a game of checkers outside Wescoe cafeteria. The two were in Lawrence on Wednesday for the River City Reunion.
State fair features Bob Hope
By MARK TILFORD Staff writer
Staff writer
Looking at the color of leaves isn't the only way to tell fall is approaching.
A fall tradition just like the World Series or the beginning of football season, the 75th annual Kansas State Fighting 20 run runs through in Hutchinson.
In addition to carnival rides on the midway and exhibitions of food and livestock at various halls, the fair will feature several evening grandstand events.
Kansas City
Lawrence
Hutchinson
Wichita
Granstand performers for this year's fair include comedian Bob Hope, the band Chicago, and country singers Barbara Mandrell and The Judds.
Judas.
"We have a lot better shows this year," said Elmer Deming, assistant fair manager.
Tickets for most grandstand shows should be available on the days of the show, Deming said.
slow, Deming the University of Kansas will have various booths at the fair throughout the week.
The Museum of Natural History will feature an exhibit this weekend on Kansas mammals and taxidermy techniques.
The School of Journalism will sponsor a booth Wednesday. Mike Kautsch, dean of journalism, and Max Ustler, chairman of the radiotelevision department, will answer questions about the school.
Question Admission at the gate is $2.75 for adults and $1.50 for children 6 to 12 years old.
Tickets to grandstand shows this weekend are $9, $11 and $13. Information is available by calling (316) 662-6616, but tickets may not be bought by phone.
2 p.m. - Opening ceremony.
7 p.m. - Opening and show: Survivor.
Saturday:
7 p.m. Grandstand show: An
Evening with Anne Murray.
7 p.m. - Grandstand show: Bob Hope.
County examines possible effects of Lawrence bypass Trafficway to mean minimal damage to wetlands, official tells commissioners
By VALOREE ARMSTRONG
Staff writer
As public debate on the south Lawrence trafficway continued, the Douglas County Commission heard a report yesterday that predicted the trafficway would have only minimal adverse effects on the Baker Wetlands.
The report, written by Kenneth Herin of the Kansas Department of Transportation, contrasted two areas of the wetlands that are separated by a levee south of Lawrence — the Haskell Wetlands, a 600-acre tract south of 31st street, and the 31st Street Wetlands, a 36-acre area between the levee and 31st Street.
between the park and Herin, who is the department's wildlife program director, rated the two wetlands in the Wakurausa River Valley. The ratings assessed how each of the two wetlands would be affected by the trafficway. The wetlands have 11 areas, including a flood
storage area, a wildlife habitat area and recreation area.
Herin said that given the levee an canal drainage, the proposed traffic-way would have little effect on the Haskell Wetlands.
It affected the population but did not wipe it out.'
- Kenneth Herin Department of Transportation
That's because the levee and canals isolate Haskell Wetlands from the rest of the area, Herin said. But the 31st Street Wetlands, which has a main function of flood storage, would be affected.
But, he said, "It's not of real significance when you figure the whole Wakara River Valley." Hein said that the Clinton Reservoir
County Commissioner Nancy Hiebert said that the reservoir had damaged the wetlands by affecting their food control function.
had affected the wetlands more but that it hadn't wiped out the Northern Crawfish frog's habitat as some had said.
Herin said that the Clinton Reservoir
"It itched the population but did not wipe it out," he said.
Hiebert also said the county, working with the Kansas Fish and Game Commission, could improve the wetlands, creating a better environment for the frogs.
on the concerns can be addressed — questions of social concern, economic development, environmental and health. "This is a step in the process."
She said that yesterday's report was significant because it was done by a source outside the city and the county who used an established rating system to reach the conclusions.
Local biologist applies for a new grant to search for relatives of Agnes T. Frog
By a Kansan reporter
For several months, biologist Peggie von Achen has searched an hunted for a frog — any Northern Crawfish frog — and still doesn't know whether they live in the Baker Wetlands.
Von Achen began looking for the frogs, which are on the federal endangered species list, last spring. The Kansas Fish and Game Commission gave her a $1,500 grant to search for frogs. But in May, her grant ran out and her search stopped.
"Until the spring, there is nothing to do because the way to locate the frogs is by their mating call," von Achen said.
While von Achen waits for spring, she is applying for a new grant. She said the weather hindered her chances of seeing a frog last spring.
"Because of the lack of suitable weather conditions, I wasn't able to conclude if there were or weren't any frogs," she said.
Frogs tend to surface after a heavy downpour when temperatures are no cooler than about 46 degrees.
The frogs live underground and rarely surface until they search for a mate in the spring. But if the frogs hear even the slightest noise, they return to their underground homes.
Von Achen's search is not likely to cool the debate about whether the building of the south Lawrence trafficway would drive the frogs out of the wetlands.
John Simmons, spokesman for Agnes T. Frog, a fictitious Northern Crawfish frog, said, "Just because humans haven't seen it says nothing about whether the frog exists."
Agnes ran as a write-in candidate against Douglas County commissioner Nancy Hiebert last fall. Hiebert supported the building of the trafficway, which Agnes supporters said would destroy the wetlands.
---
2
Friday, September 11, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Aquino asks nation for support; Cabinet will be named this week
MANILA, Philippines — President Corazon Aquino made a television appeal yesterday for public support in her gravest crisis since "people power" swept her to office in February 1986. "I need you badly," she told Filipinos.
She denounced last month's coup attempt by disloyal soldiers but did not mention the resignation of
ner entire 25-member Cabinet a day earlier.
Earlier yesterday, Aquino told reporters she probably would announce her new government by the weekend.
The Cabinet resigned under pressure from pre-business groups and others demanding stronger leadership.
Hispanic population up 30 percent, report says
WASHINGTON — The population of Hispanics, the nation's fastest-growing minority, has risen by 30 percent since 1980, with almost one-fourth of the increase coming from illegal aliens, the Census Bureau said yesterday.
United States after blacks, totaled 19.8 million in March, an increase of 4.3 million since 1980.
white the Hispanic population was growing by 30 percent between 1980 and 1987, the total population of the country was rising by 7.3 percent.
The bureau said Hispanics, the second-largest minority in the
Communist predicts open German border
WIEBELSKIRCHEN, West Germany — East German Communist party leader Erich Honecker visited his hometown yesterday for the first time since 1948 and predicted his country would one day share a normal border with West Germany.
In the emotional high point of his West German visit, Honecker arrived in Wiedelskirchen after touring the ancient city of Trier and leaving 50 red roses in the house where Karl Marx, one of the founders of communism, was born in 1818.
Jackson's arrival in Tokyo sparks craze
TOKYO — Michael Jackson's arrival in Japan to kick off his world tour has sparked Michaelmania, with the rock star depicted on items ranging from towels to magnetic telephone cards.
"All of us are very excited to be here," Jackson said in a statement released yesterday. "The Japanese people have always been kind and strong supporters of me and my music."
Shultz to seek contra aid
WASHINGTON — Secretary of State George P. Shultz, arguing that the alternative is a communist victory in Nicaragua, said yesterday that the administration would ask Congress for $270 million in aid to the contraas for an 18-month period.
The Associated Press
From The Associated Press.
Testifying before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Shultz added aid to the contras was the best insurance that Nicaragua would comply with terms of the Central American peace agreement it signed last month in Guatemala.
The announcement drew immediate criticism from a number of congressional Democrats and is certain to produce another round of heated debate on Capitol Hill over the administration's Central America
Shultz said, "If the Guatemalan agreement is to be implemented in a
way that secures a negotiated ceasefire, a democratic opening in Nicaragua and accommodation of basic national security interests . . . the United States must continue to furnish support to the freedom fighters."
President Reagan, asked by reporters just before he began a private talk with Pope John Paul II in Miami late yesterday afternoon, said it was the week's most additional aid and the contras because "you can't let them starve."
Reagan at first refused to respond to reporters' queries about Shultz's testimony, saying, "I can't answer that. This is not the place for that."
But as the president sat beside the pope in an orate Italian renaissance-style room in the Viscaya villa, he was asked again about the contra
"Just because an agreement has been signed that calls for some
waiting, you can't let them starve," Reagan said.
The pope, who leaned forward in his chair to hear the rapid-fire questions, did not say anything in response to Reagan's comments.
white House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater told reporters the aid request would "keep pressure on the Sandinistas as we go through the peace process and let them know the president is serious in his commitment not to desert the resistance."
The Guatemala agreement, among other steps, calls on the Sandinista government to arrange a cease-fire and implement democratic reform measures. NY, Nov. 2 about five days after the current contra-aid allotment expires. It also calls on the United States to cease funding the contras.
Reagan confers with pontiff
The Associated Press
MIAMI — President Reagan flew to Florida yesterday to welcome the visit of Pope John Paul II and to confer privately with the pontiff on Central America and the prospects for an arms accord between the superpowers.
"On behalf of all Americans, your Holiness, welcome back." Reagan said in welcoming the pope for the start of his second U.S. tour.
"As you exhert us, we will listen," Reagan said. "For with all our hearts, we yearn to make this good land better still."
The pope replied that he was "a
friend of America."
Reagan's remarks at the welcoming ceremony set the tone for private talks with the pope later in the day at Vizcaya, a lavish villa on Biscayne Bay where they were to confer for 45 minutes.
White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said the two would discuss arms control issues, next week's meeting between Secretary of State George Shultz and Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze and the possibility of a superpower summit. He added that Reagan's policies in Central America — a heavily Roman Catholic region — would be
The pope, a former university professor, might have been amused by undergraduates at Florida International University who celebrated his coming with a "Toga and Pope Look-Alike Costume Bash" and the "Heaven and Hell Party" put on by a sorority and a fraternity.
The pope didn't have to peer far out of his vehicle's bullet-proof bubble to see Americans' peculiar sense of humor. T-shirts, posters and signs were just a few of the memorabilia displacing palel ingles.
Senator defends nominee
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Sen. Orrin G. Hatch yesterday散说了 four members of an American Bar Association panel of being willing to play politics on the nomination of Robert H. Bork to the Supreme Court, and he said prolonged opaque talk about the presidency and the Senate in the 1988 elections.
Hatch, a Utah Republican and a leader of conservative senators, first defended the federal appeals court judge at a news conference. He then went to the Senate floor and unproceeded ideological inquisition of Bork and vicious attacks on the nominee's record.
The senator argued that the confirmation process for Bork has been politicized not only by Democratic senators and liberal groups, but by four members of the 15-person ABA panel who reportedly said the nominee is unqualified for the high court. A fifth panel member in the vote Wednesday is said to have taken the neutral ground of "not opposed," while the other 10 gave Bork the highest rating of "well-qualified."
When the Senate Judiciary Committee confirmation hearings begin Tuesday, Hatch will have the role of responding to liberal critics of Bork.
Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd, D-Wa. said that before acting on Bork, the Senate should act on the regular 13 appropriation bills.
MALAYSIAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION
Annual General Meeting For Present And Prospective Members
Date: September 12, 1987 (Sat.)
Time: 2:00 p.m.
Place: Woodruff Auditorium (Kansas Union, level 4) Agenda : Election of new officers Activities for the Fall '87-Spring'88 year
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Tandon wins state contract
Lawrence, KS - Success in the OEM (Original Equipment Manufacturer) market has prompted Tandon Corporation to enter the microcomputer market. Available at Computer Outlet (804 New Hampshire), the Tandon PC line has become increasingly popular on campus.
Since the late seventies, Tandon Corporation has been known as the leader in the microcomputer disk drive market. To maintain their position as a market leader, they have redirected their marketing and manufacturing efforts to meet new requirements of computer manufacturers and endusers, including the introduction of an IBM-compatible computer.
See PCs on campus, September 10
Tandon went to the top to ensure the success of their microcomputer launch. Four IBM veterans, who were closely involved in the development and manufacturing of the IBM Personal Computer, were hired to manage the engineering and marketing divisions. This dedication to a quality product has allowed Tandon to make significant inroads into the PC marketplace.
In March, the State of Kansas signed a contract with Tandon Corporation to purchase PC/AT compatible machines. The PCA is functionally equivalent to the IBM PC/AT at almost half the price.
With an 80286 microprocessor,
an optional 80287 co-processor,
and keyboard selectable clock
speeds of 6 and 8 MHz, it offers
comparable performance. The
PCA was rated "operationally
compatible with IBM PC/AT" by
Future Computing, which is
the highest compatibility rating given.
The University of Kansas has
The Tandion PCA comes with 1 MB of RAM and a wide selection of hard disks for about half the price of a comparable IBM.
Tandon also has a PC/XT model which is ideal for word-processing and data entry. Both Tandons are a good choice for anyone who needs the security of a brand name and nearby dealer service. "Tandon offers high quality workmanship at an affordable price", says Mark Husby, Computer Oulet Sales Representative, "Overall, it is a good value."
found that a computer with these features and benefits is definitely a good buy, especially at state contract prices.
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HAPPY
KANU
CELEBRATING 100 YEARS
M
ELEBRATING 35 YEARS
Put on your party hat. KANU is celebrating 35 years of public radio and we want you to be a part of the celebration. Our Birthday Party Programming is electrifying the airwaves and you're invited to attend special September events in person or tune your radio to 91.5 FM and join in the fun!
Return to the GOLDEN AGE OF RADIO—Don't miss the LIVE concert/broadcast of the Imagination Workshop, Saturday, September 19 at 8 p.m. in the Lawrence Arts Center. Tickets are $3. Children under 12 are admitted free.
PENGUIN
I
asn--Join us Saturday, September 26, at 6 p.m. in Liberty Hall for our 35th Birthday Banquet Fundraiser. Noah Adams, former host of "All Things Considered", will join an all-staur guest list from KANU's past. The cost is $40 a plate and seating is limited to 200, so call 864-5100 today to reserve your tickets. Ticket deadline is September 18.
An afternoon of great music—Bluegrass star
An afternoon of great music -- bluegrass star Dan Crary, virtuoso jazz pianist Makoto Ozone, and the classical instrumental trio Salmigundi will perform for you Sunday, September 27, from 1 to 4 p.m. during our FREE, LIVE birthday party concert/ broadcast in South Park, 12th and Massachusetts, Lawrence. You'll also be treated to recorded birthday greetings from special guests.
ARAN 35th Anniversary Sponsors: Clebah;
JL's Grocery; Maupintour; Admark, Inc;
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KANU91.5FM
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan / Friday, September 11, 1987
3
Local Briefs
Trial will begin for KU student in car accident
A KU student will go to trial today in Lawrence Municipal Court on charges stemming from a Moot Court case against three other students one sorely.
Eldon Aldritt, Wichita junior, was charged with one count each of operating under the influence and reckless driving. According to Lawrence police, Aldritt was the driver of a car that struck three cars parked in the 2000 block of Avenue early on the morning of May 5.
John Buzbee, Hutchinson junior,
lost his left leg below the knee
after he was pinned between two of
the parked cars.
Malfunction causes midnight whistle
The whistle that signals the end of classes has been sending confusing signals lately.
The whistle blew at midnight Wednesday because of a malfunction in an electronic printed circuit board. The director of plant maintenance.
The circuit board was a replacement for the part that malfunctioned at 5:20 p.m. on Sept. 3. At that time, the whistle blew for a full minute before a plant worker shut off the power.
free nature hikes sponsored by city
The first in a series of nature hikes sponsored by the Lawrence Parks & Recreation Department will be tomorrow morning.
There also will be hikes on October 10 and November 14.
Hikers should meet at 8 a.m. at
South Park Center, 1141 Massachusetts St., on the day of the hike. Hikers should enter the park via the biking route.
Casual, comfortable clothes are recommended.
The hikes are usually two to three miles long and are finished by 11:30 a.m. said Jane Suellen-Schulenberg, supervisors for the department.
Patrick Clark, a KU graduate,
will lead tomorrow's hike.
The hikes are free and open to
the public.
Additional information is available by calling 841-7777.
Literature forum scheduled for today
Literature students, teachers and scholars may attend a comparative literature conference beginning at 4 p.m. today in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
Professor Juliet MacCannell,
University of California-Irvine,
will speak at 4 p.m. today on "A
Comparativist Looks at Jean-
Jacques Rousseau's Confessions."
Speech will focus on artist's drawings
Don Lambert, Topea graduate student, will speak on "The Art of Elizabeth Layton" at 3 p.m. Sunday in the Spencer Museum of Art auditorium. A reception will follow in the Central Court.
Correction
Because of a reporter's error, the name of St. Ami's Church was misspeiled in yesterday's Kansan. The church is in Mission.
From staff and wire reports.
Error-filled Western Civ manuals rewrite Bible
By JENNIFER ROWLAND
The Western Civilization department was surprised this fall when it discovered an altered version of the Bible in its new collected readings and student manuals.
Staff writer
There were problems with Aristotle, too, said James Woelfel, director of the department.
Printing errors in the 1878 editions of the two manuals excluded some required readings, included unaccessible reading and garbled the text of other readings.
The Bible readings had the most errors in them, Woolfel said. The material had been garbled, making it "wildly inaccurate," he said.
"I'm not talking about just your typographical errors," he said. "I'm talking about starting in the middle of a paragraph or the middle of a sentence."
Correction booklets are expected to be distributed free next week at the KU Bookstore, said Sue Thayer, textbook office supervisor for the store. Bill Muggy, manager of the Jayhawk Book Store, said he would distribute the booklets free if the store was not charged for them.
booklets in the Woolfeil said Ginn Press, a Lexington, Mass., firm that published the student manual and collected readings made the mistakes and was paying for printing the booklets.
store will announce the availability of the booklets in their classes.
He said the 1967 edition of the collected readings included errors in Aristotle's "Politics," which the department changed from last year.
The Western Civilization department makes changes in the reading material each year, Woolfel said.
The Bible section errors included the absence of readings on Job, which previously had been included, he said. Paul's letter to the Ephesians was included in that reading, and had not been requested. The errors made the section unusable.
The student manual didn't contain the list of weekly readings usually printed on inside front and back covers, and some bibliographical material was incorrect on the first page of each essay in the manual, he said.
"They didn't print the changes, they printed the old readings. We tried to remedy by making sure we put the correct reading assignments on our sylabi for the large lecture classes." Woelfel said.
Students in smaller lecture classes
take up the changes by their
interactions with the course.
He said reading material on the
Bible and on Lenin had also been left out.
"The other essays are just fine," Woelfel said. "They seem to have made the other changes that we instructed them to make."
After finding the mistakes, he said he contacted the publisher and sent them a corrected version of the books.
The publisher then agreed to provide a separate booklet containing additions to the manual and a list of errors made in the 1987 edition.
Because of the lack of time, however, Ginn Press then sent Woelfel and the House of Usher, a Lawrence booklet containing the corrections.
House of Usher, 838 Massachusetts St., will distribute 2,600 copies of the booklet to the KU Bookstore and the Jayhawk Book Store next Tuesday, said Rhonda Leebrick, general manager.
Woelfel said, "Since next week is the week we're studying Aristotle, I've told our teaching staff to go ahead and use the old material."
He said the problem had been frustrating for the department, which was in the process of changing the training format to include larger classes.
"We did not need this at the beginning of the fall term. We didn't need this at all to happen," he said. "We are inaugurating a new format and it makes money without having to deal with these problems with the readings."
Western Civilization 204 students Tanya Hektor, Chicago sophomore, and Anne Schudy, Leawood junior, said they were unaware of the changes being made for the manuals
Reunion events draw media
"Ours is fine," Hektor said, "I didn't know about it."
60s-style art draws approval
By MICHAEL MERSCHEL Staff writer
The portraits are something a Disney animator might do on an acid trip; over-inked, sinister cartoon characters that show an evil face behind an Uncle Sam mask in one drawing, subtly attack the morality in Donald Duck comic books in another and promote Kansas marjuana in another.
See related story
By a Kansan reporter
The River City Reunion, this fall's continuing cultural event in Lawrence, has caught widespread attention from both national and international media, such as the Rolling Stone Magazine, The New York Times and Stern, one of West Germany's largest magazines.
These and other examples of 1960s-style underground art have been gathered by Lawrence artist Jim Barnes for a display at the Kansas Union. The display has been open this week and will be open until 5:30 p.m. today.
City Reunion organizers, said Time magazine, Stern and Elle, a New York fashion magazine, all had reporters and photographers at the event.
The presence of cultural celebrities such as Allen Ginsberg, William S. Burroughs and Marianne Faithfull and a weeklong series of performances by other well-known poets, musicians and filmmakers have attracted reporters from newspapers, magazines and television and radio stations to Lawrence.
Bill Rich, Lawrence resident and one of the River
Michael Emerton, Kansas City, Kan., senior and a member of the River City Productions news staff, said mainly local radio and television stations covered the Reunion. He saw six television crews on campus
The Kansas City Star and Times, Wichita Eagle- Beacon and the Topeka Capitol-Journal also have covered the event, Rich said.
Barnes said he didn't expect the display to go over well in the conservative 1980s, but he's been surprised.
"There's been an incredible response," he said. "I'm very astonished by how much people really enjoy this type of artwork."
Emerton said the press coverage so far had been positive, enthusiastic and at times well-written.
ANIMAL MEMORIES
Barnes said that he expected people to be deterred or offended by the crudity and roughness of some of the drawings and paintings, but that hasn't happened at all he said.
"They love it." he said
The display, which Barnes put together in connection with this year's River City Reunion, fea- more than 100 works by 4 artists.
Lawrence artist Jim Barnes' exhibit of more than 100 works by 14 artists is part of the River City Reunion celebration. The exhibit will be in the Kansas Union Gallery until 5:30 p.m. today.
Most of the artists are from the Lawrence area, Barnes said, but the display features work by nationally known artists S. Clay Wilson and Roger Shimomura, a KU professor of art.
The display also includes copies of comic books such as Zapp, one of the most popular of the underground comics, Barnes said.
Barnes said that he thought one reason people were reacting well to the display was that because the display was at the Union, many people who normally would avoid
art shows had stopped in to view the works.
He said that those people might find other forms of art highbrow, but that the works in his display would appeal for people to become engaged.
"This stuff just hits you," he said.
Mark Sprague, Overland Park sophomore, said he had been to art shows in the past and found them boring, but he had come back to view the underground display a
second time.
Sprauga said he was particularly impressed with the detail some of the artists used on their works, even though he called some of them scary.
Office looking into Lawrence hazing report
From staff and wire reports.
Douglas County district attorney Jim Flary said yesterday that he was investigating a possible hazard incident that reportedly occurred earlier
this month in Lawrence.
Also yesterday, a Kansas State
University fraternity was disciplined by the school's Interfraternity Council after a female student was treated for alcohol poisoning after a party at the fraternity last week.
However, Flory said he could not provide any further information about the investigation.
Men glad urinals installed
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Since the beginning of the school year, the men on the west wing of the 10th floor of McCollium Hall have been without urinals in their bathroom, while the women of the east wing had two working urinals. The problem resulted from the having urine from the east wing, where they lived last year, to the west wing, which was previously a women's wing.
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"It itse ridiculous to make a big deal out of it," she said. "People don't have time at home, and they need it. If I had to just lift the seat, they would be fine."
Afterward, between 1 and 3 p.m., two urinals were removed from the women's bathroom on the cast wing of the 10th floor and installed in the men's bathroom on the west wing, George Kitchen, plumbing supervisor, said.
Kitchen said the two urinals removed from the women's wing probably would be replaced by two new urinals in about a week.
now only $459.95
Stephens, St. Rose, La., graduate student, said he met with Ken Stoneer, director of student housing, at 8 a.m. Wednesday and presented a petition signed by 22 male residents of the west wing of the 10th floor.
"We don't know if male students will be living on that floor next year so we will probably have to put new ones in." Kitchen said.
"If someone had called our attention to it two weeks ago, we would have been much better."
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Bryan Stephens' petition to get urinations installed in a bathroom in McColum Hall was an instant success on Wednesday.
Carol Adams, Overland Park graduate student and a resident of the east wing, said she was surprised the urinials were removed.
By BEN JOHNSTON
Stoner said he would have corrected the problem earlier if he known it existed.
The female residents cracked jokes while the urinals were removed. Kitchen said.
Stephens said he was pleased the urinals were installed so quickly.
Staff writer
"Housing was very gracious about the whole thing." Stephens said. "I don't think they could have done it any faster."
"They had a ball," he said. "They laughed their heads off."
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The Kansas Relays Are Coming!!
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Applications are now being accepted for the Student Relays Committee.
This committee is instrumental to the organization and administration of one of the nation's oldest and most prestigious Track and Field Meets.
BECOME PART OF THE TRADITION!
Working with the Kansas Relays can be an exciting and rewarding experience. Applications will be accepted through FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25. Interviews will be conducted the following two weeks. Stop by the Kansas Track Office, Room 143 Allen Field House today and fill out an application
4
Friday, September 11, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Destructive doves
Diplomacy flies out the window when three presidential hopefuls talk about Nicaragua.
Senate Minority leader Bob Dole calmed his acid-dipped tongue considerably since his sarcasm in 1976 as a vice-presidential candidate.
But with primary dates looming, his comments during last week's trip to Nicaragua were reminiscent of that old bite.
Dole debated with Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega about negotiations between the United States and Nicaragua.
To Ortega's assertion that the boss of the contras is the U.S. government, Dole replied, "Then maybe we should negotiate with Cuba, since they are your bosses."
Hardly the voice of tact.
Hardly the voice of fact.
And the Rev. Pat Robertson has chimed in
Robertson proposed last week that the United States support an invasion of Nicaragua to replace the Sandinista government.
He wants the U.S. to set up a government-in-exile and help the exiles wage a "war of independence." But of course, he said, he does not advocate the use of U.S. troops.
And a third presidential candidate, Rep. Jack Kemp, R-New York, traveled to Central America on Tuesday to convince leaders there that the peace treaty they signed last month was "fundamentally flawed" and "a recipe for disaster."
Peace in the world is a dream for most.
Peace in Central America is crucial to the United States. But peace doesn't seem to be on their minds.
The party's over
Hazing can kill.
Hazing can kill. Naturally, it should be against the law. Last year, Kansas took that step and the Kansas Legislature passed an anti-hazing law. Now it's Missouri's turn.
In Kansas, the crime carries a maximum penalty of a $1,000 fine and six months in jail. Missouri's law, which takes effect Sept. 28, carries a maximum penalty of a $1,000 fine and up to a year in jail.
Missouri will become the 27th state to wipe out the "harmless fun" image that many people associate with hazing. Besides just being plain stupid, hazing is dangerous, and the results can often be tragic. Jumping from balconies, exercising all night or being forced to drink alcohol can only lead to pain, injury or even death.
Missouri's law, which prohibits acts that "recklessly endanger the physical or mental health of a student or prospective member of an organization," goes a step beyond the Kansas law by including mental health.
At the University of Kansas, a spokesman for the KU Interfraternity Council said he thought hazing was less apparent than it used to be. Hazing stretches beyond fraternity and sorority initiation to any type of organization. However, policies from national house headquarters coupled with hazing laws could have doubled the effect.
The remaining 23 states should follow the smart examples set by Kansas and Missouri.
Losing credit
it seems William Bennett can prove only the smart students receive degrees.
The secretary of education has a new plan that would require accreditation agencies to be a better watchdog over the nation's postsecondary schools.
postsecondary schools Currently, colleges are required to disclose information about graduation requirements and verify graduation and job-placement rates.
But Bennett thinks the goal should be to discover "what students actually learn." Certainly, this is a noble idea in theory, but is it really all that practical?
the accreditation agencies now look at a college's library volume and the number of faculty members with doctorate degrees as a basis for accreditation. This policy creates competition among schools to provide better libraries and faculty.
But an attempt to discover what students have learned after several years of college would require some sort of post-graduate standardized test.
Bennett seems to forget the volume of information acquired in college, not only academically, but socially as well.
Thus, the idea to prove that students have "x" amount of knowledge is unreasonable, at least, and impossible in reality.
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board
News staff
Jennifer Benjamin ... Editor
Jul Warren ... Managing editor
John Benner ... News editor
Beth Copeland ... Editorial editor
Sally Streff ... Campus editor
Brian Kabelline ... Sports editor
Dan Riettlmann ... Photo editor
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must care
Uverwalt
Roe vs. Wade
ooo
MS. BADGER by A. D. Long
THE WISE OLD BORK
The administration would like to remind the Senate that Judge Bork is a moderate...
Overturn Roe vs. Wade.
...who believes in "original intent"...
The 14th Amendment does not apply to women.
...and judicial restraint.
Fire the special prosecutor
This nomination has nothing to do with ideology or perpetuating President Reagan's social agenda.
My credentials are impeccable.
JUST ANSWER:
YALE LAW
You must take us for fools!
Now, now, Senator...
no politics allowed.
DREAM ON!!
Civil Rights
ENVIRONMENT
PROTECTION
School Prayer
Voting Rights
ON!
SEMATOR BADGER
(D) WISCONSIN
Bork stance aborts consistency
A good friend once told me the reason he voted for Reagan.
"The way I saw it, all those domestic issues like prayer in schools and abortion would never make it past his desk, while the defense spending and things I support would go through," he said.
Jim Farquhar Staff Columnist
The problem with an issue like abortion is that no one can talk about it without getting emotional. From the far right to the far left, mention the word abortion and tears will be shed.
Right-to-life groups, for instance, have always had a penchant for melodrama.
But while I watched the movie, I kept wondering what this scenario would look like without a sanitary hospital and a trained doctor on hand. Much more gruesome, I'm sure. Or what a sad movie this would be if producers had dealt with the child abuse that can occur because of unwanted pregnancies.
If Supreme Court Justice Lewis Powell had hung on another two years, he might have been right. As it is, abortion has again become an issue with the nomination of Robert Bork.
I once sat through a showing of "Silent Scream," the movie anti-abortionists tout as an undeniable argument for their cause. The movie gruesome, but what an abortion looks like the inside out.
The object is to repulse viewers from the prochoice view and then shower them with emotion so thick they may feel the need to towel off later. It's a very successful formula.
These issues, it struck me, didn't seem to bring these people to tears as easily.
Those on the other side of the issue are not above playing for emotions either.
he playing for hotshots either. After U.S. Sen. Ted Kennedy heard about the Bork nomination, he almost had a baby himself. If Bork is confirmed, according to the Massachusetts senator, this country will quickly hop on the "A-train" to Hell.
The problem with this Bork hysteria is that it has clouded the actual issues at stake.
Bork's position on abortion is not anti-abortion, as conservatives are told, nor is it prochoice. His position is that the abortion issue is the government's job to decide, it is the state's jobs.
The consequence of such a Supreme Court decision would not be the abolition of abortions; it would mean varying abortion laws from state to state.
One of the many problems with this would be, as with other state-run programs, that each state would perform abortions according to
different requirements. A sub-standard abortion could be very harmful to the mother.
Furthermore, varying state laws could drive women from one state, where they are unable to have a legal abortion, to a bordering state with more lax abortion laws. The flight resembles an 18-year-old on the hunt for a six-pack a few years ago.
Bork's states'-rights position on abortion is not articulated in the Constitution. Nowhere does it assert that national policies on health care are an unnecessary usurpation of states' rights.
Bork has made a series of other questionable calls in his day. Among them is his 1971 article interpreting the First Amendment so as not to include types of speech that are apolitical.
His 1964 article condemned the Civil Rights Act because it forced stores to serve people regardless of their race. His position was that government had no right to tell merchants how to conduct their businesses. He has since changed his mind.
In 1984 he refused to step down and ruled on a court case despite cries that he was biased. Bork was three votes away from receiving a reprimand from the American Bar Association for his behavior.
Supreme Court justices have some of the most crucial opinions in this country. Can we afford a justice with such a poor record of judgment? Let's hope the Senate takes a good long look when the hearings start this month.
History scoffs at Little Rock's racism
It has become a kind of historical pageant by now — the ritualistic observance of another anniversary of the Little Rock Crisis of 1957. (Orval E. Faubus, chief architect and apologist.)
What happened cannot be altered, but people's response to it changes, and in this case that is the good news. Defiance of law no longer holds the same charms; the end of racial segregation is seen as the blessing it was; the old political montebanks grow transparent. The Little Rock Crisis is nothing to celebrate, but the way it is perceived 39 years later certainly is.
The most insignificant part of history may be what happened in the past. It is how those events are interpreted that tells us something of a society and where it is tending. Orval Faubus's version of events this year might as well have been taped long ago.
"Yes, sir. Keep the niggers out!
"Do you know what your orders are
There is no sign of growth; the only change may be in rhetoric. To hear him tell it for the n-th time, he called out the National Guard only to keep the peace he disturbed, not to enforce segregation or integration. It's an explanation that wasn't very convincing even when it was new.
Paul Greenburg Syndicated Columnist
congruent positions. Whatever Faubus's formal position then or now, there is no doubt who was the mob's hero, and for good reason. To quote a brief but telling exchange reported at the time between a National Guard officer and one of his troopers:
A. L. BLAIR
Gov. Faubus had got his message across. And he would be rewarded for it. The man proved politically invincible in Arkansas for the next decade, winning re-re-re-election. He retired undefeated and might have remained so if
he hadn't tried for a comeback or two or three. Time and the judgment it may lend finally caught up with him. When he gives his rectal of the crisis now, the old admiration on the part of the audience has been replaced with knowing smiles and even the first signs of pity. The man seems unable to go anywhere without dragging the chains of 1957 with him.
Even and sometimes especially when the subject isn't mentioned, it is palpably there. The bargain he made becomes clearer over the years and decades: a transient popularity in exchange for a permanent footnote in American history under Law, Defiance Of.
Called on for his anniversary comment, Orval Faubus has added to his practiced repertoire one more explanation for what he did: "to induce in some manner the federal government to assume responsibility for its own court order." If that is so, he certainly succeeded. All Dwight Eisenhower was the sight of roiting ("disgraceful," he snorted) to send troops in.
There has been considerable speculation about whether racial segregation ever offended the general, but disorder certainly did. Nor did the international publicity afford Little Rock
accord with Dwight Eisenhower's idea of what the United States should symbolize in the world. Maybe that's what induced the federal government, to quote Faubus this year, to assume responsibility for its own court order.
Unfortunately, the good name of Arkansas was tarred in the process; the Little Rock Nine weren't the only ones done injustice in 1957. The ailing publisher of a little paper up in the Ozarks came a lot closer to expressing the real spirit of this state when there was a little war, and the fact that it was part of the state. While recuperating from surgery, Miss Elizabeth Burrow wrote this in the Ozark Spectator:
"All too frequently white people have black hearts. I first learned that in school here in Ozark, where a few town kids used to pick on the country kids. That was all so long ago. I thought everybody would be different by now. Just as we have a superior class of Negroes here, so I'd thought our white citizens were extra special, too. Most of them are, thank God. . . Our integration is not noble. It's simply horse-sense. . . Of course the (black children) will make it all right. But the worry is over our own conscience. Will we white people make it all right? Here's a malignancy worse than my cancer, and I wouldn't swap with you."
Now that's the spirit of Arkansas — none of your sloppy, sentimental do-gooder folderol, just plain dealing and horse sense. In her simple words there is the recognition that race hate can be more disabling than any physical sickness, and that to exploit it is beyond understanding and beneath contempt.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Elitist attitude
Apology expected
The article in the Kansan for Sept. 9, concerning advising makes remarks about scholarly faculty members in African Studies that border on libelous. None of the African Studies faculty that I know speak anything but flawless, cultivated English.
The poor taste shown by Brad Taylor calls for an apology from him.
Oliver Phillips, professor of classics
Bravo!
Bravo
When I read Jerri Niebaum's article I found myself so interested that I couldn't put it down. Not only did she defend her position, she left an ending that allowed little rebuttal from any smoker.
smoker.
I am not writing this letter in defense of smokers. I realize that smothering others, and if asked I always quickly extinguish my cigarette. What I would like to discuss is your elitist attitude that shines through your article like a burning star.
Never before have I been so offended by the sheer smugness of an article. Not only do you want us to stop smoking anywhere you may roam, but you won't allow us to smoke at all. To
this I can only remind you that I have my own rights to do what I choose, within the law.
Yes, I do have my own mother to take care of me. Such wonderful journalism may be great for a campus newspaper, but I wouldn't use this as an example of your capable style when you graduate. You'll be walking the streets and digging in the trash barrels behind Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurants looking for food. A little fatherly advice in return for your matronly ways.
Frederick Dee Haag, Wichita senior
BLOOM COUNTY
OLIVER! DON'T LEAVE US
TO YOUR PAST! THE MODERN
WORLD IS SHINY... BUT IT'S
ALSO COLD! HERE... SAY
HELLO TO SOMEONE YOU
HAVEN'T SEEN FOR
AWHILE...
by Berke Breathed
YOU CAN COME OUT NOW...
GOOD
HEAVEN'S...
IT'S... IT'S...
MY OLD SLIDE RULE.
YOU'VE SEEMED SO... DISTANT LATELY.
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
University Daily Kansan / Friday, September 11, 1987
5
--kept gathering for the Liberty Hall had another crowded show last night, and the booksigning by William Burroughs, Edith Kerouac-Parker and Allen Ginsberg packed the Oread Book Shop. Also yesterday, tickets for the 8 p.m. Saturday readings at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St, sold out at 1 p.m.
I will not play in God’s domain.
I will not play in God’s domain.
I will not play in God’s domain.
I will not play in God’s domain.
I will not play in God’s domain.
I will not play in God’s domain.
I will not play in God’s dom.
Campus/Area
L
Younga Victor Frankenstein stays after school
River City Reunion gets enthusiastic responses
Like a rolling stone, the River City Reunion kept gathering momentum yesterday.
By JULIE McMAHON Staff writer
By JOLLIE STaff writer
At noon yesterday, the line of people waiting to have books signed at the Oread Bookstore snaked into the fourth floor lobby in the Kansas Union.
Later, Ginsberg came in and was ushered to his table. He looked around and saw Burroughs.
Upon:
In the bookstore, film and television crews watched as books were signed. Kerouac-Parker signed books and posters by her first husband, Jack Kerouac, and William Burroughs signed his books.
"Oh, there you are," William," he said to his old friend. They discussed a performance they had seen Wednesday night, and then they signed books.
signed books.
Ginsberg and Burroughs will be among those reading poems Saturday at a sold-out Liberty Hall. Also reading will be Andrei Codroce
Diane DiPrima, John Giorno and Anne Waldman.
Tim Griffith, a manager at Liberty Hall, said that tickets reserved for out-of-town guests will be sold at 6 p.m. Saturday if they are not claimed.
The performance last night featured Danny Sugerman, who wrote "No One Here Gets Out Alive," which is about the '60s band the Doors. He read from his new book, which told about managing the Doors at the age of 16 and his drug use at that time.
Michael McClure, who was born in Marysville and attended Wichita University, now Wichita State University, recited his own poems and other works without notes. McClure, who was a friend of Jim Morrison of the Doors, wrote a play called "The Beard," which was performed in 1965. The cast was arrested 14 consecutive times.
Marianne Faithful, a singer and former girlfriend of Mick Jagger, also sang.
At the performance, Ginsberg announced that he and Anne Waldman would lead a meditation by Potter Lake at 4 p.m. today.
Also, Bill Rich of River City Productions denied rumors that Bob Dylan was coming to Lawrence.
RIVER CITY
REUNION
Events on Friday, Sept. 11.
**Filmstar Man Brakage will speak from 1 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas Union.**
**Book signings by Michael McClure, Danny Sugerman and David Miles will take up to 130 p.m. in the Oread Book Store at the Kansas Union.**
Philip Miller, Michael Annis, Repha Buckman, Kary Kilpatric Wolfe and Denise Low will be from 2 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union.
p. m. in the Pine Hollow. Readings by James Gunn, Brad Denton and John Kessel will be from 2 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union.
**Book signings by James Gunn, John Kessel, Brad Denson and Robert Day are scheduled at 4:30 p.m. to 5 p.m.**
- Jim Carroll, Ed Dorn and Ed Sanders are scheduled to perform at 9 p.m. at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St.
Tickets are $7.
- Club Babebalo West will have open-mike readings at 9 p.m. at the rear entrance of Hoch Auditorium.
- Readings and the performance of Keith Dennison's "Jazz Moods" by the Quilva Traveling Show are scheduled at 7 p.m. at the Lawrence Arts Center, Ninth and Massachusetts
Events on Saturday, Sep. 12.
Book signings by Ed Dorn, John Glorno, Jim Carroll and Timothy Leary will be from noon to 1:30 p.m. at the Oread Book Shop in the Kansas Union.
Events on Saturday, Sept. 12.
Timothy Leary will speak from 2 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St. Tickets are $5.
■ William Burroughs, Andrei Codrescu, Diane DIPrima,
Alain Ginbsch, John Glorion and Anne Walden will read
from their works from 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. at Liberty Hall, 642
Massachusetts St. Tickets are $12.
Husker Du will perform at 9 p.m. at Liberty Hall. Tickets are $9.
Events on Sunday, Sept. 13.
12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
--information and appointment.
GETTING A JOB?
DON'T LET TIME RUN OUT!
The University Placement Center can help!
Attend the Fall 1987
Career Employment Workshops
Beginning the job search
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Tuesday, Sept. 22 8:30-9:20
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Thursday, Oct. 8 3:30-4:20
Monday, Oct. 12 10:30-11:20
Wednesday, Oct. 21 3:30-4:20
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Interviewing 1
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Tuesday, Oct. 6 3:30-4:20
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Thursday, Oct. 22 3:30-4:20
Wednesday, Oct. 28 3:30-4:20
Thursday, Sept. 17 3:30-4:20
Friday, Sept. 25 8:30-9:20
Monday, Oct. 5 2:30-3:20
Thursday, Oct. 15 10:30-11:20
Tuesday, Oct. 27 3:30-4:20
Tuesday, Nov. 3 9:30-10:20
Thursday, Nov. 12 3:30-4:20
Travel And Tourism Careers Thursday, Sept. 24 3:30-5:00
Interviewing 2 successful Interviewing'
Videotapes Available For Viewing By Appointment Resume Writing Secondary Interviews "The Plant Visit" Also, Several Employer Profiles
"Successful Interviewing
Wednesday, Sept. 16 3:30-4:20
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Thursday, Oct. 1 2:30-3:20
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Every Friday Beginning
Sept. 25-Nov. 13
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6
Friday, September 11, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Ramaley stresses excellence
By MICHAEL HORAK
From the KU Weather Service
Staff writer
KU faculty members are looking toward the future with a new sense of optimism — striving for teaching excellence and inspiring others to do the same, Judith Ramaley, KU's new executive vice chancellor, said yesterday.
Ramaley, speaking to a group of about 40 faculty representatives at the Kansas Union for the year's first semester, told her bored to continue that good feeling.
The key to maintaining that level of enthusiasm will be listening to faculty and students and their problems and successes, she said.
issues here," she said.
"I can't deal with the price of oil in Saudi Arabia, but I can deal with
Ramaley introduced herself and said that her first priority as executive vice chancellor would be quality-of-life issues. She said she would not only work to improve academic programs, but would work to make sure those programs were taught in classrooms of adequate size. She also pledged to bring superb faculty to KU, and keep them here.
During that meeting, the council took action on the following items: ■ Decided to hold a special meeting Sept. 24 to discuss the issue of limiting undergraduate admissions and undergird implications of such a policy.
chancellor for academic affairs that the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences abandon or rewrite its policy for filling vacancies after denial of tenure for faculty.
- Approved faculty appointments to the University Council, University Senate and University Board and set members for members of those committees.
Discussed the health insurance policy provided to faculty by the state and the effect of a predicted shortfall in state money for the program.
Crime prevention event to show children how to prevent crime
By a Kansan reporter
KU police will sponsor the first Stouffer Place Crime Prevention and Safety Festival from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. tomorrow by the Stouffer playground.
Lt. Jeanne Longaker said KU police organized the festival to alert children of the importance of crime prevention. Children of KU students, faculty and staff are invited.
"In the past, most of our programs have centered around the residence
halls," Longaker said. "We want to make the children aware about community safety."
The festival will include free carnival rides, games, drinks and snacks for children. The children and their parents will get a chance to meet Uncle Corky the Crime Clown and McGruff the Crime Dog.
Police will fingerprint the children for identification purposes, if parents wish, and register the children's bicycles. Parents may also bring small items to be engraved with
identification numbers, Longaker said.
The Lawrence Fire Department and the Douglass Police have insurance safety bombs on their safety boots.
People attending the festival may park in Lot 72 on the east side of Burge Union before noon and on the west side of the union after noon.
I
THE REAL FEATURES at THE WHEEL SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 12th $2.00 cover
THE WHEEL
LAWRENCE, M.
WEATHER
Lawrence Forecast
多云
DAY
Cloudy and cool
HIGH 75°
LOW 51°
Today will be mostly cloudy with showers until noon. Tonight clouds will stick around with highs in the mid-70s and lows in the low 50s.
5-DAY
SAT
Mostly cloudy
74/48
HIGH LOW
SUN
Mostly cloudy
76/54
MON
Partly cloudy
78/56
TUE
Sunny
80/59
WED
Partly cloudy
80/60
North Platte
68/45
Partly sunny
Omaha
70/49
Mostly cloudy
Rain T-Storms Snow Flurries Ice
Goodland
70/48
Mostly cloudy
Hays
72/50
Mostly cloudy
Salina
73/50
Cloudy
Topeka
75/51
Cloudy
Kansas City
77/53
Cloudy
Columbia
79/56
Showers
St. Louis
80/58
Showers
Dodge City
73/52
Showers
Wichita
76/55
Showers
Chanute
77/55
Showers
Springfield
81/58
Showers
Forecast by Kevin Darmofal and Alicea Maas.
Temperatures are today's high and tonight's overnight low.
Conditions are forecasted for this afternoon.
Tulsa
79/61
Thunderstorms
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KU AND LAWRENCE EVENTS
CALENDAR
Friday 11
7
3:30 p.m. — "Little Shop of Horns"
an SUA film, at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Also at 7 and
9:30 p.m. on and on Saturday at 3:00, 7 and
9:30 p.m. Afterternoon showings $1. Evening showings $2.
5 p.m. - Volleyball tournament with KU, University of Houston, New Mexico State and Wichita State universities at Allen Field House. Also games at 7:30 p.m. and Saturday at 9 and 11 a.m., 5 and 7:30 p.m.
5:30 p.m. — Team handball organizational meeting at north gymnasium in Robinson Center.
7:30 p.m. — "Brighton Beach"
*Memoirs* "at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204. Oral Ave. No charge.
P
8 p.m. KU International Folk
2 p.m. John's gymnasium,
19th and Knucklehock
7:30 p.m. — Elizabeth Murray, a New York artist, talks at the Spencer Museum of Art auditorium about her work. A reception for the artist will follow in the museum's Central Court.
9 p.m. - Observatory Open House (if the sky is clear) at Clyde W. Tombaugh Observatory, 500 Lindley Hall. Call 864-3168 for more information.
**Midnight — "200 Motels," an SUA movie, at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Also at midnight on Saturday. Cost $2.**
Saturday
12
9 a.m. — "A Comparative Looks at Nathaniel Hawthorne's 'Rappaccin'l Daughter," a lecture by Clayton Koelb of the University of Chicago, at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union. A conference conference conference conference all day at the Union.
9 a.m. — "The Vintage Jazz Show" with Micheal Maher will be broadcast on KANI101.5 FM
10 a.m. — "The Jazz Scene" with
Dick Wright will be broadcast on KANU- 91.5 FM.
8 p.m. — The Tannheil Weavers, a Scottish band, at the Community Christian Church, 4601 Main St., Kansas City, Mo. Tickets are $5 for students with
9:30 p.m. — The Red Zone will perform at Bogart's, 611 Vermont St.
Admission is $3.
Sunday
Q
13
Noon — Lawrence Fall Arts and Crafts Festival at South Park. Activities include a moon walk, food booths, musical entertainment and art exhibits.
Noon — KU Baseball. KU varsity vs. Kansas City, Kan., Community College at Quinley Field.
1 p.m. — Exhibit opening of Noel Szychowski, MFA thesis, showed media. Will show through Friday.
3 p.m. — The KU Concerts featuring
Sue Oatman on trombone on KANU-91.5 FM
3 p.m. — "The Art of Elizabeth Layton," a lecture by Dob Lambert, graduate student at Spencer Museum of Art auditioned after in the center Court, Central Court.
4:30 p.m. — KU Student Speech and Hearing Association picnic at Potter Lake.
Monday
14
streets.
6 p.m. - Guy Billow, New York and Paris illustrator, will lecture in the Hallmark Symposium Series at Spencer Museum of Art auditorium.
8 p.m. — Society for Fantasy and
Science Fiction, at the Walt Room in
Downtown.
7 p.m. — Lawrence Civic Choir resumes practice at the Immanuel University Lutheran Church, 15th and Iowa
8 p.m. — Faculty Recital with Larry Maxey, clarinet, and Linda Maxey, marimba, at Swarthout Recital Hall.
Q
E
15
Tuesday
11:30 a.m. — French Table at Parlor C in the Kansas Union. Every Tuesday all semester except Tuesday before Thanksgiving.
4:30 p.m. — "Liberation Theology:
The Gospel, Human Freedom and The
People of God," a seminar, at Ecumenical
Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
7 p.m. — "Overcoming Math and
Science Anxiety," a workshop by Chico
Herbison, counselor at Supportive Educational Services, and Barbara Ballard, director of the Emily Taylor Women's
Resource Center, at the Pine Room in
the Kansas Union.
7 p.m. — "Broadway Danny Rose," an SUA film, at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union, Cost $2.
b. p.m. — "Science and Quackery." a lecture by Robert P. Hudson, chairman of the department of history and philosophy of medicine at the University of Kansas Medical Center, at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
5 p.m. - Trouys and practice for the KU Men's Soccer Club at Shenk Complex, 23rd and Iowa streets. Also on Thursday at the same time.
Wednesday
16
11:40 a.m. — "Childhood Socialization and Teen Sexuality," a University Forum by K. McCluskey-Fawcett, associate professor of psychology, at Eucumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave Call 643-4833 by Sept 15 to
8 p.m. - Student recital with *Blaid Hake*, violin, at Swartooth Recital Hall.
8 p.m. - "We the People" 1977
Revisited by Pickett.
Clyde Reed distinguished professor, Musicalism, at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kanaas, Union.
6:30 p.m. — Campus Christians meeting
7 p.m. — "The Front", an SUA film, will be shown at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Tickets are $2.
7 p.m. - KU Democrats meeting at Parlor C in the Kansas Union.
Thursday
Q
7 p.m. - "Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex," an SUA film, at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
17
3 p.m. "Spanish Earth" and
living at the film, at Spencer
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7 p.m. KU Study Abroad informational meeting at the Pioneer Room of
7:30 p.m. — Jaywhacks for UNICEF organization at meeting at Parlor A in the Kansas Union. For information call 864-2284.
7:30 p.m. — Margo Humphreys Talks About Her Art at Spencer Museum of Art auditorium, Reception following in the museum's Central Court.
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8
Friday, September 11, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
KANSAS
Photos by LISA JONES Story by VIRGINIA McGRATH
"Quit on the set!" "Sound speaker." "Rolling . . .
Action!"
At 10 a.m., three hours after extras arrived on the set of the movie "Kansas," cameras were finally rolling. The set, a large farm and farmhouse, is about 15 miles outside of Lawrence.
Actor Andrew McCarthy, perched on top of a big, green John Deere tractor, watched while extras, dressed as members of the press, were given instructions for a scene.
"This is supposed to be a press conference, so everyone ask a lot of questions all at once. And keep it up till I yell, 'cut.' And watch out for the cameramen, because they can't watch for you," director David Stevens told the extras.
After several rehearsals of the scene and three takes, the scene was finished.
JL Fishef
Later that afternoon, on the other side of the house, a party at the farmhouse was being filmed. All the principal actors and more than 100 extras were costumed and ready for filming one of the biggest scenes of the day.
A large tent was set up on the lawn. Extras, elegantly dressed as invited guests, mingled under the tent. Reporters were stationed throughout the lawn, and "Crescent County" highway patrolmen lined the long drive, all awaiting the arrival of the "governor" and his family.
chen
"Oaf," yelled Stevens. "Places." And the whole thing was reflamed, several times.
in front of the house
Reporters and guests ran up to the car as the governor and his family got out and were introduced. The crowd cheered.
I
family "Action!" velled the director. As uniformed waitresses circulated amongst the guests with hors d'oeuvres and glasses of champagne (actually ginger ale), the governor's black Cadillac, led and followed by highway patrol cars with lights flashing, raced up the drive and stopped in front of the house.
was refiled, several times.
Filmmakers and actors were on the set for 12 hours. At the end of the day, they had tramped through mud, lugged equipment, and set around, made several costume changes, and had done take after take of the same five scenes, all for a total of about eight minutes of screen time.
time.
Mimi Wickliff, who plays one of the principal characters, said movie-making always was time consuming. "There's a lot of sitting and waiting. And then all of a sudden they say they need you, and you're on, and then they're done," she said.
Lawrence. Filming is scheduled to be completed Sept. 23 or 24, Bahrenburg said. The movie will be released next summer.
The movie has been filmed entirely in Kansas. Other locations have included Valley Falls, Edgerton, the Osage County fair and several other farms outside of Lawrence.
Bruce Bahrenburg, the movie's publicist, said the Lawrence area was chosen as the movie's location for several reasons. "Lawrence is central to an airport. And it's a university town. That makes it more pleasant there than anywhere else. And it's got Liberty Hall," Bahrenburg said.
MICHAEL GONZALEZ
P
THE NIGHTMARE WITH THE BIG FACE
JOHN K. BARNES
DINNER AT THE MUSEUM
Clockwise from top: Director of photography David Egby sizes up the set before filming the next scene of the motion picture "Kansas," which is being filmed in and around Lawrence. Andrew McCarthy, Matt Dillon and Leslie Hope play the lead characters in the movie. Laughter breaks the seriousness of light, sound and camera checks during a scene rehearsal. Andrea Moreau, Lawrence sophomore, an extra in the movie, listens carefully to the instructions of director David Stevens. Annie Kellogs, acting as the governor's daughter, gives a hero's welcome to McCarthy, whose character rescues her from drowning.
University Daily Kansan / Friday, September 11, 1987
Campus/Area
9
Couple's funeral set
Services for Delbert A. and LaVerne I. Eisele will be at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the First United Methodist Church, 946 Vermont St. Virgil Brard will conduct the services. Burial will be in Oak Hill Cemetery.
By a Kansan reporter
The Lawrence couple died Sept. 3 in a two-vehicle accident in Hubbard County, Minn.
The couple owned Marks Jewelers, 817 Massachusetts St., for 20 years before they sold the business.
The family will receive friends from 7 to 8:30 p.m. today at Warren McElain Mortuary, 120 W. 13th St.
Memorials may be made to the Children's Ministry of the First United Methodist Church in care of the mortuary.
A video camera and 19-inch color television, valued together at $1,275, were taken between 8:30 p.m. m. sept. 4 and noon Sept. 6 from the 200 block of Michigan Street, Lawrence police reported.
Funeral set for Edwards
By a Kansan reporter
Funeral services for Karl D. Edwards, 74, professor emeritus of education, will be at 10 a.m. tomorrow at the First United Methodist Church.
Burial and a graveside service will be at 2 p.m. in the Wreford Cemetery in Junction City.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers.
Friends may visit from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. today at Warren-McElwain Mortuary.
Dr. Edwards, Lawrence resident, who was also a well-known square-dance caller, died Wednesday at Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
Contributions may be made to the Lawrence First United Methodist Church or to the Kansas University Endowment Association, where a scholarship has been established.
On the Record
An AM-FM stereo and equalizer, valued together at $425, were taken from a parked car between 11 p.m. Sept. 8 and 4 p.m. Sept. 9 in the 600 block of Michigan Street. The car sustained $100 damage, Lawrence police reported.
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10
Friday, September 11, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Lottery coming to Lawrence
By VIRGINIA McGRATH Staff writer
Staff writer
State lottery officials were in Lawrence yesterday to answer the questions of local retailers interested in selling lottery tickets at their businesses.
The officials conducted an all-day workshop at the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, 209 West Eighth St. Applications were available for those retailers who had not yet signed up for the lottery.
The lottery, scheduled to begin in late October, was legalized by Kansas voters last November. Any retailer can sell the tickets, officials said.
Frank Kinney, corporate account executive for the Kansas Lottery, said that selling lottery tickets would
help retailers with their businesses because of the extra people it would bring in. It also would make the retailer look like a hero, because he would be the one to distribute all prize money under $25, Kenny said.
Tom and Shirley Aley, owners of Amyx Barber Shop, 849% Massachusetts St., attended the workshop, plan to sell lottery tickets at the shop.
"I've always wanted to participate in the lottery," Tom Amyx said, "mostly because it will help keep Kansas money in Kansas, and because I want to help out downtown. I think we can help the people buying the tickets as much as they would help our business," he said.
John Webb, managing partner of
Green's Fine Wines, 800 W. 23rd St., wasn't as enthusiastic about the lottery. "I haven't made up my mind yet if I'm going to participate or not," he said.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, September 11, 1987
Sports
11
Valesente looks forward in anticipation to Auburn game
BY CRAIG ANDERSON
Staff writer
After watching his team scrimmage against itself for the past month, Kansas coach Bob Valesente said he was looking forward to seeing what his football team can do against the Auburn Tigers.
"I want to see us perform in a 60-minute game," he said. "I want to see we can play jaw to jaw, eye to eye, national quality type football."
Valesente said playing a tough team like Auburn in the opening game would give him a chance to see how far his team has progressed since they began practicing in early August. Auburn is ranked No. 4 in the latest Associated Press Top 20 poll.
For a school that has routinely produced Heisman Trophy candidates at running back, Auburn has taken a different approach in its early season gameplan. With three relatively untested tailbacks at the top of their depth chart, the Tigers relied heavily on its passing game in its season opening 31-3 victory against Texas.
"We're still feeling our way on offense," Auburn coach Pat Dye said. "We still have no idea what kind of personality we will have."
"They're still young so they don't have the numbers of (some of their previous running backs)," he said. "They've got the talent to hurt us."
The Auburn running game gained only 112 yards in its first game. In previous years when Auburn had a Brent Fullwood or a Bo Jackson running for them, such low rushing totals would be unheard of. Part of the reason was that Texas stacked its defense against the attack. Valesante said, though, it would be a challenge to stop the Tiger running game.
The size and strength of the Auburn offensive line, Valesente said, concerned him. The Tiger offenses front averages six foot four, 257 pounds. Senior defense tackle Eldridge Avery said he didn't look at the size of the Tiger linemen when watching their films.
"It doesn't matter how big they are. I just know they're good," he said. "I feel like I can dominate the lineman I play over."
Kansas junior linebacker Rick Clayton said the key to the game for the Jayhawks
was shutting down the outside running game of the Tigers. He said if the defense was able to shut down the Auburn offensive attack, Kansas would dominate the game. Clayton said the KU defense could compete with anyone in the country.
Shutting down the running game still might not stop the Tigers from moving the ball on Kansas. Last week against Texas, senior quarterback Jeff Burger completed 16 of 22 passes for 269 yards and two touchdowns. Clayton said Burger could do a lot of damage if he was given the time to throw the ball.
Senior strong safety Milt Garner said the Jayhawk secondary had the ability to slow Burger down.
"He's a good quarterback, but he's not the best I ever been. Garnar said. "If we stick to that," he said.
A big key to stopping the Auburn passing game, junior safety Clint Nortmore said, would be if the KU defensive line could put some pressure on the Auburn signal caller. He said he felt confident that the Kansas defensive front four would be able to do so.
Kansas linebacker coach Scott Conley attended Auburns opening game and came away impressed with the depth of their receivers. In all, nine players caught passes against Texas. Projected starter Lawyer Tillman missed most of the contest because of a pulled thigh muscle, but did manage to catch two passes for 31 yards. Tillman will dress for the game against Kansas but likely will not play. Dve said.
Kansas quarterbacks Kelly Donohoe and Mike Orth contributed Dye. He said either quarterback had the ability to throw the ball downfield with success. Valesena said last night freshman quarterback Kevin Verdugo will also suit up for the Auburn game.
The Auburn defensive backfield suffered a blow last week when starting junior safety Shan Morris suffered a season-ending knee injury. Dye said, though, that junior letterman Greg Staples stepped in and did a good attack as staples had an interception against Texas.
Kansas may have to throw the ball many times if it's to be productive, Valesente said. He said Auburn's defensive line and linebackers be as good as any group in the country. Last week, the Tiger defense
had seven tackles for losses and sacked Texas quarterback Brett Stafford seven times.
"We've worked hard on our punging game this week because with their defensive line, who knows?" Valesente said. "I hope some of them miss curfew or something so Coach Dye has to keep out of the game Saturday.
"I don't know if we can run or throw on them. They're just so physical. But did you hear what Pat Dye said about us? He said we're better than Texas and he's right. They're 0-1 and we haven't played yet so we're undefeated."
"They pressured the quarterback all day," he said. "He never had a chance to set up and throw."
Conley said the speed on the Tiger defensive front was the first thing that jumped out at him when he was watching the game.
Auburn returns eight starters from a defense last year that ranked second in the nation in scoring defense, giving up only 10.1 points per game. In its 12 games, the defense gave up 10 touchdowns.
Valesente said the Auburn home crowd would also be putting pressure on the Jayhawks. Last week 80,000 fans attended the game at Jordan-Hare Stadium. He said that was an indication of Southeastern Conference football at its best.
Because the Tigers had played their first game already and Kansas didn't, Dye said the Jayhawks would have an advantage in the way they could prepare.
The large crowd, he said, would try to get involved in the game by trying to intimidate Kansas. Valesente said he was concerned whether or not the Jayhawks would be able to match the enthusiasm that Auburn would be playing with. He said his team would have to play with poise if it was going to compete with the highly regarded Tigers.
Dye said he expected the home crowd to approach 85,000 against Kansas. He said since the Auburn students had arrived back on campus this week he hoped the crowd would be louder and more excited than it had been in the first game.
"They know what our weaknesses are by seeing us play and will try to exploit them," he said. "We haven't seen them in a game-like situation, so it's hard for us to get ready."
Game 1
Kansas Jayhawks
Coach Bob Valesente
Record: 0-0
Last Week: idle
KU
Auburn Tigers
Coach Pat Dye
Record: 1-0
Last Week: The Tigers defeated the Texas Longhorns 31-3 in Auburn, Ala.
the Texas Le
Auburn, Ala.
Probable Starters:
Offense:
WR— 80 Rodney Harris, Jr.
LT— 70 Jim Davis, Sr.
LG— 68 Jay Allen, Jr.
C— 51 Chip Buddle, Fr.
RG— 65 Bryan Howard, Sr.
RT— 71 Bob Pieper, Sr.
TE— 86 John Baker, So.
QB— 14 Kelly Donohoe, So.
TB— 22 Arnold Snell, Jr.
FB— 24 Mike Rogers, Sr.
FL— 34 Ronnie Caldwell, Sr.
PK— 29 Louis Klemp, So
TE— 86 Walter Reeves, Jr.
LT— 54 Jim Thompson, Jr.
LG— 79 Stacy Dunn, Jr.
C— 66 John Hudson, So.
RG— 76 Rodney Garner, Jr.
RT— 60 Stacy Searls, Sr.
QB— 12 Jeff Burger, Sr.
FB— 36 Reggie Ware, Sr.
TB— 10 James Joseph, So.
WR— 24 Scott Bolton, Sr.
WR— 29 Duke Donaldson, Sr.
PK— 6 Win Lyle, Fr.
Defense:
LE— 90 Eldridge Avery, Sr.
LT— 72 Von Lacey, Sr.
RT— 97 David White, Sr.
RE— 73 Teddy Newman, Sr.
LB— 39 Rick Clayton, Jr.
MLB— 19 Curtis Moore, Fr.
RLB— 25 Rick Bredesen, Sr.
RCB— 10 Johnny Granderson, Jr.
LCB— 31 Mike Fisher, Sr.
FS— 8 Clint Normore, Jr.
SS— 16 Milt Garner, Sr.
P— 48 Rich Rieth, Sr.
LOLB— 48 Alvin Mitchell, Jr.
LT— 74 Tracy Rocker, Jr.
NG— 96 Benj Roland, Jr.
RT— 99 Nate Hill, Sr.
ROBL— 93 Audrey Bruce, Sr.
SLB— 39 Kurt Crain, Sr.
MLB— 46 Edward Phillips, Sr.
LCB— 74 Kevin Porter, Sr.
SS— 45 Greg Staples, Jr.
FS— 35 Carlo Cheattom, Jr.
RCB— 4 Alvin Briggs, Sr.
P— 1 Brian Shulman, Jr.
Series: This is the first meeting of the two schools in football
History: This Saturday's game will begin the 98th year of football at the University of Kansas. In 1890, Kansas went 1-2 for the season. The coach that year was Will Coleman. In 909 total games, the Jayhawks have a record of 449-404-56.
Coverage: The Kansas-Auburn game will be carried locally by the Kansas Jayhawk Network. The game can be heard on KLZR (106 FM) and KLWN (1320 AM). Coverage begins at 5:30 p.m. Kickoff time is set for 6 p.m. Central Daylight Time in Auburn's Jordan-Hare Stadium.
KU volleyball team playing host for four-team weekend tourney
KANSAN graphic
Staff writer
By ROBERT WHITMAN Staff writer
Now it has a place to call home.
The Kansas volleyball team has always had a place to play its home matches.
Now it has a place to call home. Allen Field House is the place senior outside hitter Judy Desch said she thought she could call a home court for the first time she had played. The team had two-a-day practices in the field house from Aug. 13-Aug. 24.
"We never practiced in Allen. We never really had a home court advantage." Desch said. "We never practiced in Allen, we really have a home this year."
The team 'opens the home portion of its schedule today in Allen Field House with the first game in the season. Kansas will play the Univer-
ity of Houston at 7:30 p.m. and New Mexico State will play Wichita State at 5:00 p.m. in the other match of the four-team tournament.
The winners will play each other in the championship game tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. The losers will play for third place at 5:00 p.m.
So that each team will be able to play the team it will not meet in the tournament, the four teams will be assigned 30:00 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. tomorrow.
Of the teams coming to the tournament, Coach Frankie Albitz said New Mexico State would probablely play Houston but that Houston also would be tough.
"I heard they were strong from the (University of Texas) Austin coach," Ablitz said. Kansas played Texas on Saturday in the South
west Missouri State University tournament.
Getting teams to come to Lawrence to play the Jayhawks has been difficult, said Abitz, who will all the scheduling for the team.
Albitz said she was trying to build a program that could be ranked in the top 20 nationally. But to be ranked, a team has to play a tough schedule. To make a tough schedule of nationally ranked teams, a team needs to ranked.
"It's more that we have been so weak in the past," Albizt said. "The schedule is not really organized. It's political. You have to know people.
"But the basic thing is, they don't want to travel and blow someone out, because it's not worth their time."
Dave Niebergall/KANSAN
Kansas
Delays
Michelle Klone, Kansas setter, lunges to return a spiked ball. The volleyball team will begin its season at 7:30 p.m. today in Allen Field House against the University of Houston. Also playing in the tournament are New Mexico State and Wichita State.
K.C. falls on bases-loaded walk
The Associated Press
OAKLAND, Calif. — Jose Canseco's first look at Game Berger was rather scary through the first two pitches, both changeups for strikes
But Canseco kept his compose and watched four straight balls go by, drawing a bases-loaded walk and giving the Oakland Athletics a ninth-inning 3-2 victory over the Kansas City Royals last night.
"It's pretty hard to resist swinging when you're down-2 O. " Cansceo said.
There were two outs in the bottom of the ninth inning when Canseco came to the plate to face Garber, the former, and his Royals recently acquired from Atlanta.
"When the count went to 3:2, I was zoning in on one area where I thought he'd pitch me. He didn't throw it there and I never even thought of swinging," Canseco said. He
watched an outside pitch for ball four.
"If I ever walked with the bases loaded before, it must have been in my last life," added the usually free-swinging power hitter. "But I wasn't even thinking home run this time."
The Athletics, second in the American League West, pulled within $2^{2}$ games of idle Minnesota. The third-place Royals fell $5^{2}$ back.
"They're all tough losses this time of year. But there's still tomorrow. I'm not going to dwell on losses," Royals manager John Wathan said. "We didn't swine the bats very well."
The A's had three hits in the ninth and outhit the Royals 11-5.
Garber, Kansas City's fourth pitcher of the game, came out of the bullpen to face Canseco. The walk
brought pinch-runner Alfredo Griffin home from third base. Canceco got his 99th RBI of the season and his 15th game-winner.
John Davis, 3-2, was the losing pitcher. He left after giving up a one out, infield single to Mickey Tettleton. Griffin ran for Tettleton and went to second on Terry Steinbach's pinch-single off Jerry Don Gleaton After Tony Phillips filed out to center, Luis Polonia beat out an infield single to shortstop, loading the bases.
Reliever Eric Plank, 3-4, got the victory with two hitless innings of work.
Steve Balboni's pinch-hit, two-run homer off Curt Young in the seventh inning had given the Royals a 21-lead, but Mark McGwire drove in his 103rd run with an eighth-inning single, tying the game.
KU baseball team to open season against KCK Community College
Staff writer
Bv DARRIN STINEMAN
The coaches of the Kansas baseball team will get a look at how their players perform in competition Sunday when the Jayhawks open the fall season against Kansas City Kansas Community College at Quigley Field.
"We're going to try to play most of our ballclub," Kansas coach Dave Bingham said. "It's an evaluation time. We'll try to get as many as we can into a game situation and see how we react to it."
Bingham said he might want to redshirt two or three players, but that the determination of which players to redshirt only made the decision of who to play that much more
difficult. Even though the fall season is like a preseason for the team, a player's eligibility year counts much or what time of year he plays.
"We want to make sure what we do in the fall doesn't take away from the spring," Bingham said. "Like I've said, there's only one championship season, and that's the spring season."
Although he is concerned about losing the opportunity to redshift player, he's playing a bad fall. Tomman says the team must create a big relief of the policy of redshifting.
"I've never seen a lot of benefit in it," he said. "If a kid's ready to play for you, you put him out there."
Returning lettermen Mike McCloud, senior; Brad Hinkle, sophomore, and Scott Taylor, junior, will pitch for the Jayhawks on Sunday. Bingham said, because they had played this summer in summer leagues
Although Bingham said he saw the game primarily as a time to evaluate his players, he said that KCCK, the top junior college baseball team in Kansas last year, would be a worthy opponent.
"We're trying to put kids out there who are used to pitching in a regular rotation," he said.
The teams will play a single nine inning game beginning at noon Sun day.
Sports complex field is named in part after a KU administrator
By ROBERT WHITMAN
Staff writer
Staff writer
When young athletes in Douglas County begin playing on new fields built by Youth Sports Inc. tomorrow, one of the fields they will play on will be named in part after a KU administrator.
sportor.
The sports complex, about one-half mile south of the intersection of Clinton Parkway and Wakarusa Drive, will have one field named Reimer-Beibengood field.
The Leibengood half of the name is for Dana Leibengood, associate dean of journalism. Someone who wished to remain anonymous donated $7,500 to pay for the field and asked that it bear the names of Reimer and Leibengood, said Jim Otten, president of Youth Sports Inc.
The other half of the name is for John Reimer, regional vice-president
of Lincoln Liberty Life Insurance Co.
Reinimer is also a youth soccer coach.
Otten, Leibengood's next door neighbor, told Leibengood Wednesday night that the field would bear his name. Leibengood said.
"And, of course, I'm honored and surprised by the whole thing."
"I was out in the yard when I found out about it," Leibengood said. "He (Otten) said, 'Someone paid you quite a compliment.' I asked him what it was, and he told me all about it.
Leibengood said he had no idea who the anonymous donor was.
Leibengold said he coached soccer teams made up of Douglas County youngsters for five years until May 1987. Leibengold's sons, Bill, 16, and Steve, 13, played on the teams at different times.
'It was probably one of the parents
of one of the kids on the team," he said. "It's probably because his son had a good experience on the team and that's exactly what we wanted. Winning was secondary, but we never had a losing season, even though we played some tough competition."
A ribbon-cutting ceremony will be held at 9 a.m. tomorrow. Soccer and football games are scheduled soon after the ceremony.
The complex will initially have eight soccer and two football fields. When it is complete, the complex will have 14 soccer, five football and four baseball fields.
Private donations have paid for all of the $200,000 cost of the complex to date. Often said. He said a fund-a raising drive would begin soon to raise the money necessary to finish the complex. About $200,000 to $250,000 is needed, he said.
12
Fridav. September 11, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Sports
Softball team set for tourney
By MIKE CONSIDINE
Staff writer
The Kansas women's softball team will begin its fall season tomorrow when it will be the host for KU Invitational No.1, the first of three invitational tournaments, weather permitting.
The Jayhawks will play host to Creighton, Iowa State, Missouri and Nebraska-Omaha in the two-day round-robin format.
Competition starts at 9 a.m. when Creighton takes on Missouri. Kansas plays Nebraska-Omaha in the second game at 11 a.m.
"We've got some good ballcalls coming in," said Kansas coach Kalum Haack, who is making his debut. "Everybody will be making freshman mistakes, they've only
been practicing together a couple of weeks. We've got to get the freshman used to top-level softball."
Junior Reenie Powell will start against Nebraska-Omaha. The rest of the Jayhawks' infield is freshman Jenny Splittorff at first base, freshman Susan Hubbard at second base, senior Gary Lueked at third base, freshman Sara Marchand at shortstop and freshman Tammy Cook as the catcher. Splittorff also pitches.
Haack said that Creighton was considered the favorite.
The outfield is composed of freshmen. Jessica Hennig starts in left field, Shelly Burke in right and Missy Bond in center.
Haack plans to start Splittorff in Saturday's 5 p.m. game agains
Missouri, Junior Roanna Brazier will pitch Sunday at 11 a.m. against Iowa State or 5 p.m. against Creighton.
"Everybody's ready to go," said the coach. "I know they're tired of practicing and ready to play ballgames."
bungalows:
The only thing that may stand in their way is the possibility of inclement weather.
"If we can get the field half-way dried out, we'll cover it tonight." Haack said yesterday morning. "If the sun stays out, we should be ready."
Haack said he would check with the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department about the availability of other fields in town if the rain persisted.
Cross country team hits the road
By MIKE CONSIDINE
Staff writer
The time trials are behind them. This weekend the Kansas men's and women's cross country teams hit the road.
The men open the 1987 season with a dual meet today at Southern Illinois. The women travel to Lincoln, Neb., for the Nebraska Invitational.
"It's not going to be a high-powered meet," said women's coach Cliff Rovello. "Nebraska hasn't done much (work) and we haven't either. It's a real nice course though. We like running there."
Kansas last ran in the invitational
two years ago.
The field includes Nebraska (a threat for the Big Eight title), South Dakota, South Dakota State, Midland (Neb.), Kearney (Neb.) State and Nebraska-Omaha.
Rovelto said the team would run a controlled race and aim for second place — behind the host school.
"We're not going in racing from thegun," he said. "We'll run the last part hard. If we turn in good times, it'll be because we're getting fit."
The coach said he hoped to place senior Trisha Mangan, sophomore Kelly Coffey and freshman Susan MacLean among the top 16 individu
"Every day, she's been establishing herself at the top of the pack," Rovelto said.
als. MacLean has been leading recent workouts.
Last year Southern Illinois defeated the Kansas men 35-28 in a triple dual with Johnson County Community College at Rim Rock Farm in Lawrence. Saluki senior Andrew Petrewg won the win in 26:21.71 and teammate Lamont was second. Lamont was lost to graduation, but SIU coach Bill Cornell has the bulk of that team back.
Mecir loses to Wilander at U.S. Open
NEW YORK — Mats Wilander sled the "swede Killer" at the U.S. Open last night, ensuring that his country would be represented in the finals.
The Associated Press
Third-seeded Wilander beat No. 5 Miloslav Mecir 6-3, 6-7 (5-7), 6-4, 7-6 (7-0) in a groundstroke duel and moved into the semifinals, where he will meet countryman Stefan Edberg tomorrow.
Earlier in the day, second-seeded Edberg overpowered unsweared Ramesh Krishnan 6-2, 6-2 and 6-2 in finals for the second straight year.
Mecir, who holds a 28-18 advantage over Sweden's top players, had beaten Wilander three times in a row, including a fourth-round victory at last year's Open. The 23-year-old eventually lost to Ivan Lendl in the final.
In the earlier match, Krishnan's finesse game was no match for Edberg's serve-and-volley attack.
"Right from the beginning, he was all over me," said Krishnan, the last unseeded player left in singles play.
"We were always fighting it out on my serve. I thought I was very well prepared. I played the way I wanted him to play, but as he was a little bit quicker on the court,"
Edberg, who has yet to play a seeded player in the tournament, needed five sets to beat Krishnan in the third round at last year's Open.
Sports Briefs
Varsity rugby team to play first home game
The Kansas rugby teams will have their home openers at 1:30 p.m tomorrow at Shenk Competition. The Oklahoma Jayhawks varsity will play Garden
City. The KU club and senior reserve teams will play Johnson County "A" and "B" teams. Admission is free.
Women's golf team to play in Iowa tourney
The six players who will make the trip to Iowa City are seniors
Sue Pekar and Tina Gnewuch,
junior Michelle Mulvihill
sophrores Suzanne Mossberg and
Donna Lowe, and freshman Sherri
Atchison.
The Kansas women's golf team will return to Iowa this weekend to play in the Iowa Invitational at Iowa City, Iowa. In its first tournament last week, the team finished third in a field of eight at the Cyclone Golf Classic at Ames, Iowa.
2 KU tennis players go to tourney
Other teams participating in the tournament are Nebraska, Wisconsin, Iowa State, Minnesota, Southwest Missouri State, Northern Iowa and the host team, Iowa.
Kansas tennis players Craig Wildey and Chris Walker will travel to St. Augustine, Fla., this weekend to participate in the Tropical Collegiate Tennis Championships. It will be the first tournament for Kansas this season.
and the first appearance for Kansas players at the TCTC. The host of the event, Flagler College, invited two players from 16 schools across the country. Kansas coach Scott Perelman said Wildley and Walker were the perfect choice.
Correction
Because of an editor's error, a story on KU tennis player Jeff Gross incorrectly stated the team's final conference standing.
The KU men's team was the Big Eight Conference champion last year.
Scoreboard
American League
Baseball
National League
San Diego 8, Houston 7
Oakland 3, Kansas City 2
Boston 5, Baltimore 4
Milwaukee 4, Detroit 3
California 8, Texas 7
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2% blocks from Union 1155 Ohio 2 bedroom and large lounge 1½ bath Exciting energy efficient All appliances. Over-the-door refrigerator, over-driver. Wired for cable.
- rental furniture available from Thompson Crawley
GUARANTEED SPACE at Nasimh Hall for 96 students from Nasimh Hall for 96 LIST! Call Matt, 842-5315 for details anytime. HOME FOR RENT Share large 5 dkm/ lath on the 2nd floor in BASEMENT and 6th bdm or study. Two fun-loving and responsible echolithic student schools offer bdm or study bills at 14th and Kentucky. Contact Darryl at 842-5315 if ever 216-366-2868. 1217 N. Houston Drive.
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
Glenhaven Apartments walk to class
一
1. need a roommate I have a very nice brand-new apartment that comes with washers and dryer. $200 plus utilities. I need someone who is casual but likes to have fun. Call in events. 843-6708. Room for rent in a studio/1/2 unit. Seek quiet, nonnaming, graduate student. 8423-830B.
FOR SALE
A FEW 2 BR APTS.
LEFT FOR FALL
9 AND 11 MONTH
LEASES AVAILABLE
- CENTRAL AIR & HEAT
• EALLY FUILLED KITCHENS
• LOWEST UTILITIES IN TOWN
• REDUCED SECURITY DEPOSITS
841-5797
13" Sylvania remote control color TV and stand.
Call 841-7897 after 6 p.m.
**1084 Honda E elite Delite 100cc* Jack 7130, asking
**1250. Perfect condition!!** Call 749-3525.
5 piece white pearl drum set. Excellent condition.
Best offer over $690. 4 concert trombones 8" , 10" ,
16" - white. Excellent condition. Best offer over
$725. Call Cash: 841-141-81.
An Absolutely Awesome Array of Antiques, collectibles and neat stuff—would you love it? The new line of new comic books. Playbags. Penthouse, etc. loads of antiques in a good deal. A good book; the right vintage clothes for any occasion. antique toys, fine art glass, badger fur, antique trunk boxes. best selection of antique furniture in the area. Quaint Flea Market. antique toys.
BRING. THIS AD AND
RECEIVE ADDITIONAL
$20 OFF MONTHLY RENT
Bainian Sale-Whidboard board & accessories
Bainian Sale-Windurffur board & accessories
Cairn Salon Use - cusb B. B.
www.cairnsalon.com
sion, antique toys, fine art glass, dout suit furniture, miniatures, fixtures, and the collection of antique furniture in the area. *Quanta Flea Flat*, 41, New Hampshire, Open Sat & Sun. 10-5
CALL 843-4754 FOR DETAILS
Sunrise Apartment
Offering luxurious twinrooms and apartment living.
Stop by to see our show unit at 9th and Michigan or call . . .
841-1287
Office: M.P.M. Office
bookshelves, Hoover vacuum, floorlamp, pic
books, coffee tables. 841-1499.
Drumset. LUIDWIG Ddl Bass, Roto-tones, Pastec
ymbal, 2 stands. Excellent condition $900
CHEAF SF4 40 classes-Asimov to Zelazny. Call Dph.ap at 3242 effect.8.
cymbal, 2 stands. Excellent condition $300
negotiable. Call once after 3 p.m. on tue.
Thu. 8:30 a.m. or Sat. 10:30 a.m.
contact: james@learningmusic.com
learningmusic.com
Fender ribs, suitcase model, excellent condition.
$500. Call 1-722-6887
For Sale: 1985 Kawasaki Ninja. 600 R, clean.
fast. Must sell. C14-729-3648
For Sale: Disc CD player, AMS, one song and
disc recorder. $125-$notable. 842-4594.
For sale, classical record collection -400 LP's
+42 case. Excellent to mint condition. Bob at
boblev.com
FULLY IBM PC/XT COMPAFFITE fountain
database 7500 #38694 MODEM
7500 #38694 1424 after 2 nm
$100. Large input capacity
microrefrigerator
type $150; both in excellent condi-
tion type $150
GARAGE SALE, 120 MELLHOLLAND, implement seats, Christmas tree, cast iron steaks, brass baskets, brush, Gibson bass guitar, wooden bass, sm. gas heater, old brass bed pins, wood churn, walnut Victorian furniture
Introduction offer. PC compatible computer
support is offered. MIDOS, Softsog, GEM, basic, I year warrant.
Fully licensed.
1/2 ft 30 Wheeler (nice), Herbalife products, baby board, infant carrier, Avon bottles (from 96%), coats, clothes to shoes. Saturday, September 12th.
Professional sound, all accessories, only $106.
apiece. 841-9488.
Korg Micropreset synthesizer, M-500 $200. Call
Korg Microprotect synthesizer; M-500 $200; Call
1-913-728-6087
MAX'S COMICS. Comic Books, Playbills, Penh-
house, etc. 813 New Hampshire.
Migata 2° Grandrouting bicycle, both racks,
fully equipped. New is $600; must买 at $300
and $150 respectively.
Mint 85 Shinno Super Sport. Shimano 600 compoments. Give $479, sell at $228 or $216-188.
**** MOTHIRAL GOOD USED FURNITURE
Magazin
Monday - 10 p.m., Saturday 12 o'p.m.
79-499-9980
Mold Hops Express 109, 3 baskets, clean, $175.
Also, 179 Gram Torno 2108 BQ 841-0605.
Motorcycle for sale. 175 Ender-make offer (no less than $400) Call Chris at 841-3624
Moving Mavis 10-speed air conditioner, color TV
King Air Conditioner, cable TV, bldg B15, Apt. 19, Stnfer Place or call
1-800-323-7468
***New Cordless Bell Phones***
Overstocked and must be sold by EOM! **
***
Nahiki 10-speed with Shimano Comp. Beautiful.
Less than 50 miles. $150. 914-5436.
Racing Bicycle 22 pounds $800 one year ago,
sacrifice at $100. 841-9488
Sailboards; HC 2065 Funfair with 5.7 foot
bannonboard; HC 6106军士板 with 6.2m sfa
bonnboard; 400mm f4-5.6 lens
Bucky's Drive-in, a KU tradition for 26 years, has openings for the noon-hour shift, weekend shift, and night shift. Apply in person between to a m. Acknowledge your BANK YOU. BUCKY'S DRIVE-IN, sth and iowa.
Tandy 1000, 128K, memory expansion option. One disk drive, second disk drive optional. Matrix printer, built-in modem, and green printer $1100 or best offer. Call collect 128-3900
Twain matte, box springs, and frame. Like new. Ask $100; 841-6941. Call 5:30 p.m.
justable boom-4800 w will separate -16422622
Tandem 1000 13KW memory expansion仕
Vaccuum - Save big money. Residuities with
a Vacuum can be stored in a bag or in the
Lavencre Vacuum & Sewing Room. 916 Mafia
Totale interview course for all four parties of CFA
pass the CFA exam on the first try. Call after 6
am for the exam.
AUTO SALES
Why rent? Bly my 1470 mobile home for only $89/month, or a brand new A.C. Bally home at A.C. Bally for ready cash on graduation.
1983 Ford LTD, VG,A/C,PB,PS,SW,24 MPGI $299, or best offer, BM43-75392.
1980 Datsum pickup. Silver, 5-speed, A/C Must
price; Priced below book value, new AM/FM
cassette stereo and near new Topper thrown in.
842-4286
1973 Pontiac Catalina PB, PS, A/C, radio, extra clean. Call 841-7897 after 6 p.m.
CARS SELL for $155 (average!) Also see:
toys. etc. Now available 805-687-6000 Extent
good condition. 841-7069 or 381-74-42
BILY NEW YORK
514-841-7069 841-74-42 OVER
514-841-7069 841-74-42
79 Toyota Celica. Manual standard features
air/conditioning, stereo, etc. Good condition.
Sold by WDJ.
FUN SPORTS CAR-1976 TR7, great condition,
$1500 CALL: 844-6974 (Jewes).
74 VV Super-Biteer new parts. Good condition.
$150 or best offer. 841-8752
D-BASE PROGRAMMER: 25% position to write and maintain student records programming using Zenith hard disk Qualifications: experience proficiency in programming language, grad. student; Salary: $260/month for 10 hours/week. Complete application at the Applied English Center, 24 Lippincott, 864-406.
Tune up your import car, $35. Parts and labor insatisfaction, satisfaction call, Call Aaron.
Buffalo Bob's Smoketown and Mass. Street Deli bring home service and service table equipment and service table equipment, hour table service $2.01 plus tips. Must have experience with Buffalo Bob's smoketown. Apply at 719 Broomstick above Buffalo Bob's Smoketown.
Child care needed for local church for Sunday and
Wednesday evening. Also, some child care needed
for special occasions. Good pay. Call Christi
at 814-0451 for Saturday interview.
Bertane X19-18.8, leather interior, loaded 31K.
Found-bank dog, mixed breed, female. 19-20 inches. Tall with spartan tongue. Found on Friday at the store.
ATTENTION: STUDENTS! Natl firm prepar-
ment is required. For job
quality, coop. scholarships are awarded,
interns are possible, & you may earn 2.3.
creditrs or semester. Must apply now.
Found: watch near Green Hall on Friday,
September 4. Call 749-206 to identify
Female help wanted for housekeeping Mondays and Fridays, noon to 5 p.m. Call 843-3868. Fragrance model-demonstrator on Saturday. Approximately 14-16 hours total. Please email resume to us at info@ticketmaster.com.
$10-$96 Weekly/up mailing circulars Rush sushi
$10-$96 Weekly/up mailing circulars Rush sushi
Blvd. Birch, Blox, DQ, Deer, Bay Hill, CA
Blvd. Birch, Blox, DQ, Deer, Bay Hill, CA
I A R E R D W E E E S S
suture room, we need little extra time
join the fun of work on the turnipke
fardes a new accepting applications for all shifts
good pay, flexible hours, meal discounts, free t
allowance, and a pleasant atmosphere can all be
provided. Call 843-8203 for all application
accepted anytime. Call 843-8203
Full or part-time work as NANNY. You set the hours. Child Care Coordinating Service. 842-0655.
GOVMENT WARNINGS $16,040-$85,320.yr. When Hiring Call 807-687-4000. Ext R/978 for our needs.
LOST-FOUND
Secretary church secretary to work two mornings a week. Monday 8:45, Tuesday 10:30, Thursday 8:45, 10:30. Tuesday through Saturday morning.
feed cooks for day shift. Apply in person 2-4 p.m.
l Tactace, 745 New Hampshire
Now hiring for part-time video route position.
Will maintain, repair and collect video games.
must have experience, credible references.
must be a graduate degree or 710 majors above Buffalo bob's Smoketown.
HIRING:
Government jobs-your area.
515.000-8490. Call 6028 8383. EXT. 4053
Local advertising agency seeks account sales
grey kelly garten will take you a mile to half-grown. From 1618 Kentucky, 841-2560
Now hiring experienced line cooks and prep cooks. Wage commensalize with experience. Must have some daytime availability. Apply at 179 Mass, above Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse.
Part-time graphic designer wanted. Apply at J-Hawk Svak from 10.1.
HELP WANTED
Person to sit with by B year old after school
Alvamar area 749-458 after 2 or Saturdays.
River City Reunion Collector's Corner, 810 E.130. Books: Ephemera-Art. Call for appl
The Art & Design departments are hiring part-
time Student Gallery Monitors. These are work-
day positions. Gallery hours are between 8:30
and 1:00 Sunday through Saturday. Visit
www.theartdesign.com/DesignBldg. 864-4401
Sales-gift company needs 2 salespeople to sell a great line of over 250 gifts locally. P/T hours $2.00/hour plus commission (to start). Some sales experience help but not necessary.
Videostore Help!! Retail sales experience a must. Credit & collection experience preferred.
Videoworks 1447 W. 23rd, 843-9206
Want your own business? Now is the time to start eating at an Avon restaurant. Call Julie at 412-358-2629.
We have openings in carpentry, electrical and general labor crews. We provide training at least two shifts, either 8-12 or 1-5, M-F, we would like you to apply *Housing Maintenance Shop*, 230 West 19th, Room A1.
WORK STUDY position available in the Study Abroad Office. Must be able to work Monday and Wednesday, 9 a.m. to 12 p.m and 3:30 p.m. for telephone information, answering telephone, giving out general study abroad information to students, some typing mail out, others typing emails. In lieu of the Office of Study Abroad, 203 Lippincott.
MISCELLANEOUS
$10-$360 Weekly/Wk? mailing circles! "Quasia/bosses. Information: RUSH self-
addressed envelope CM/MA-CDQ POLB 7730, Rockwell II. 81126
JEREMY SUNS. "Totshall we have the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy spirit, and with all thy mind, and And the second is like unto it. Thou shall mandreats both the law and the prophet; thou mandreats both the law and the prophet."
SKI KEYSTONE for, Thankgiving, November
25-29. Low package prices, includes air/ hotel/ski
rent/transfers/lift tickets. Call 843-5698.
Package available without air.
Small established foreign car repair shop for sale in Lawrence. Inquiries: 841-5496.
We have a new store that you can get cash on almost anything of value. Also, good buys on hornets, antlers, bumble bees, borer squirrels, amplifiers. Stop in! Jawhawk Pawn & Jewelry, W 6th W. 8th H. 6/19.
PERSONAL
Rare and Used Records. Buy, Sell, or Trade Quanttrill's 811 New Hampshire.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, SARAH!! LOVE, YOUR IRRITABLE ROOMIE
LAWRENGE'S
FINEST
SELECTION OF
RECORDED MUSIC
HOURS:
Mon Sat 10-8
Sun 11-6
DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
844 MASSACHUSETTS
903-749-4221
AEPIis-Let's keep the Greek Week trophy in BILINGHAM and see it! The General
siWM attractive and athletic. Would like to meet same for ? Straight acting and appearing.
Send name, letter, phone and photo to: DC P.O. BON 107, Lawrence K.S. 66441
Happy 21st, Vicki Vikling! Don't do anything we wouldn't do. Love, Donn, Cherri, Angela, and
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
Sunflower Mt. Bike Workshop-Learn how to repair & adjust my Mt. Bike Thursday evening, 6:4 p.m., begins September 17 $5, 804 Massachusetts, Lawrence, 934-5000
PENNYLANE
Hey Sip, Yup!" This is concerning Scott and Tom. On Sept 18, we are combining two very different cultures Fajaitile and the Corona River nested deep in the lake. Join us on the scenic route.
Huny, Happy anniversary, I宝好. I love you forever plus two days. Oh yeah, oh yeah. Jilly. Julie (Com grad): met you in K C weeks ago. Joulie will love to meet you again. The pre-schoolers are driving me crazy and I need adult supervision. Respond here. Signed I dance with you
Want cheap music? At Exile Records, we buy and sell LPs,' cassettes, & CD's. We also have new alternative sounds. Exile Records, 13 East 8th, 842-309-509
SERVICES OFFERED
Katie I don't know what I'd do without you-
Thank you for everything! Love you-Court.
Michelle. We almost didn't make it, but-Happy
we were. I got the Steve's, ya waay ye
a the spooper.
Capture the golden tan with a bouillon portrait from Photon Plus. Call Mike or McKee at 749-7086.
Post-freshmen Neds with spiked hair and poodle perms JJ Annel-Jaine see" sex "Happy birthday we'll be both terrific friends!" Tomorrow will be fun.
COMPUTER CONSULTING Tutoring and programming for elementary computer science courses. Work on engineering, projects and other works. Reasonable prices for individuals and groups.
T. -Happy !!! In trutina becomes truer every day. My wings are sprouting and I love sweet. O.I.R
Shannon-Hawk 20th birthday to the best roommate. Did you ever think it would last?!My alarm, hairspray! Thanks a lot. I am awake. I thank Alicia. I thank a coordinator, file-drabble, UDK's, Nagel, and sleeping under my bed! I don't know what I do without those late-night calls. I thank Bair. Birthday greetings. —! Heather!
CALDSON SUN PHOTO" is looking for young interested in developing a modeling portfolio. 15% over cost. Call 841 16980
oWiNEE EDUCATION offered thru Midwest
and regional universities. Required
years, driver's license obtainable, transportation
travel
HACKBACK PHOTO fast and dependable party service CHE 8437700 to book your next party
GRAF/X: Scientific and statistical illustration,
maps, drawings, slides, editing aid, also watercolor/acrylic. Phone 841 2636.
Tracy, wake up, wake up, the sun's up...it's your 1st birthday. We love you, your rooms.
JAM FAVORS for all your party favor needs. Hats, shirts, paddles, glasses. If you have a unique favor idea, call us and we'll find it for you.
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ekachrome services within 24 hours. Complete B/W services. PASSPORT $6.00. Art & Design Building. Room 286. 864-1470.
BUS. PERSONAL
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $8/hr, 843-9032
(p.m.)
943-6000 HEADACHE, BACKACHIE, ARM PAIN, LEG
PAIN! Student and most insurance accepted. For
complete chiropractic care call Dr. Mark
Jones 943-6000 or 974
**Workshops:** Our mechanic will teach you how to change flats, true wheels, maintain brakes & tums on your vehicle. We also work with stions 85 auch, Saturday, 10 a.m., begins September 19. Sunflower, 84, Massachusetts.
MATH TITLOT. Algebra through multivariable
calculus for 1 student. $1 for student for 2 students; $4 for
student for 3 students.
Pregnant and need help? Call Birdlight at Confidential help/free pregnancy testing.
Amyx
Barber Shop 8421/2 Mass.
$5.90
Reg. Haircuts
for Your Convenience
Welcome Students
**MUSIC**1 **MUSIC**2 **MUSIC**3 **MUSIC**
*Red House Audio-Mobile Party Music*, 8 track studio, P.A. and Lights, Maximum Audio Wizardry, Call Brad 749-1275.
Now in Lawrence - ineffective 4-track demos,
DJ sound and light company, private guitar
and bass lessons. Basic Productions, 843-4243
Vice. Over and Past ... 191-403-6060
Prompt contraception and abortion services in
Lawrence. 841-5716.
QUALITY Tutoring, Statistics, Economics and
math. Send resumes to tutoring@ucla.edu,
preparation or general review. SA with 7 years
experience in teaching. Please e-mail resume to:
Gary Sullivan, edt@ucla.edu.
SEWING ALTERATIONS-love to new for others,
reasonable rates. Please call Julie at 842-4300.
Graystone Athletic Club
Grayson Athletic Club
Special Student Membership
No QR code
Raquebitat, Tennis
Exercise Equipment
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your driver's license without pat testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided 841-2316.
Warm, caring people who like children age three to five are required to be on duty at least two hours a day per week. Between 7:30 and 3:00 Monday friday. Daycare volunteers need from 12:30 to 5:30, for care of children under 5.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* TIE DYE! *
Barb's Vintage Rose
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
- Der Woman word processing. Former editor will transform your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctured, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. Call us at (800) 253-4567.
TYPING
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large.
Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing.
Judy, 842-7945 or Liza, 841-1915.
Absolutely Fast Typing Is Back! Dependable.
Reasonable Rates, Late Night Typing Available.
Kathy 841-2400 days, 749-5284 eve.
2 Smart Word Processing, Spelling Corrected
Very Reasonable. Call Foster 749-2740
A1- reliable professional typing: Term papers,
Thesis, Presentations
ACT NOW. PAPERS-THESES-RESUMES
WRITING LIFELEVEL 841-3469.
i plus Typing, Letters, resumes, thesis, law typing, etc. 13 years experience Call Terry 842 4754 or 842 6713 evenings and weekends.
Primary quantity is not required for
Term papers, theses, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter
printing, spelling corrected. 842-7247.
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS,
MOMMY'S TYPING is back from Australia !!
842 737 before 9 am, please
for professional typing/word processing, call Myra. 841-4960. Fall special $12/page, space-niche.
KU SECRETARY. Typing and word processing.
Accurately spell. Spotting corrected
letter quality. Pickup on campus. Montica
40141. Evenings-weekends.
Quality typing or word processing for thesis,
dissertations, resumes, term papers, applications.
Professional editing, composition
available. Have M.S. Degree.
Quality Typing includes excellent spelling, phtte-
graphy, and punctuation. 843-0274 delivery
packup delivery. Available at: 843-0274
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing, manuscripts, resumes, theses, letter quality printing, etc. 843-5062
WRIGHT'S TYPING SERVICE: Term papers, theses, miscellaneous, IBM Selectric. Spelling corrected. 843-9554
Band needs secure basement or garage in which to store equipment and supplies. Band will work a two for 20 or three hours per practice. Will be able to attend up to six days a week.
WANTED
to practice and store equipment. We practiced in a workshop with 10 students paying $8.00 per month. Call Bill or Eric at 843-2767. Non-traditional, non-smoker, mature male graduate student to share existing rent with mature female grad student. Please call 843-5589-ask for further information upon request. Would prefer to meet in person.
Pianist for Lawrence Wesleyan Church, one hour Sunday morning, two hours during week for rehearsal with soloists. Compensation is use of 642.931/381.758 for personal rehearsal. Call 642.931/381.758
Urgent a non-smoking male roommate to share. A 2-bedroom apartment. $165/month plus utilities. Call Cesar at 844-0649 (days) or 842-1525 (after 5:30 p.m.).
Tutors. All subjects $4 (individuals), $8 (group submit application, transcript, schedule of classes and tutoring times). Supportive Educational Services. 843-9711.
Roommate wanted: Female, $165 per month. includes utilities Close to campus/downtown. Call 749-5253.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wanted: ALL SPORTS TICKET-Make fast $$.
call John at 749-4896
Wanted 2 female roommates $170 and 1/3 utilities
Trailridge. Call 842-6541.
Call at John 749-4866
Wanted: All Sports Ticket. Will pay well for it!
Wanted: four drawer file cabinet in good condition.
Steve 8642942.
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words.
Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words.
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Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Daily Kansan.
Deadline is on Monday at 4:00pm 2 days prior to publication
Words 1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 days 15 days 1 month
0.15 2.85 4.20 6.00 10.00 14.95 18.90
16.20 3.35 5.00 7.05 11.30 16.55 20.75
21.25 3.90 5.80 8.10 12.60 18.10 22.60
26.30 4.40 6.55 9.15 13.90 19.70 24.40
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001 announcements 300 for sale 500 help wanted 800 services offered
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14
Friday, September 11, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
RO
ROLL-OVER SALE
IT'S TIME TO ROLL OVER! Every fall University Audio clears out its demonstrator models, overstocks, and discounted items...And that time is now! So come in and save as never before. But hurry, some items are one-of-a-kind!
RECEIVERS
KENWOOD KR-V20
40 watts/CH digital receiver 8-bit graphic LCD
List: $250.00...NOW $149.95
KENWOOD KR-V45
55 watts/CH digital receiver. Video ready ON-
List: $299.95. NOW $199.95
KENWOOD KR-V55
List: $359.95...NOW $239.95
LUXMAN LV-100/T-102
35 watts/ch amplifier and tuner. Very high performance.
List: $630.00 pr...NOW $349.95 pr.
JVC RX-150
25 watts/CH digital receiver. 8 - 8 tuner presets.
List: $180.00...NOW $129.95
JVC RX-350
45 watts CHA digital receiver. Wireless remote, 5-band EQ, acoustic expand for video sound
List: $319.95...NOW $189.95
CASSETTE DECKS
2-motor logic control cassette deck with Dohy B&C
List: $250.00...NOW $179.95
JVC TDX-301
JVC TD-W110
Dual well cassette deck, soft- touch controls, Dohy.
List: $175.00...NOW $119.95
JVC TD-W220
Dual well cassette deck. Dolby B&C,ute reverse on deck B.
Doubly & B noise reduction and soft-sound
List: $99.95 NOW $49.95
List: $250.00...NOW $179.95
SANYO RD-529
SANYO RD-W79
Dolly B double deck mini-mat
List: $249.95...NOW $149.95
HARMAN KARDON TD-302
Dolby B&C, HX-Pro circuit for extended high-frequency response. Certified to meet advertised specs.
List: $450.00...NOW $349.95
SPEAKERS
EPI TE-100
ALISON 120
8" 2-way acoustic suspension speakers.
"Best buy" rated by most hi-fi publications.
95 ea.
NOW $79.95 ea.
ALLISON: SEVEN
8' 2-way speaker system with dome tweeters, bi-layer woofers.
List: $149.95 ea.
Now $NOW $149.95 ea.
ALLISON 120
WALKMANS
Floor-standing B' 2-way speaker.
"Best buy" rating from consumer magazines.
Best buy rated by most stores.
List: $199.95 ea...NOW $79.95 ea.
"Best buy" rating from consumer magazines.
List: $279.95 ea. NOW $99.95 ea.
PAISLEY FPL-1000 Very high efficiency European design drivers for low distortion, high power handling. NOW $149.95 ea.
RAISLEY SPL-1000
List: $259.00 ea...NOW $149.95 ea.
SANYO MGR-650D
SANYO MGR-62
List: $49.95...NOW $19.95
TOSHIBA RT-KS1
TOSHIBA RJ-10 Waterproof router with player. Auto reverse.
Dolby N.R. Includes headphones.
List: 159.95...NOW $99.95
JVC-F3
Auto reverse a cassette, AM/FM radio, 5-band EQ,
Dolby N.R. Includes headphones.
List: $119.95...NOW $99.95
TELEVISION
SANYO AVM-210 High-performance 20" TV monitor-tuner. Wireless remote, stereo tuner.
List: $599.95...NOW $429.95
SANYO 31C472
(3" color TV with wireless remote.
TOSHIBA CX-2045
List: $399.95...NOW $229.95
List: $599.95...NOW $399.95
HITACHI CT-2267
NFC CT-2060A
22" stereo TV. Wireless remote control, audio-video inputs.
List: $699.95...NOW $479.95
20" stereo TV with remote control, audio video inputs.
20 stale IW will have to go to
List: $599.95 NOW $399.95
VCRs
SANYO VHR-1900
SANYO VHR-3250
SANTO VIRT 1950
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Details page 6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday September 14, 1987 Vol. 98, No. 16
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Canoe race fun for KU,K-State despite mishaps
By BEN JOHNSTON
Staff writer
Mishaps were a common occurrence Saturday as KU and Kansas State University students tried to paddle their canoes smoothly down a winding stretch of the Kansas River.
The Kaw River Canoe Race was sponsored by the K-State association of residence halls. It was the first canoe race between KU and K-State students since 1983. Last year, K-State students competed against each other.
The race took place on a 32-mile stretch of the river between the Kaw Valley Access in Manhattan and the Maple Road Bridge, a few miles east of St. Marys. About 55 KU students and 550 K-State students participated.
Monday Morning
Students were on teams of between nine and 27 people. Each team had to have three people, including at least one female, in the canoe, and three new team members could enter at each of the eight checkpoints along the race route. Four KU teams and 26 K-State teams participated.
hoss Nigro, Kansas City, Mo.
junior and president of the KU Association of University Residence Halls, said lack of transportation was the main reason more KU students did not compete.
but he didn't want to come out to Manhattan and then go to St. Marvs," he said.
K-State teams took the top three places and won the traveling trophy, which is awarded to the school that has two out of the top three finishers.
KA-All Staff, a five-woman, fourman team, won the race in a time of seven hours and 10 minutes.
seven hours later.
Todd Martin, team captain, said,
"I participated in the race last year,
and we finished about last. This year
we were really enthusiastic and
determined, and we didn't give up.
We also went to aerobics class to
prepare for the race."
Darrin Phelps, another team member, said he was tired after the race but happy with the results.
but happy we will tipped over twice
"Last year we tipped over twice and came in about an hour and a half behind the leaders. This year we
decided not to tip over, and we didn't." Phelps said.
Although no KU team finished in the top three, two teams said they were pleased with how well they did.
KU's Finest, a team consisting of 14 men and six women from Oliver Hall, finished fourth.
David Platt, Roeland Park senior and team captain, said he didn't receive the canoe the team used in the race until 11 p.m. Friday.
"I got the canoe from my uncle in Garnett," Platt said. "We also built the canoe rack yesterday.
"I think having a camouflaged canoe was one of our advantages. They couldn't see us sneaking up on them. It was the only camouflaged canoe in the race."
However, the team had a couple of disadvantages before the race started. Platt said.
"Some of the team got lost in Manhattan and couldn't find us for an hour and a half." Platt said. "Final checkouts we found us at the second checkpoint."
"We also only had two oars for most of the first half of the trip. Somebody went to the Wal-Mart in Manhattan and got us an oar."
Platt said the team was in ninth place when it received the car.
We made up ground with the oar. It was definitely a well-invested $2.96". Platt said as a teammate held up his hand, the tag price still firmly attached.
Platt said the team also had a problem when the canoe tipped over in deep water.
"Our teammates had to come out and save us," he said. "We drifted for awhile. They had to swim out and get us. It took about ten minutes. We came in to that checkpoint sixth and went out ninth."
Other KU teams had less success in the race.
PAF United, a team consisting of six men and three women from McCollum Hall, finished sixteenth.
Catherine Bishcoff, Ascunion,
Paraguay, freshman, said the team
had problems early in the race but
finished strong.
"We came from second-to-the last to 18th," Bischoff said. "We drew the first starting time, and we were the
See CANOE, p. 6, col. 6
THE MASSIVE BUBBLE IS HELPING TO CATCH THE WIND.
Craig Nowatzke, Prairie Village freshman, makes a giant bubble out of Friday afternoon in front of Wescoe Hall dishwashing soap. Nowatzke and his friends were entertaining students
Mr. Bubble
Husband is charged in wife's murder
By JAVAN OWENS
A 40-year-old Lawrence man was charged Friday afternoon in Douglas County District Court with the murder of his wife.
Carl L. Kemp, 101 Michigan St., lot 46, was charged with second-degree murder in connection with the death of his 32-year-old wife, Judy.
A warrant for Kemp's arrest is pending his release from Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Kemp entered the hospital Thursday afternoon for observation of low blood pressure.
Lawrence police first went to the trailer home of Carl and Judy Kemp on Sept. 9, after Kemp called the police dispatcher to inquire how to make funeral arrangements for his wife.
After a nine-minute conversation with Kemp, the dispatcher sent a patrol car out to the home, Lawrence assistant police chief Ron Olin said.
Would be used as evidence in course Police suspect that the woman had
Olin said he could not detail the conversation that prompted the dispatcher to send a patrol, because it would be used as evidence in court.
been dead for about a week before they found her in a wooden box in a shed adjacent to the trailer.
Olin said that although the case had been turned over to District Attorney Jim Flory, the entire detective staff and some sheriff's deputies would follow up on the case for the next week.
"We have about 14 people following up on this case," Olin said.
An affadavit requesting a charge of second-degree murder was presented to Judge Jean Shepherd early Friday morning. Second-degree mur
dier is a class B beloy. If convicted,
Kemp would face a minimum of five
to 15 years in prison and a maximum
of 20 years to life.
20 sheepers to hire
Shepherd set bond at $150.000.
Flory said evidence in the final coroner's report had led him to request the second-degree murder charge. He said a forensic pathologist also would be consulted. Police also have questioned Kemp.
"There were some coroner findings of great significance." Flory said, although he would not reveal the cause of death.
Debate over nomination of Bork goes to Senate
Black greek leaders hold weekend retreat
See BORK, p. 6, col. 5
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — To his supporters, the confirmation of Robert H. Bork as Supreme Court Justice would give the court a lasting conservative legacy. To his liberal foes, the Bork appointment could end three decades of progress for women, blacks and civil libertarians.
After waging an ideological struggle via news conferences, studies and letter writing, the rival camps will move their battleground tomorrow to the place where it counts: the Senate Judiciary Committee.
More than 100 potential witnesses have asked to testify in support of, or in opposition to, the 60-year-old Bork, whose future on the court will be decided by a large group of undecided senators now sitting on a political hotseat.
Much is at stake in these televised proceedings, both sides say, because the court has reached a turning point following the retirement of Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr. It can move toward moderation or strict conservatism.
By ELAINE SUNG
Special to the Kansan
Members of the eight black Greek organizations at the University of Kansas attended a greek leadership retreat this weekend, an event separate from the activities of Greek Week.
None of the black organizations participated in Greek Week, during which 24 fraternities and 14 sororites formed 12 teams to compete for points through various activities.
bobby Jann, Interfraternity Council vice president for campus affairs, said that all houses on campus were invited to participate in Greek Week but that the black organizations chose not to.
"We'd asked someone a long time ago, but they said that they had their own things to do." Jann said.
president for campus affairs, said that black greek leaders were invited last spring in person and by letter but that they did not attend because of differences in the ideas of the Greek system.
"They have a real different view. They work more in the community, and they're not into national things." Campbell said.
Kim Campbell, Panhellenic vice
Campbell said.
Melinda Grace, president of Alpha Kappa Alpha, said she did not remember being invited to participate in Greek Week, although it was possible a written invitation was lost in a pile of correspondence during summer.
Jolynn Baucm, a member of Alpha Kappa Alpha, said no black Greek leaders mentioned attending Greek Week at a recent meeting of black fraternities and sororites. She said she did not know whether the black
organizations had been invited.
would have loved to participate." Baucam said. She said she assumed Greek Week was only for houses with live-in members.
houses with it. KU has four black fraternities and four black sororites, only one of which has live-in members. That fraternity is under renovation this year.
Leaders of the predominantly white greek houses met in the spring to plan Greek Week, Jann said.
London Bonds, assistant director of the Organizations and Activities Center, said information from that meeting might not have been passed on to black leaders. But she said she didn't think the predominantly white organizations chose not to invite the black Greek houses.
"I think there was just miscommunication in what was taking place.
Bonds and Vernell Spearman, director of minority affairs, planned this weekend's retreat for the black houses. Bonds said the retreat was organized to educate blacks and show support for those in black Greek organizations.
"It is a good way to share information that would be valuable to them," she said. "It provides cooperation and cohesiveness among the group."
Members of the predominantly white greek organizations at KU did not attend, although officers of Interfraternity Council and Panhellenic were notified of the retreat and told they could attend, Bonds said.
The retreat included guest speakers and sessions on academic and constructive pledging programs, male and female relationships, hazing, and media relations.
Dan Rustlinen
Former Harvard professor Timothy Leary speaks to a sold-out River City Reunion crowd. Leary spoke Saturday at Liberty Hall.
Performers merge generations
Reunion audience hears voice from the psychedelic past
By JULIE McMAHON Staff writer
Timothy Leary, a former Harvard University professor who favored legalized drugs in the 1960s, spoke in favor of psychedelic drug use and against government interference.
The old and the new anti-establishments merged Saturday at Liberty Hall.
Jello Biafra, lead singer for the punk band The Dead Kennedys, spoke against government censorship.
Biafra had come from an observances trial in Los Angeles last week, where he was tried for distribution of harmful matter to minors.
The charges stemmed from a poster by H.R. Giger, who was the Oscar-winning set designer for the movie "Alien." Giger's poster was included in The Dead Kennedy's last album.
Saint.
Biafra's trial resulted in a hung jury. The judge declared a mistrial, so Biafra was acquitted.
so Biafra was acquitted.
Biafra gave satirical dialogues with names such as "Vietnam Never
Happened," "Why I'm Glad the Space Shuttle Blew Up" and "The U.S. is Under Martial Law."
But Leary was the main attraction for the sold-out house.
When his performance was over, he took up a collection for the No More Censorship Defense Fund, which he founded to pay for his trial.
which he rounded up for me.
"Here's my鞋," he said. "We'll take a collection to help Oral Roberts die."
figure in the book.
"I'd like to see for myself what he's all about," she said. "He's supposed to be a pretty wild dude."
"I thought he was pretty weird back then. I have no idea what he has
Marianne Ault-Rich, Topeka resident, heard Leary speak in 1964 in Greenwich Village while she was attending New York University.
Carl Ringler, who was with Crittenden, said. "Yeah, I want to see what somebody who's done that much acid is like."
Connie Crittenden, Lawrence resident, said she came to see Leary because he was such an influential figure in the '60s.
Nik Huffman, Kansas City, Mo. senior, said Leary belonged in Lawrence last week.
to say now," she said.
"He was such a big part of what's been going on here this week with the River City Reunion," Huffman said.
Some people at the River City Reunion were a big part of Leary's life. Leary said Allen Ginsberg and William S. Burroughs had helped transform him from a straight-laced Harvard professor.
"The people here in this room taught me," he said.
Leary said Ginsberg would be remembered as a great American poet and a "cosmic social worker." Leary said.
---
He said Burroughs knew everything about drugs' effects on the human body. Burroughs was envious of the free, legal drug supply Leary had while at Harvard, but critical of the naivete of the experimenting professors. Leary said.
Leary said the "Summer of Love"
See RIVER, p. 6, col. 4
2
Monday, September 14, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
U.N. secretary-general visits Iraq in an effort to end 7-year-old war
BAGHIDAD, Iraq — U.N. Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuelar took his peace mission to Iraq after Iran's president told him yesterday that Iran would keep fighting until a Nuremberg-style court punished Iraq as the aggressor.
Earlier in the day, Iraq threatened what one official called a "more severe war" unless Iran
accepted the U.N. Security Council's July 20 resolution demanding a cease-fire in the 7-year-old war
"So far I am neither pessimistic nor optimistic," the U.N. leader told reporters in Iraq. He said his two days of talks with Iranian leaders in Teheran dealt exclusively with the proposal of the cease-fire resolution.
Cuomo's travels for peace, not presidency
ALBANY, N.Y. — Gov. Mario Cuomo said his upcoming visit to the Soviet Union as a guest of its Russian republic was a mission that involved peace and politics, but not the presidency.
Gorbachev was negotiating an arms deal with the Reagan administration, and a treaty would have to be approved by the Democratic-controlled Senate.
Cuomo, a Democrat, said last week that Soviet leaders should be interested in his political thoughts because Soviet leader Mikhail
Separated twins show signs of recovering
Cuomo, whose trip begins Saturday, said he might be able to help the peace process by advising the Soviets on U.S. politics.
BALTMORE — Seven-month-old Siamese twins began to emerge yesterday from the drug-induced comas in which they were placed after being separated at the skull a week ago, a hospital official said.
It might be Miller time for contest winner
"They're starting to show signs of waking up now," said Ghita Levine, Johns Hopkins Hospital spokesman. The twins are starting to show some spontaneous movement and attempts to breathe on their own, she said.
form, no purchase necessary.
MARLOW, Okla. — Theda Watson, 73, has never tasted beer. But she's considering taking just a taste after winning $10,000 in the Miller Brewing Co.'s "Run For Your Lite" contest, which she entered last spring by submitting a
Watson, a great-grandmother, said she might ask her husband to get her can. "I really don't like the smell of it, but I should at least taste it for the fun of it," she said.
From The Associated Press.
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He did not disclose the contents of Gorbachev's letter to Reagan, but said in Russian through an interpreter, "As for the summit, everything will depend on the results of our work here."
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Reagan and Gorbachev agreed at their first meeting in Geneva in November 1885 to make successive two years in Washington and in Moscow.
Instead, they met last October in Revkajvik, Iceland, and Gorbachev
In a brief airport news conference, Shevaradhanam said could say something. Maybe.
KUBookstores
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The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard A. Shevardnadze said yesterday a decision on another superpower summit meeting depended on the outcome of his talks this week with President Reagan and Secretary of State George P. Shultz.
"We have come here in order to roll up our sleeves and work." Shevardnadze said on his arrival from Moscow.
Shevardnadze set for talks
The white-haired Soviet official brought with him a letter for Reagan from Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev and "a degree of optimism."
Karpov said if the United States refused to include the U.S. warbads on West German Pershing I-4 missiles in the pact, the Soviets must eliminate 130 missiles in the same general range of 315 to 365 miles.
Veteran negotiator Viktor P. Karpvint hinted in an interview with the Soviet government's news agency Tass on Saturday that Sheardnadze would take a rigid stance in the final phase of the treaty negotiations.
That would still mean the scraping of U.S. and Soviet missiles that can fly up to 3,125 miles.
"Generally, without reason, I do not go anywhere, particularly America," Gorbachev said last April during Skultz's visit to Moscow.
has not responded to the president's invitation to visit America this year.
Reagan administration officials have not pressed the Soviet leader for a response, but anticipated it might come during the talks scheduled with Shevardnadze tomorrow through Thursday.
The Soviet foreign minister said the two sides had made "very substantial progress" on a treaty to ban intermediate-range nuclear missiles. But he tempered his positive remark by saying "a great deal of work also remains."
But officials on both sides seemed to go out of their way to lower expectations of any breakthrough in talks Shevardnadze will have here.
television interview that despite a public squabble, there was really little difference between the two sides on how to execute the nearly completed U.S.-Soviet treaty to eliminate intermediate-range ballistic missiles as well as cruise missiles in Europe and the Soviet Union.
"The warheads are a serious question," he said.
Shevardnadze said differences remained over warheads. On top of that, he said, procedures for verifying destruction of the U.S. and Soviet weapons as well as the pace still must be resolved.
However, Shevardnadze also declared, "We have come in a business-like spirit, and in a working spirit, and with a degree of optimism."
Similarly, Shultz said in a CBS
KU
Pope lauds those who aid aliens
The Associated Press
SAN ANTONIO, Texas — Pope John Paul II, greeted in this heavily Hispanic city yesterday by the largest crowd yet of his current tour, lauded the courage and generosity of those who aid Latin American immigrants to the United States.
"They have sought to show compassion in the face of complex human, social and political realities," the pope told the crowd of worshipers at a 144-acre site 140 miles from the Mexican border.
At a sun-beaten, open-air Mass attended by an estimated 300,000 people, the pontifice saluted those who have worked "on behalf of suffering brothers and sisters arriving from the south.
Antonio, the fourth stop on a nine-
city, 10-day U.S. tour that began
Thursday.
Many of the readings and songs of the Mass were in Spanish, and in the Mass, the pope switched to Spanish when he called upon the Hispanic community to respond to its own needs, and to show generous and effective solidarity among its own members.
The pope did not mention Sanctuary by name, but he appeared to be referring to that movement, which gives assistance to Latin Americans who enter the United States illegally.
members.
It is estimated that 21 million of the nation's 52.9 million Roman Catholics are Hispanics.
Europeans will re-enter space race
"Here human needs, both spiritual and material, continue to call out to the church with thousands of voices, and the whole church must respond" in concert with other Christian denominations, he said.
The Associated Press
Officials at ESA and Arianespace, the commercial arm of the 13-nation space consortium, say they are confident that the ISS will be in after the failure of their 180 shot.
It had been expected the Hispanic- American community would be the focal point of the pope's stop in San
PARIS — With a backlog of 46 satellites waiting for launch, the European Space Agency plans to reenter the space race tomorrow after a 16-month hiatus brought on by technical failure.
On May 31, 1986, technicians destroyed an Ariane II rocket $4½ minutes after it lifted off from ESA's space center in the Gagliano area of Italy to bring its $5 million telecommunications satellite payload into a ball of fire.
The U.S. space shuttle program is still grounded and working to recover from the January 1986 Challenger disaster, which killed the craft's crew. The NASA shuttle flights probably will not resume before next summer.
that would appear to put Ariane in the commercial driver's seat with $2.45 billion worth of launch contracts in its pocket.
Three U.S. companies have agreements to launch private satellites, but none are scheduled. Japan and China also are offering to launch satellites for a fee.
Despite the May 1986 aborted Ariane launch, countries and industries have been placed on place satellite in orbit have maintained faith in the European launcher.
Arianespace says it has signed 11 new launch contracts since May 1986. The current schedule calls for three launches this year, including tomorrow's, eight next year and nine in 1989.
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Campus/Area
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Local Briefs
Faculty breaks ground for new science library
About 75 people watched Friday as administrators and faculty joined in groundbreaking ceremonies at Kansas' new science library.
The $13.9 million library is expected to be open by the fall of 1989. It will be southeast of Hoch Auditorium and will house the University's science and technological collections, including maps, plans, journals and microfilms.
The exterior of the building will be finished in three limestone textures to match the style of other buildings on campus.
Joining in the groundbreaking and speeches were Chancellor Gene A. Budig; Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor; James Ranz, dean of libraries; Kansas Board of Regents member Richard Senecal; Charles D. Michener, Watkins distinguished professor of entomology; and W.J. Argersinger, professor of chemistry and former vice chancellor for research and graduate studies and former dean of the graduate school.
KU student's trial moved to October
The trial of a KU student who was charged after a May car accident that injured three other students has been postponed until
Eldon Alldritt, Wichita junior, is charged in Lawrence Municipal Court with one count each of reckless driving and operating under the influence. According to Lawrence police, the suspect that struck three cars parked in the 2000 block of Stewart Avenue early May 5.
Alldritt's lawyer asked for the postponement Friday morning.
Student arrested after Friday chase
A KU student was arrested early Friday morning after police chased him away from a KU sorority house.
Police said the student was trying to enter the Alpha Phi sorority, 1602 High Drive, through a fire department, residents in the house called police.
The student was arrested for attempted burglary, criminal trespassing, possession of false identification and resisting arrest, Lawrence police reported. He was later released without bond.
While fleeing the police, the man ran out of his shoes and fell, police reported. He then became entangled in a volleyball net and ran into a wall. He suffered minor brushes on his head and cuts on his feet but refused medical attention.
KU band member to play in parade
KU marching band member Mark Sinser has been selected to play in the "We the People 200" parade Sept. 17 in Philadelphia.
Simerly, Lakewood, Colo., senior, will play a euphonium in the parade, which is a celebration of the bicentennial of the U.S. Constitution. Euphoniums are similar to baritones.
From staff and wire reports.
Transcript fees will go toward computer
Rv MICHAEL MERSCHEL
Transcript pick-up service and free copies of transcripts are a thing of the past for KU students and alumni, but the director of student records says it's for their own good.
Staff writer
Since July 1, transcripts have cost
hospitals more than director of
student records.
The records office is charging the fee to help raise money for a computer system that would shorten the length of time it takes for students to receive transcripts. The new transcripts will look better, too. Thompson said.
The system will be similar to one at Kansas State University, where transcripts are provided to students instantly for $2.
At the University of Kansas, Thompson said, it now takes at least four days for the office to mail transcripts. Thompson hopes to reduce the wait to two days.
Pick-up service was canceled last January because students who made appointments to pick up their transcripts sometimes got priority over students who wanted their transcripts mailed to them, Thompson said.
Pick up service will resume when the office gets the computer system. Thompson said he hopes to have the computers working within a year. But transcripts will still cost $2, he says for other improvements in services.
Certification of enrollment, also provided by the office of student
records, will continue to be free, he said.
Thompson said he and other administrators had decided to charge for transcripts to pay for a computer system only after waiting for years to see whether they could get the money from some other source.
In April, the office informed Student Senate of the pending change and told members that the primary reason for the charge was to cut down on the number of requests. Last month the office had about 70,000 requests.
Thompson said that although a reduction in requests probably would be a side effect of the fee, it wasn't the reason fees were being charged.
"Once we get computer-generated transcripts, we won't have to worry
The same number of students probably will i equest transcripts, he said, but now that students have to pay for them probably will request fewer at a time.
about that," he said.
Thompson said that some students who were used to picking up free transcripts had been surprised or unhappy with the change. But most students never request a transcript until their senior year, he said, and never knew that transcripts once had been free.
Scott Burchett, Overland Park resident, said he wasn't bothered at all by having to pay to have a copy of his transcript sent to the junior school; he didn't bother; since it would be the only copy of his transcript he would ever need.
Burchett, who attended KU three years, said he hadn't known that the charge was something new for KU.
Students who need many copies of their transcripts for job applications or scholarships might be able to avoid paying the fee by checking to make sure they need official copies of their transcripts, student advisers said.
The records office provides transcripts that have official stamps. But students can get unofficial copies by themselves or from their advisers by copying their own transcripts from their confidential folders.
Fred Sardowski/KANSAN
Bill Moses, Chicago freshman, sports a mohawk after he was plastered with Edge extra-rich gel shaving cream. Moses and about 50 other McCollium Hall residents fought with shaving cream Saturday behind McCollium.
McCollum residents get creamed
By FRED SADOWSKI Special to the Kansan
It was a call to arms. The battlefield was a volleyball court, but nothing was at stake except good clean fun. It was the second annual McColum Hall shaving cream fight Saturday afternoon behind McColium.
The rules of the fight were simple:
do not spray cream in anyone's face,
do not go out of bounds, throw away
your empty cans and pick up a
About 1,000 cans of Edge extra-rich gel shaving cream were at the disposal of about 50 combatants, who were dressed in nothing more than shorts and T-shirts, and sometimes less than that.
packet about stress management.
This year's shaving cream figh,
was the brainchild of McColum resi-
dent assistants Mark Gillem, Walnut
Creek, Calif., senior, and Steve
Courtney, Overland Park junior. The purpose of the fight was two-fold, Gillem said.
Each resident assistant must organize an academic, social and educational workshop over the course of a semester. The shaving cream fight counts as an academic workshop because the residents
"We have all this shaving cream and we have to use it," he said. "Also, we're using the event for stress management. This is one of the ways of relieving stress."
learn stress management as a part of the fight. Gillem said.
Janet Bearly, McColum assistant residence hall director, said that the fight was an annual event. The staff had known about it. All ball residents could attend.
"I've heard a lot of good things
the fight since it happened."
she said.
The shaving cream came from "Good Stuff" boxes distributed free at the beginning of the semester throughout the hall. Every hall resident gets one of the boxes, containing items such as toiletries and aspirin. Bearly said that the shaving cream was removed from the boxes before they were distributed.
Authorities believe body in Colorado may be KU student
By a Kansan reporter
A naked body that authorities think might be that of a KU student has been recovered from a pool at the bottom of a 500-foot waterfall in Telluride, Colo.
Bill Masters, sheriff of San Miguel County, said the body of an oliv-skinned male, probably of Middle Eastern descent, was found in the pool Sept. 3.
Masters said police had found no identification for the man. He traced the man back to Lawrence through interviews with some youths who were accused of the person of the dead man's description at a Grateful Dead concert Aug. 16.
The youths said that the man had identified himself as Eric, an art student at the University of Kansas.
They said they last saw him on the day of the concert sleeping within 100 feet of the waterfall.
The youths said the man had what he called a "Harmonic Convergence Tuning Fork," a large wooden sculpture with dreadlocks of hair stapled to it. Masters surmises that the man hitchhiked to Colorado with the sculpture.
Masters said the man was 5 feet 7 inches tall and of stocky build, with shoulder-length dark hair and a thin dark beard.
Anyone with information identifying the man is asked to call the San Miguel County Sheriff's department at (303) 728-3081.
The KU police department is aid ing in the search.
Simon Says turnout short of world record
By VIRGINIA McGRATH Staff writer
Simon says: More people! Members of the Chi Omega sorority, 1345 W. Campus Rd., and Alpha KappaLambda fraternity, 2021 Stewart Ave., didn't set a world record with their Simon Says game on Friday.
They didn’t even come close. But members said the game, which was played on the lawn in front of Allen Field House, was a success anyway. “I think it went over real well, considering all of the other events that were going on last week,” said Carrie Booe, Leawood junior and member of Chi Omega. Greek Week also took place last week, so some people were participating in that, she said.
It was really funny." she said.
The two Greek houses had hoped to earn a spot in the Guinness Book of World Records by getting as many KU students as possible to play Simon Says. Officials with the Guinness Book said they would consider making a trip to at least 1,500 people participated. The actual turnout for the event was 350 people, although about 1,000 tickets were sold. Booed said.
But many of those who did turn out had a good time. Kristin Schudy, Leawood senior, was one of the participants. "At first they went really slow, and then they started to speed it up and people started getting called out. I don't even know what I did to get out. I just looked up and about four of us were doing something different than everybody else.
The Simon Says game earned over $2,000 for the Cancer Research Center at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan. Participants paid $2 in advance or $2.50 on the day of the game.
'Things are easier to organize the second time around so maybe we will.
Carrie Booe Chi Omega member
Prizes were awarded for the top three winners — those who stayed in the game the longest without being called out. First prize was a trip to Chicago for two, second prize was a $20 gift certificate from Dos Hombres and a case of Corona beer and third prize was a $20 gift certificate from Arensberg Shoes or Dos Hombres.
Brian McCaffrey, Tonganoxie senior, won the third-place prize. "A friend of mine told me about it and wanted me to go with her. She ended up getting 10th place and I got third place. It was great," he said.
Boo said she wasn't sure whether they would try again next year to break the record, and they're easier to break the second time around, so maybe we will," she said.
The Black Student Union Announces...
GENERAL ASSEMBLY MEETING
The meeting will be held Monday, September 14, 1987
Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union
6:30 p.m.
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Monday, September 14, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Hopes for Pope's tour
Pope John Paul II can expect numerous protesters as well as adoring thumbs to greet him during his tour of the United States.
Opponents of the Vatican's views on such topics as abortion, birth control, Israel and others will turn out in force to make their views known and to share a piece of the media attention that will accompany the paal visit.
There are those who decry the political overtones that are cast on what they see as simply a spiritual mission. But we should be encouraged that such robust debate regarding important social and political issues will occur.
Reagan's administration is the first in U.S. history to extend diplomatic — and therefore political — recognition to the Vatican. Moreover, the pope frequently meets with world political leaders, including such controversial figures as Austrian President Kurt Waldheim. Accordingly, we should not be disturbed that political and social activists wish to express their objections to the views of the none
Indeed, as a man of great spiritual character and leadership, it is only fitting that John Paul II should hear and meditate upon the concerns of the people of this nation, Catholic and non-Catholic alike.
Let's hope that the spirit of open debate and the earnest convictions of the protesters will not be compromised by disruptive behavior or violence. Though it is important that differing moral, social and political views be heard, the merits of a cause, whatever it may be, can never justify barbaric behavior.
The struggle for a just moral ethic cannot be served by resorting to actions which all would agree are immoral.
No pity
Gary Hart dug his own political grave, and now he must lie in it.
residential candidates give up their private lives when they run for office. What they eat, where they go and who they're with are all public information.
The electorate deserves that information so that it can choose who to support. The conduct of candidates shows much about their judgment.
Consider Hart's conduct
He issued a challenge to the press to follow him. What they would find, he said, would bore them. But it didn't.
When the press took up his challenge, followed him and pointed a spotlight on his relationship with Miami model Donna Rice, Hart was not straightforward. It was none of their business, he said.
Hart's faulty judgment led to the end of his presidential quest. In an emotional television interview last week, Hart admitted that he had committed adultery during his 29 years of marriage. He took responsibility for keeping company with Rice. He apologized to his children. He was contrite.
And yes, it was a pitiful scene.
But Hart does not deserve pity. His own actions led him on his downhill path.
Birthday blues
Modern man once again manifests his obsession with anniversaries of technical achievements.
series of technical events. Last week marked the 100th anniversary of yet another lofty invention, which perhaps changed the course of Western civilization as we know it.
This invention, small enough to rest on a thumbnail, gave generations of common people the capability to see far ahead. It allowed most to set their sights high. It transformed the blurry into the crystal-clear.
into the crystal sphere.
Yet, many celebrate this invention because it reveals the beauty nature intended. It allows man to conceal handicaps that were once openly visible.
Those still in the dark about the nature of this invention are merely blinded by its high profile.
The contact lens. Its transparency has dropped many a wearer to his knees in search of the slippery disc. Yet it brings many to their feet as they cheer the invention's cosmetic applications.
And consumers are now eyeing the newest innovation in the contact lens - color. Those blase brownis can now hide behind baby blues.
Perhaps wearers should now join hands and sing the first line of "The Star Spangled Banner."
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
News staff
Jennifer Benjamin ... Editor
Jull Warren ... Managing editor
John Benner ... News editor
Beth Copeland ... Editorial editor
Sally Streff ... Campus editor
Brian Kabelline ... Sports editor
Dan Riettman ... Photo editor
Bill Skeet ... Graphics editor
Tom Eblen ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Bonnie J. Hardy ... Business manager
Robert Hughes ... Advertising manager
Kelly Scherer ... Retail sales manager
Kurt Messersmith ... Corporate sales
Greg Knipp ... Production manager
David Dorfelt ... National sales manager
Angela Clark ... Classified manager
Ron Weems ... Director of marketing
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 university or staff position.
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can be mailed or brought to the LETTERS, guest shots and columns are the opinion of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University Daily Kansan. Editorials are the opinion of the Kansan editorial board.
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POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
DIAL-A-PRAYER
IT MUST BE FOOTBALL SEASON AGAIN!
WHY'S THAT?
WE'RE GETTING MORE AND MORE CALLS FROM KANSAS!
KiNe
Attitudes sealed Auburn victory
Clubbed like a baby seal.
The nightmare, as easily as it had left, has returned. And we have front-row seats next to the devil-possessed guy wielding the chainsaw. Kansas football has started
Granted, we did open the season with Auburn,
a fourth-ranked team whose linemen eat small
household pets for midday meals, and lost, 49-0.
My problem is the way we lost 49-0
Face it, we have an attitude problem.
Joel Zeff Guest Shot
Instead of playing Auburn with a vengeful frothing-at-the-mouth attitude, we snuggled up to them like a baby seal waiting to be clubbed into the middle of next week.
Where does the attitude problem start? Let's begin with the ever-graceful Bob "Can't win for losing?" Valesente. Bob, it's time we start showing a little faith in our football team.
Or as Bob elegantly said in Friday's Kansan, "We've worked hard on our puncting game this week." If Bob was in the Army, he'd install back-up lights on tanks and teach troops the proper way of throwing one's hands in the air to
surrender. Truth hurts, huh, Bob?
shelter. Then trust me.
We have to stand tall, Bible in hand, and be proud to be a Jayhawk. Did the men in the Alamo practice their打unting game? Did the men in the first space missions practice their打unting game?
Sure, the world is against us, and we don't have any matched soaks. But does that mean we have to roll over and die? So what if Sports Illustrated called our football program a joke. Also picked the Cleveland Indians to win the World Series, and look at them.
Admittedly, the only reason KU football fans
will be throwing oranges on the field this year is if the team runs out of Gatorade. However, an Orange Bowl is not the only factor in determining pride.
Consider the fans. While watching gridiron giants like Kent State, Louisiana Tech andOU students add to the magicianement by creating a technical illusion of a giant白牙Jawhawk.
Consider teamwork. The KU athletic program is one of the most drug-free in the country. Not to mention, the entire football team is academically eligible. Truth hurts, huh, Mr. Swizer?
Consider tradition. Maybe we don't have a glorious football tradition like Notre Dame, but maybe we can have a football tradition.
Someday, somewhere, the Jayhawks will rise from their youth and take command of the Big Eight.
Take that. Auburn. Wimps
We are KU football fans, hear us roar.
Joel Zeff is a Kansas City, Mo., sophomore majoring in journalism.
Foreign students adapt to KU, culture
After spending the summer in the South amidst the blistering heat, I loaded my luggage with souvenirs and headed back to Lawrence wearily. The strong, cool winds greeted me. The town would be flooded with people once more.
Well, it is fall again and the beginning of another academic year. Familiar August surroundings invoked a flood of memories that marked my first year in the United States.
Experiences with the first taste of American life can be painfully embarrassing at times. My first opponent proved to be an unseeingly formidable one — the water spigot. It turned from right to left before the water gushed out — just the reverse of what I did back home. Old habits certainly die hard for I still have the tendency to turn the tap the wrong way when I am done, leaving wet blotches all over my carefully ironed blouse.
The light switch is just as odd. To turn it on, I had to push it up instead of down. Getting into the car also proved to be a hilarious experience for everyone except me. I always walked to the left side of the car even though I did not possess a driver's licence.
The huge, hilly campus nearly drove me nuts,
too. I have vivid memories of my desperate search for classes and of worrying myself sick about a suspected case of asthma or heart disease
Janet Neo Staff Columnist
when I panted for breath upon reaching "Wescoe Beach."
A few weeks after arriving, my skin began to look like fish scales because of the dry spell in
'Experiences with the first taste of American life can be painfully embarrassing at times.'
Lawrence. And my hair always looked like a tuft of grass when I reached my first class — thanks to the wind that cut through my hair like a razor blade.
There was also a dismaying amount of breakdown in communication until I picked up some slang and got used to the American accent.
Questions such as, "How's going, man?" used to send my mind reeling with utter astonishment.
On a more serious note, new students who have traveled thousands of miles to attend school here often experience a large dose of homesickness. Communication by phone with folks at home can only happen sparsely because of high costs. Extensive letter writing becomes a norm or duty for most foreign students.
Adjusting to a totally different culture and lifestyle takes more than a willingness to embrace and experience new things. There have been instances where foreign students are ridiculed for not knowing how to converse well in English. Scars like these are hard to erase.
When things go wrong, such as doing poorly on exams, succumbing to an illness, or simply feeling stressed, a foreign student is highly susceptible to a sense of helplessness and isolation.
There are many hurdles to overcome for a student who has decided to enroll at a university where it takes three days to get home — by plane!
My advice to freshmen from all corners of the world is: Be receptive, put your best foot forward and hope it doesn't end up in your mouth!
Janet Neo is a Johor Bahru, Malaysia, sophomore, majoring in Journalism.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Responsible students
We read with displeasure yet another annual column complaining about the KU advising process. Brad Taylor's remarks regarding the English proficiency of African Studies professors could be construed as racist and reflected his ethnocentrism.
The University of Kansas expects students, who are adults, to take appropriate responsibility in the advising process. It is expected that a student know the basic requirements for graduation or entrance into a professional school
Armed with this knowledge, the student and adviser together can formulate a solid schedule. Additionally, the student should be prepared to seek out the answers they need. No adviser can be expected to learn the requirements for every program. Advisers for specialized programs like pre-med, pre-law, pre-nursing, pre-occupational therapy or pre-physical therapy are available to answer specific questions either at the Advising Support Center or other appropriate offices. Questions regarding professional entrance exams are addressed in the testing booklets available when the student applies to take the test.
These requirements are available in the undergraduate catalog, from the professional school or from the Advising Support Center.
The University of Kansas has many competent, informed and concerned faculty members who have served as advisers without remuneration.
tion. Your column was a disservice to these dedicated people. Moreover, the responsibility of a columnist is to be informed about the subject. It is easy to criticize without substantiation or alternatives. A responsible journalist should learn this lesson early in his or her career.
Dawn Semon, advising assistant at the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Advising Support Center and Lawrence graduate student.
Kim Metzger, advising assistant and Lawrence graduate student.
Carol Coburn, advising assistant and Lawrence graduate student.
BLOOM COUNTY
SADLY, OLVER BADE HIS
RAGGED OL' TEDDY AND
WORN OUT SLIDE RULE
GOODBYE AS THEY
RELUCTANTLY RETURNED
TO HIS MEMORIES.
by Berke Breathed
THEY WERE RIGHT, OF COURSE.
THE THINGS FROM OUR PAST
ARE SOMEHOW THE DEAREST...
AND AS HE SMUGGLED BACK
INTO BED, OLIVER TUCKED IN
WITH HIM ONE VERY SPECIAL
THOUGH GLEANED FROM
THIS PHANTOM EVENING:
LIFE WITHOUT A
"RAMBO LASER RIFLE"
WOULDN'T BE WORTH LIVINO.
1
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
WOLF ON HILL
COMTE TOMA
Time Management
9.14
"Letter from Lonso. ... And he sounds pretty lonely."
Professor will talk on quack doctors
Campus/Area
Bv NOEL GERDES
5
Staff writer
Quackery is so widespread it threatens the authority of science, said a Chancellor's Club teaching professor of history and philosophy of medicine.
date scientists. Sometimes it's difficult to determine who's a quack and who's simply an ignorant practitioner, he said.
Although some quacks may truly believe in their cures, most are in business for the money. Quackery is a $10 billion-a-year business because
"It's almost impossible to identify the modern health quack," said Robert Hudson, the professor.
University Daily Kansan / Monday, September 14. 1987
billion-a-year business in Hudson said the drug called Laet-
erudition. Heiden will discuss science and quack, scientific frauds, at 8 p.m. tomorrow at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. His lecture is the first of four in the 1987-88 Humanities Lecture Series.
Hudson said that consumers found it difficult to tell quacks and legitimate medical doctors apart because many modern quocks looked reputable, had doctorates and used up-to-date scientific terms.
rile was an example of how quackery usurped science. Although the U.S. National Cancer Institute tested the drug and said in 1981 that it was worthless and sometimes dangerous, the public was willing to believe it was a cure for cancer.
Because of public pressure, 23 states, including Kansas, have legalized the drug. Hudson said.
"Where science is really a dominant force in society, quackery thrives," he said, adding that quacks feed on scientific discoveries.
Hudson said radiation treatment for arthritis in the 1980s was such an example.
An early 1900s Kansas quack, John R. Brinkley, was so charismatic that he was almost elected governor in 1930 as a write-in candidate, Hudson said. Brinkley read that scientists were neutering baby chickens and using hormones to change them from roosters to hens. Brinkley came up with the idea to transplant goat testicles into humans to rejuvenate his patients and became a millionaire, Hudson said.
Unique financing for sports clubs proposed
By BRAD ADDINGTON Staff writer
Staff writer
KU sports clubs will go through a financing process different from that of other KU organizations if an amendment to Student Senate rules is approved next month.
Stephanie Quincy, student body vice president, said she hoped to present an amendment at the Senate's Oct. 7 meeting that would make the recreation services advisory board a subcommittee of the Senate Finance Committee.
She said the advisory board was more familiar than the finance committee with the needs of sports clubs.
"Recreation Services sees them a lot more than we do," she said.
The recreation services advisory board, which is appointed by Senate, advises Item 10. It offers athletic needs and interests. It has six student members. Staff members of Recreation Services, which is a division of the department of health, physical education and recreation, advise the board but do not vote.
Organizations request money from Senate in the spring for the following school year. They also may make money to provide for immediate money at any time.
Under the plan, sports clubs would request money from the advisory board, which would make recommendations about allocations to the finance committee. The finance committee makes recommendations to the full Senate.
Quincy also recommended that the board have 13 students.
A recreation services task force met Friday to discuss the role of the individual in the school web which was initiated by David Amble, vice chancellor for student
affairs, has been meeting since June under the direction of Caryl Smith, associate vice chancellor for student affairs.
At Friday's meeting, Quincy recommended that the advisory board continue to meet monthly.
"What if the board meets and they don't have a quorum? Then they'll have to wait until the next meeting, and that will be a problem," he said.
But task force member Rick Cameron, outdoor education and special events coordinator for Recreation Services, expressed concern about the advisory board meeting only once a month.
Several task force members said they were concerned that the advisory board might recommend that Senate allocate too much money.
Jason Krankow, student body president, said. "There's good evidence between the two."
chairman of the finance committee and the chairman of the advisory board."
In 1984, Senate gave the advisory board a set amount to allocate to sports clubs. Quincy said that method of financing resulted in too many sports clubs competing for the money that Recreation Services had to offer.
In 1985, the Senate finance committee resumed hearing requests from sports clubs along with other University organizations.
sity of organizations.
But that process also had problems, Quincy said, which is why she recommended the new plan.
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"There has been a lot of inconsistency," Quincy said. "In the past, we'd pay one club for their coach, and we wouldn't pay another club for their coach."
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Monday, September 14, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
R. S. SMITH
From the KU Weather Service
Jello Biafra of the band The Dead Kennedys holds the shoe he used to collect money for the No More Censorship Defense Fund, an anti-censorship organization he founded. Biafra spoke Saturday afternoon at Liberty Hall.
Reunion ends with a flourish
By DEBRA A. PETERSON Special to the Kansan
The night everybody'd been waiting for had finally arrived. From as far away as San Antonio, Texas, punkers, poets and hippies descended Saturday night on Liberty Hall to hear beat and performance poets strut their stuff in one final, exultant, screaming paen to the glorious Left.
Long before the show started, a mixed crowd gathered outside the theater. They were young, old, dressed-to-kill, dressed-for-a-bikeride, carrying bongo drums or wielding New Testaments. Two wore signs that read, "I need a ticket" and one wore an eye medallion mid-forehead that stared at out the world. Some stood in three-piece suits and some lounged in paint-stained T-shirts.
oilfilled pail, on time for the 8 p.m. show, but it didn't start until about 8:30 p.m., just after an impatient audience member sailed a pail
er airplane from the upper balcony to the stage. Then the house lights dimmed, the curtain rose, and purple and magenta lights bathed the stage.
The evening's performance began with Frankie Edie Kieronau-Parker reading from letters written to her by on-the-road husband, Jack, and continued through the freedom-praising poems of Andrei Codrescu, the self-praising poems of John Giorno delivered in the style of a Las Vegas comedian, and the sage advice offered by the irascible, but beloved, granddaddy of them all, William Burroughs.
Diane DiPrima's political pleas, reflecting both Buddhist and feminist influences, closed the first set, and the audience filtered out into the cool evening to discuss what they'd heard and check out the video monitor that had been set up outside the main doors of the theater.
delivery, punctuated and augmented by flute, guitar, drums and modern dance, drew wild cheers from the crowd as she exited.
And then a hush fell over the theater. It was time to hear the most famous of the beat poets.
Allen Ginsberg entered carrying a sunflower. He sat down and, in a grand democratic gesture, requested that the theater lights be turned up, "so I can see who I'm talking to." They weren't, but Ginsberg read anyway, and the second poem he read was "How," with its line summing up the reason for the journey within the poem and the journey within the poet:
In the second half, performance artist Anne Waldman theatrical
"To recreate the syntax and measure of poor human prose and stand before you speechless and intelligent and shaking with shame, rejected yet confessing out the soul to conform to the rhythm of thought in his naked and endless head."
WEATHER Lawrence Forecast
TODAY
Mostly cloudy
HIGH: 84°
LOW: 68°
Today will be partly cloudy with a 30% chance of thunderstorms by tonight. The high will be in the mid-80s with lows in the upper-60s.
5-DAY
TUE
T-Storm
84/64
HIGH LOW
WED
T-Storm
83/61
THU
Partly cloudy
80/57
FRI
Sunny
82/59
SAT
Showers
83/64
North Platte
81/57
Showers
Omaha
78/66
Showers
Rain T-Storms Snow Flurries Ice
Goodland
81/541
Showers
Hays.
83/60
Thunderstorms
Salina
85/65
Showers
Topeka
84/69
Cloudy
Columbia
86/66
Cloudy
St. Louis
85/67
Mostly cloudy
Dodge City
87/67
Thunderstorms
Wichita
85/71
Showers
Chanute
87/72
Showers
Springfield
86/69
Cloudy
Forecast by Jamie Zahara.
Temperatures are today's high and lengths overnight low.
Conditions are forecasted for this afternoon.
Tulsa
82/74
Thunderstorms
River
Continued from p.1
in 1967 was the surfacing of a movement that Ginsberg and Burroughs had helped to start in the '50s.
"67 was the coming-out party for the first class of the Baby-Boom generation," he said.
That was the first of many summers of love that continue today around the world, Leary said.
He then began speaking about drugs.
"I'll confess right now that I'm very brain-damaged," he said. "There are three effects of psychedelic drugs. First there is long-term memory gain, second there is short-term memory loss, and third
... Forget.
Former addicts and the government aren't experts on drugs, Leary said.
He said that in the history of the earth, only 25 people had died from smoking or eating marijuana.
"They probably giggled themselves to death," he said.
then ne spoke about computers, his new interest. He compared their importance to Gutenberg's printing machine; they would be a big part of the future.
He said that every thousand years the world goes crazy, and he could see it happening now.
Bork Continued from p. 1
For that reason, lobbying groups from both sides have been spending freely to create enthusiasm among their members and to convince senators that their position is right.
Conservatives want a justice who would protect the rights of the unborn, be tough on criminals and put religion back in the schools.
Liberals want a swing vote on the court who would prolong a string of pro-civil rights and civil liberties rulings that began with the 1954 decision outlawing school segregation.
Senators and viewers will hear arguments concerning free speech, privacy, segregation, antitrust, respect for Supreme Court precedent, and the 1973 "Saturday Night Massacre," when then-Solicitor General Bork fired Watergate special prosecutor Archibald Cox, after Attorney General Elliott Richardson and Deputy Attorney General William Ruckelshaus had refused to do so.
Yet, Richardson is one of the prominent witnesses scheduled to testify in favor of Bork. Another is retired Chief Justice Warren Burger, who said previously that Bork "has got it all."
Canoe
Continued from p. 1
first canoe to tip over. Two people also lost their shoes in the river."
Frederic Dotte, Besancon, France, junior, said a K-State team tipped them over during the race.
them over.
"Someone came up and grabbed the side and pulled," Dotte said.
"They were good but unfair. Somebody took a photo when they tipped us over."
Another KU team, Austin Peay, finished 21st. The team consisted of six men and five women from Stephenson, Miller and Douthart scholarship halls.
David Donley, Ellsworth junior and team captain, said the team had problems throughout the race.
p "I think we managed to tip over at every checkpoint." Donley said.
Lara Montulli, chairman of the K-State Association of Residence Halls, said the fourth KU team, the KU Lowifles, was disqualified because members did not wear life preservers.
Nigro said next year's race would be from St. Marys to Lawrence and would be organized by the KU Association of University Residence Halls.
Montuli said the Pyramid Pizza chain would put plaques in its Lawrence and Manhattan stores
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, September 14, 1987
7
Campus/Area
Celebration planned for Constitution
By VALOREE ARMSTRONG
Staff writer
Millions of bells will ring simultaneously across the country at noon Eastern time Thursday to mark state and local celebrations of the 200th anniversary of the signing of the Constitution.
At the University of Kansas, Calder M. Pickett, Clyde M. Reed distinguished professor of journalism, will help celebrate the bicentennial with the lecture " 'We the People': 1787 Revisited."
His speech, at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Kansas Union's Woodruff Auditorium is free
Pickett confessed that the Constitution, as a subject, is not all that jazzy. But he plans to bring the 200 year-old and music from the period, he said.
MOBILE INTENSIVE CARE UNIT School's
Children surround McGruff the Crime Dog at the Stouffer Place Crime Prevention-Safety Free Festival. The festival, sponsored by the KU police department, took place Saturday.
In Topeka, almost 200 immigrants will become citizens on the south steps of the state Capitol during a naturalization ceremony performed by U.S. District Judge Richard Rogers.
Each of the new citizens will be able to make a free telephone call to anywhere in the world, compliments of ATT. ATT will set up a bank of at least 100 State Historical Society, 10th Street and Jackson Street, for the occasion.
Gov. Mike Hayden will speak briefly at the Capitol, and Judge Deanell Tacha of the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals will speak at the two hour ceremony.
Their remarks are to be highlighted with a fly-over by the Kansas Air National Guard, musical entertainment from Sweet Adelines, a national women's singing group, the Fife and Drum Band and bands from Hutchinson High School and Washburn University.
Each state will have similar celebrations in conjunction with the national celebration of the Constitution's bicentennial, said State Sen. Jeanne Hoffer, R-Topeka, who is a member of the Kansas Commission on the Bicentennial of the U.S. Constitution.
In Lawnery, Judge Fred Six of the Kansas Court of Appeals will speak
in honor of the bicentennial at 11 a.m.
Thursday in the Division II courtroom in the Judicial and Law Enforcement Center, 111 E. 11th St.
The Douglas County Historical Society will celebrate the event at 6 p.m. Thursday in South Park near the bandstand with patriotic poems, songs and selected readings on the Constitution.
S. R. MEYER
CARL MAYER
Study abroad may reinstate Polish exchange agreement
If you want to know about the ads in the Kansan, ask Bill. He knows them all. If you want to know how the Jayhawks are doing, you can ask Bill about that, too. He's one of the Jayhawk's biggest fans and he follows them every day in the sports pages of the University Daily Kansan.
A student exchange agreement between the University of Kansas and the University of Warsaw in Poland ended last spring, but the office of study abroad is evaluating the program and may reinstate it.
Mary Elizabeth Gwin, director of the office of study abroad, said there were no specific negotiations going on to reinstate the agreement, which expired last May. But KU is interested in continuing the program, she said.
Staff writer
about how much bold type will enhance the ideas presented in an ad and how much is too much.
By JENNIFER ROWLAND
Gwin said the agreement was allowed to run out last spring because of routine program evaluation.
"I don't have a style bold enough for some people."
"There is a definite hope that we will begin our program again in the near future," she said. "The problem is that it's very difficult to deal with administrations in Iron Curtain countries."
He sets a lot of bold type. In fact, he sets a lot of type. He's been working on Kansan ads for over 20 years and he's developed a sixth sense for fine tuning ad copy so that it looks just right. That means making some judgment calls
Bill's job may sound like a lot of late night typing to you but it's a skill to him. He cares about it. He cares about the Kansan. And most of all, he cares about doing a good job for you.
If the program is reinstated, the office will run it as part of a move to place exchange programs under its jurisdiction, Gwin said. In the past, the program has been directed by several different faculty members.
Gwin said that the exchange was for students in any major who were
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
10. a p.m., Sunday through Thursday,
Bill Thomas seats himself in front of a
Mycro-Comp computer and begins styling
copy for University Daily Kansan ads.
The student advertising staff has input
the copy earlier in the day. It's Bill's bill
to study their advertising layouts and
enter key commands so that the finished
product presents a harmony of type and
graphics that's perfectly balanced.
Nobody else speaks your language.
"Here you're dealing with a communist-ruled country and this is the first time anybody had been able to break through and establish a direct university to university exchange in the United States and Poland," he said.
A committee made up of KU administrators and professors with interests in Poland could be appointed within the next two months. Next September would be the earliest the program could be reinstated, Gwin said.
interested in studying in Poland. Evaluation of the Polish exchange program will include looking at different Polish universities where students could find the best education and looking at the field of study of students who would sign up for the program, she said.
Fletcher negotiated in 1975 with the rector of the University of Warsaw, the American Studies Institute at the University of Warsaw, the Ministry of Higher Education and the Ministry of Affairs in the Polish government.
"Our reason for doing this was not political. There are other considerations."
Negotiations might include contact with universities in Krakow, Poznan and Warsaw. Gwin said.
She said that in the past KU had sent undergraduates to Poland and had accepted graduate and post-graduate students.
exchange program, said that first exchange was a breakthrough.
The first exchange was in the late 1960s, when Oswald Prentiss Backus, former professor of history, organized a exchange with a university in Poznan.
William C. Fletcher, director of Soviet and East European studies and a past organizer of the Polish
Under that agreement, U.S. students studied Polish language and culture in a year-long program at the University of Warsaw, and Polish students studied U.S. culture and language at KU. That agreement lasted for 12 years, which was longer than expected. Fletcher said.
From two to 10 pairs of students were participating in the exchange at any given time, he said. After becoming proficient in the language, the students would enroll in courses in their majors.
"The object was to have you study in the university once you learned the subject."
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8
Monday, September 14, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
State/Local
Whizzo the Clown dies of cancer
By MARK TILEFORD
Staff writer
Frank Wiziarde; who as Whizzo the Clinton entertained Lawrence and Kansas City area children for three decades with his television show, died Friday morning. He was 71.
Wiziarie died at St. Luke's Hospital in Kansas City, Mo., where he had been receiving treatment since July for stomach cancer.
"He loved entertaining children and making kids happy," said his wife, Kitty Wiziarde. "He loved every minute of it."
Wizaride created his character in 1954 for KMBC-TV in Kansas City, Mo., in response to the station's request for a children's program.
After working for KMBC for 192 years, Wizierde's show moved to KCMO-TV, which is now KCTV in Fairway. But the show was canceled late 1960s when interest in Wizierde's simple, goofy humor waned
Wiziarde joined WIBW-TV in Tope
ka in December 1969 and began a Saturday morning children's program that ran for 17 years and gained him notoriety. He was on the air until May.
"If you went out with Frank, you could forget about being recognized," said BIBW news director
DANIEL MORRIS
Jim Hollis. "People just gravitated to him. Everyone just loved him."
Wizarie was a native of Westmorlandshire a 37-year resident of
Bristol.
When he was 6, he performed in his parent's tightrope act in vaudueille. He later worked at radio stations in California and the Kansas City area. He was a director at KMBC at the time he created the Whizzo charac-
He was also an Army veteran of World War II and a member of the Old Mission Masonic Lodge.
Whizzo the Clown
five years ago, Wiziarete performed at White House Easter services at the request of President Reagan.
The funeral is scheduled for 11 a.m. today at Village Presbyterian Church, 604 N. Broad road in Prairie City, Dural will be held by Johnson County Memorial garden.
STADIUM BARBER SHOP
The family asks that memorials be sent to the American Cancer Society. The Associated Press supplied some information for this story.
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5PM TO 7PM AT THE RUM TREE LOUNGE!
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The Anthony Chiropractic Clinic is offering Complimentary Spinal Examinations for the early detection of neck, back and related problems. There is absolutely no obligation to you in connection with this service. Early detection of spinal problems is a must in the prevention of future health problems. The free exam does not include x-rays or treatment if needed.
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---
FALL CLASSES
Beginning Knitting 16, wks 5 Thursday, October 1
You should do the prior dose for the first class, with help from a teacher. You may need to stop knitting if your hair breaks.
**FOLLOWING THIS WEEK:**
**Intermediate Knitting** (b wks.) - Monday, September 28-November 16. 7-9 p.m. Take advantage of this opportunity to select your own project and challenge yourself. Must know how to knit, pill and cut on $20.00
Norwegian knitting (8 wks.) Wednesday, September 19th
3 pm at the Norwegian Knitting Workshop. Variety of
projects and patterns will be available $20.00
**Beginning Quilling** (6 wks.)—Monday, September 28,
October 19, November 2, 9, 10 and December 2. Both
classes begin at noon on Monday. Classes are offered.
The first class (September 28) will be three hour,
morning 10 a.m., i.p. and evening 10 p.m. You will
prepare to make your own quilled paper.
**Intermediate Quilting** (one class per month-Monday,
September 21, October 26, November 6, no class
weekend)
**Advanced Quilting** (two classes per month-
project and project pattern of your choosing. This is a 6 month commitment. $3.50 per month plus supplies.**
White on Black Quilt (10 classes per month) monthly
White on Black Quilt (12 classes per month)
12 February, 12 p.m. The quilt is designed and taught
by Nancy Chan.
Quilt in a Day Log Cab Demonstration - Tuesday,
November 10, 2019. You will be shown how to make a quilt by machine in a very quick and efficient method. The method is adaptable to many quilt patterns. $4.50 demo
Crocheted Heart Ring - Monday, October 12, 7-9 p.m.
Must know how to chain and single crochet $5.00 plus
charge.
Crocheted Collar (2 wks)—Tuesday, October 20 and 27,
9.7 p.m. —Must have to chain and unchain crochet.
10 p.m. —Crochet at www.crocheting.com
Rak Bag Tackle - Coil Method - Tuesday, October 6, 7-9am
Sustainable coil bags from recycled materials
Striped fabric into useful and colorful baskets. $50.00 per bag.
Machine Appliance Swiftshirt Demonstration-Tuesday
October 7, 9 - p.m. $4.50 demonstration only
Collin, 12, of Littleton and weather demonstration
on October 7, 1989. Beginning Counted Cross Stitch: Monday, October 7, 1989.
Counted Cross Stitch with Waste Canvas - Wednesday,
November 11, 2014. $6.00 supplies provided.
Advanced Cross Stitch-Friday- October 9
16, Counted An opportunity to learn ten even wavers
Designed in a bookmark stitched "titled"
Sampler". Designed and taught by Kathy Nurnberg
8-9th plus supplies.
Beginning **Stenclining** - Tuesday, November 3, 7-9 p.m.
$5.00 mail supplies.
Lampadeh-2 (_wks_) Wednesday, October 7 and 14,
7.5 to p.m. You may select a detached, cut pierced, or
square item.
Pillow Finishing Demonstration - Thursday, November 12.
1-3 or 7-m. N or P. $4.50 demonstration only.
CHILDREN'S CLASSES
**Children** *Knitting* **4 wks**~Saturday~ 10.31-10.30
10-noon. Minimum age 6. A fun project is planned for
them.
Chilbers Rag basket - Sunday, December 8, 9.30am
Chilbers Rag basket - Monday, December 9, 10.30am
children age minimum B, 5.00 plus supplies.
children age maximum B, 7.00 plus supplies.
Minimum age 8. $50 plus supplies
Children's Crochet—Saturday, November 21, 1-4 p.m.
Minimum age 10 $7.00 plus supplies
Minimum age 12 $9.00 plus supplies
Minimum age 14 $13.00 plus supplies
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---
1
University Daily Kansan / Monday, September 14, 1987
Campus/Area
9
Watson to decide on computer index
By DAVID STEWART Special to the Kansas
Watson Library has only a short time left to decide whether it is interested in buying the NewsBank computerized index to more than 450.
"It really depends on when KU makes up its mind, but we can't let them keep it forever." he said.
The computer now is on loan from NewsBank, Inc., a Connecticut publishing firm. Christopher Kelly, NewsBank's customer service supervisor, said Watson had to show interest in buying the company's service by mid-September if the library wanted to keep the computer on trial.
The NewsBank Electronic Index has been available for student trial in the Watson reference room since Aug. 13. The computer can search through more than 500,000 newspaper articles to find the ones that relate to topics in fine arts and architecture, music, film and sports, sensation, literature and performing arts. It indexes articles from January 1982 to April 1987.
James Neely, head reference librarian, said, "it's been well-received, although some people are expecting more than it offers."
For instance, he said, many students think that the computer itself will print the articles. But the computer only lists the names of articles, which are then found printed on microfiche cards. Also, the trial model does not include the full index or all the microfiche article files.
Neely said Watson's decision about NewsBank would be based on student reaction and the library's ability to pay. The service would cost about $2,500 a year, which includes monthly article updates and software training. The databaseware would be free for as long as Watson subscribed to the index.
"If we buy this, we won't be able to something else we may need." Nye.
"About two-thirds of schools KU's size are involved with this type of system." Neely said, "but you don't buy for the latest fad."
Student reaction has not yet been significant enough to justify the purchase, he said. But Neely said in a student opinion about the index.
Watson does not get extra money to computerize the library, he said, unlike Texas A&M, which received $400 million to add computers to its libraries.
Shelly Dean, Shawne sophomore, and Ban to find articles about integration problems.
The other indexes usually are hardbound books, each of which gives information for only one newspaper.
"I like it. It's faster, it's more accessible and it's more enjoyable," she said, comparing the computer to a paper indexes available at Watson.
Watson already subscribes to two NewsBank indexes, Review of Arts and the Foreign Broadcast Information Service.
BEFORE YOU BUY,
Check the KANSAN.
DIVE IN
Passing the afternoon
Randy Pattay, Arlington Heights, Ill., senior, looks past opponent Kevin Doetzl, Leavenworth senior, for an open teammate. The two were playing ultimate Frisbee with friends yesterday afternoon on the grass next to Allen Field House.
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He studies Holarctic Recent mammals, or mammals that have been living in the northern regions in the last 10,000 years.
Hoffman also served as associate dean of liberal arts and sciences from 1978 to 1980 and from 1981 to 1985, and as acting dean from 1981 to 1982.
As assistant secretary, Hoffman will oversee the Smithsonian's many research projects and facilities, history, and science. He starts Jan. 1.
Ex-KU professor named to Smithsonian position
Hoffman said that he still had ties to the University and that he returned several times a year to advise graduate students.
BEFORE YOU BUY, Check the KANSAN. Our advertisers might save you money.
Since spring of 1986, Hoffmann has been director of the Smithsonian's Museum of Natural History. For 12 years before that, he served at the University of Kansas as curator of mammals at the Museum of Natural History and as a professor of zoology, and systematics and ecology.
By a Kansan reporter
Former KU professor Robert Hoffmann has been named assistant secretary for research at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., the Smithsonian announced recently.
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He said that he had mixed feelings about accepting the new position because he had enjoyed his job at the Smithsonian's natural history museum. But he said he was looking forward to the challenges of the new job.
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An AM-FM radio/cassette with four speakers valued at $600 was taken Aug. 17 from a van parked in the 2400 block of Jasua Drive,
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Monday, September 14, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Poll says most don't know about Bork
The Associated Press
NEW YORK - Although Robert H. Bork, President Reagan's nominee to the Supreme Court, has drawn strong reaction for his conservative views on civil rights and abortion, most Americans haven't drawn conclusions because they don't know much about him, according to a Media General-Associated Press poll.
But they don't know much about the eight remaining Supreme Court members either, the nationwide telephone poll of 1,223 adult Americans said.
Reagan's nomination of the 60-
year-old Bork will be taken up by the Senate Judiciary Committee beginning tomorrow. It is expected to be a protracted battle: Bork's civil rights stands and his opinion that the court erred in legalizing abortion have prompted opposition from a wide range of rights and feminist organizations.
But in the Media General-Associated Press poll, 52 percent of Americans said a candidate's political leanings should not be the basis of the Senate decision to confirm or deny a nomination. Thirty-one percent said the nominee's politics should be the basis of a decision, and
17 percent were unsure.
Of Bork, a federal appeals court judge in the District of Columbia, respondents were asked, "Do you have a favorable opinion about him, an unfavorable opinion, or don't you know enough about him at this time to have an opinion?" Seventeen percent had a favorable opinion, 13 percent an unfavorable opinion, and 70 percent had no opinion.
Among the sitting justices, only Justice Sandra Day O'Connor had a third of respondents voice opinions about her. More than two-thirds of respondents had no opinion about Chief Justice William Rehquist.
Older people were more likely to have a favorable opinion of Bork than younger people. Republicans and conservatives supported him more frequently than Democrats and liberals.
Twenty-three percent had a favorable opinion of Rehnquist, 9 percent had an unfavorable opinion, and 68 percent had no opinion. O'Connor received a favorable opinion from 34 percent of respondents, while 4 percent had an unfavorable opinion and 62 percent had no opinion.
The Associated Press
Secord allegedly low on money, seeking job
WASHINGTON — Richard V. Seckhard has closed his office, effectively ended his business with Iran-coronation moneyman Albert Hakim and is looking for work, according to sources familiar with his situation.
Secord, 55, a retired Air Force major general who played a principal part in the Iran-contra case, is one of the targets of Independent Counsel Lawrence Walsh's investigation
Although he has given a few
speeches, Secord is "not a hot property" on the lecture circuit, said one source, speaking on condition he remain anonymous.
The source later added, "He doesn't have a lot of money."
Record didn't get paid for the long interview in the October edition of Playboy magazine, according to journalist Jeffrey long, who coined the interview.
Secord and Hakim, his former business partner at Stanford Technology Trading Group International,
handled logistical and operational details of the program to sell U.S.-made weapons to Iran and divert the profits to the contrasts.
They reported to Lt. Col. Oliver L. North, the National Security Council aide who was fired by President Reagan in November. Second gave general instructions to Hakim, who controlled the money.
Before they became linked to North in 1985, Second and Hakim served as arms merchants for the contras, buying and selling weapons
Second, in an interview last month at his office in nearby McLean, Va., said he was pursuing new business but didn't say what they were.
at a profit
A few weeks later, he shut down the Stanford Technology office, Thomas Green, his attorney, confirmed.
second was known for his can-do approach to solving problems and his bravery in war.
Hammer, Deng discuss China energy projects
The Associated Press
BELIJING — U.S. industrialist Armand Hammer and top Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping didn't speak each other's languages, but their meeting yesterday indicated the two octogenarians read the same bottom line.
Hammer, chairman of Los Angeles-based Occidental Petroleum, wants to tap China's coal and oil riches and sell U.S. technology to the still-developing nation. Deng wants to buy.
They met for an hour behind closed doors at the Great Hall of the People. The official Xinhua News Agency said Deng told Hammer he was a courageous man because "some foreign entrepreneurs still lack the courage to cooperate with China in undertaking big projects."
Since Deng invited Hammer to invest in China eight years ago, Occidental has sunk $200 million into the $650 million Antaibo coal mine and undisclosed millions in fruitless oil exploration offshore.
Hammer arrived in Beijing last week to mark the opening of China's largest and most modern coal mine, jointly owned by China and Occidental, in the arid coal heartland west of the capital.
In an interview Saturday at a luxurious villa for China's elite guests, Hammer said he was asking Chinese leaders to join in guaranteeing the neutrality of their neighbor Afghanistan, should the Soviets end their eight-year military presence there. He said he has been trying to get the Soviets out of Afghanistan for over a year.
The 89-year-old Hammer has the largest economic stake in China's future of any foreign corporate leader. He also has unparalleled access to Deng, his contemporary at age 83.
"One of the things that I think would accomplish this would be if Russia had guarantees from all her neighbors, including China, that they would guarantee the neutrality of Afghanistan, that it would never become a base for a foreign invasion of Russia." Hammer said.
Hammer said he discussed the proposal with Soviet and United Nations officials.
"I think we can get some action," he said.
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Monday, September 14. 1987
11
Volleyball team takes third in tourney
JANE CAMPION
Beth White, KU middle blocker, jumps for a spike. The Jayhawks defeated Wichita State in three games during the consolation match of the Kansas Tournament on Saturday afternoon at Allen Field House.
By ROBERT WHITMAN Staff writer
Shannon Ridgeway went back to the basics of volleyball Saturday and put a cap on the Kansas volleyball team's third-place finish at its own four-team tournament at Allen Field House.
Ridgeway served an ace for the final point in Kansas' 15-6, 15-6, 15-11 victory over Wichita State in the third place match. Houston defeated New Mexico State in the championship match 15-6, 16-14, 15-9.
Ridgeway, a 5-foot-9 senior outside hitter, had been using a jump serve earlier in the Wichita State match, but abandoned it in the third game after missing two in a row.
With the score 14-11 in the final game, Ridway, with both feet on the ground, hit a service ace that landed in the middle of the Wichita State side in front of a diving Shocker plaver.
The jump serve, where a player throws the ball about 15 feet high, runs in front of it and jumps to hit it before landing in the court, can be an intimidating weapon, Ridgeway said.
"It's kind of a momentum breaker for the other team and a momentum gainer for your team," Mark Heller said. "I can psych the team, learn out."
It is also a riskier serve.
But it's effective only when it lands on the opposing side of the net and not in the net or out-of-bounds. Ridgeway missed two straight jump serves, one in the second game and one in the third.
She went back to holding the ball in her left hand and serving it overhand with her right hand for the remainder of the match.
Ridgway said KU coach Frankie Albitz didn't discourage use of the jump serve. She said she started practicing it last season when Albitz asked if anyone wanted to try it.
"She tells me to go ahead and do it if I feel confident," Ridway said. "But it sort of deflates when I miss one."
It seemed easier to try jump serves in Allen Field House than in the practice gym at the Robinson Center, she said, because the field was undercover.
The Jayhawks' fun in the tournament was diminished by the opening-round loss to Houston. Albizt said she wished Kansas and Houston had met in the finals because the two teams turned out to be the best in the four-team field.
"It's fun to do. That's why I do."
it." Ridgewav said
Houston defeated Kansas 15-8, 15-10. 5-15. 15-5.
Albizt said she wanted to seed teams by ability. Ideally, the best team in the tournament plays the worst team in the tournament, based on record.
But Houston was stronger than expected, Boltz said, and New Mexico State wasn't as strong.
The result was that Kansas, which Albizt considered neither the best nor the worst of the four entrants going into the tournament, played Houston in the first round.
With a tournament this early in the season, Albitz said, none of the teams had played enough to get an accurate line on their records.
Albizt said the play of Houston's Sherri Beyer, a 5-1 outside hitter, was the difference in the match with Kansas.
"That was really more like th. finals," Albitz said of the Houston match. "There isn't anything to go on because it's so early in the season. You just go from previous years."
Houston lost only one game - to Kansas - in three matches.
"She single-handedly beat us," Albitz said. "We were not lining up to block her correctly and when I told her to just like giving her a free shot."
Saturday morning Kansas defeated New Mexico State, the top-seeded team in the tournament. 15-9, 11-15, 17-5, 15-5.
Beyer recorded 31 kills against the Jayhawks. The entire Kansas team had 38.
Kansas led two games to one in the match, but Albizt said the Kansas starters let down in the fourth game.
"They quit going for the hard-to-get to balls. I told them I thought we were in trouble so we were here and play touch." Abhiz said.
Kansas is now 4-2 for the season and will play host to Nebraska at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at Allen Field House.
Auburn kills dreams of KU football upset
By CRAIG ANDERSON Staff writer
Staff writer
Kansas football fans can take a little solace in the fact that for 44 minutes during Saturday's 49-10 loss to Auburn, the Jayhawks were only outscored 14-0. The problem was, the team hadn't won because it was decided somewhere in between the opening kickoff and the end of the first quarter.
Within the game's first 16 minutes, Auburn scored five touchdowns. The Tigers' early onslaught turned a game in which Kansas had hoped to overcome that challenge by teaming team into one that both teams just wanted to keep respectable.
After Auburn scored its fifth touchdown with only a minute gone in the second quarter, Coach Pat Dye put in his second-team offense. For almost two quarters after that, the Tigers did not score.
"We came in knowing that it was going to be a physical game, but we just weren't ready," said senior defensive end ted Newman. "It was 28-0 before we realized we could hit those guys hard. After that, we got our point across."
Newman was one of the bright spots on the Jayhawks' defensive unit, recording 12 tackles, including two for losses. He said the key to improving on Saturday's loss was through good work habits.
Kansas coaches and players agreed that the Jayhaws began the season.
"After a loss like this, it's important for us to get off to a good start next week," he said. "We have to be more physical from the start."
Though he was disappointed with the outcome of the game, Kansas coach Bob Valesente said some good things did come out of the contest. He said the team never quit playing hard. He also liked the way the defense played after the first quarter.
Some good individual performances also were turned in by players making their debuts as Jayhawks, Valesete said. Sophomore wide receiver Quintin Smith, who was redshirted as a freshman, caught five passes for 40 yards. Junior safety Clint Normore, a transfer from Wichita State, intercepted a pass and recovered a fumble and
Because Kansas was unable to move the ball on the ground early in the game, it had to pass the ball much more than planned. The Jayhawks attempted 44 passes, completing 19 of them for 138 yards. Valesen said he was pleased that despite the high number of passing attempts by the Jayhawks, Auburn only recorded 2 sacks in the game.
The Kansas offense as a whole, though, sputtered throughout the game. The first and only Jayhawk drive that went into the Auburn side of the 50-yard line came midway through the third quarter. When the defense jumped at the ball, so did Kansas' only real chance to score. The offense gained only 169 yards and managed just seven first downs.
Senior offensive tackle Jim Davis said a big determining factor in the team's success in its home opener Saturday against Kent State would be found in how the team practiced. The Golden Flashes opened their season with a 27-23 victory over Akron (Oklahoma) Ohio.
"My number one goal is to make sure that everyone comes out this week and works hard to prepare for next week's game." Davis said. "We never quit, and we're a lot different from last year's team. We've got a lot of hard work ahead of us."
junior tailback Darryl Terrell, an SMU transfer, ran well in the second half, accumulating 21 yards on six carries, Valese said.
"I'm not concerned that this will pull us apart, but I think it will pull us together," said redshirt freshman center Chip Budd. "I think this will be the type of team that will buckle me and keep us together we're a team with a lot of pride."
Despite all the early season predictions that forecasted the Jayhawks would not fare much better than they did last year, the players' attitudes after the Auburn game were ones of hope, not despair. Kansas has lost eight consecutive games dating back through last season. The Jayhawks are on the road since the 1985 season opener, when they beat Hawaii 33-27.
Tigers defeat KU by a goal in soccer game
Staff writer
By ROBERT WHITMAN
The Missouri soccer club scored a goal midway through the first half yesterday afternoon and made it stand up for a 1-9 victory over the KU men's soccer club in Memorial Stadium.
The Tigers, 5-0, scored about 22 minutes into the first half when a throw-in by Doug Mahler deflected off a Kansas defender and to Missouri's Mike Walsh. Walsh hit a left-footed shot that beat Kansas goalie Scott Schaffer to the near post and into the net.
The game was played on the marked football field of the stadium, 100 yards long by 53% yards wide. A height of at least 110 yards by 70 yards wide
"Itfigured if goals would be scored, they would be on deflections and confusion," MU soccer coach Tim Dillon said. "It was narrow and fast at the time." But under control. There's a higher concentration of players on the field."
Kansas, playing its first match of the season, had several opportunities to score in the first half. The Jayhawks were awarded a penalty kick
39 minutes into the half when KU forward Ed Nelson was tripped in the Missouri penalty box by a Tiger defender.
"In retrospect, I should have had somebody else take it because Tony seen me. He hesitant when I called him to taunt it," KU coach Glenn Shirliffe said.
But Tony Vincent, Kansas midfielder, missed the penalty kick.
"As far as I'm concerned, that one was a goal." Shirtliff said. "It crossed the line, but the linesman on the end line where he could see it."
nick's header was tipped away by Tiger goalie Tim Milonas as it was about to go under the crossbar.
In the second half, Kansas created fewer chances and still no goals.
Kansas also missed a chance to score first in the game. A throw-in deep in Tiger territory was deflected by Jim Rudnick again by forward Jim Rudnick. Rud
"That really killed us by not scoring at least one goal in the first half," Shirliffe said. "That really gave them a lot of confidence."
See SOCCER, p. 13, col. 1
The Associated Press
Palmer's 95-yard kick return boosts Chiefs past Chargers
Palmer, the Chiefs' first-round draft choice, broke free behind a block by Paul Coffman and won a game-high eight sideline with 3:19 left in the game.
Vince Abbott had just kicked a 33 yard field goal with 3:27 left that
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Rookie Paul Palmer returned a kick 95 yards in the fourth quarter, giving the Kansas City Chiefs a 20-13 NFL victory over the San Diego Chargers yesterday.
Dan Fouts threw a 34-yard scoring pass to Gary Anderson earlier in the fourth quarter, cutting the Chiefs' lead to 13-10.
enable the Chargers to tie the game 13-13.
Christian Okaye, the Chief's second-round draw choice, ran 43 yards for a second-horn touchdown and finished with 105 yards rushing.
The scoring run was the longest by a Chiefs' back since Herman Heard went 69 yards against San Diego in 1984.
Royals beat Oakland 6-5 move into second-place tie
OAKLAND, Calif. — Steve Baliони hit his third home run in four games as the Kansas City Royals beat Oakland 6-5 Sunday, moving them into a second-place tie with the Athletics in the American League West.
The Associated Press
The A's and Royals trail first-place Minnesota by 4½ games.
Oakland came back with three runs in the bottom of the inning, aided by a collision between Royals right fielder Danny Tartabull and center fielder Willie Wilson on a bases-loaded sacrifice fly by Alfredo Griffin.
Balboni, who drove in nine runs in the four-game series against Oakland, gave Kansas City a 1-0 lead in the second inning with his 22nd homer, off Oakland starter Rick Honevitt. 0-2.
Mark Gubicea, 11-16, struck out seven while gaining the victory and Gene Garber pitched the final 1 % innings for his third save. They combined to hold Oakland to seven hits.
Gary Thurman led off with a bunt single, took third on Larry Owen's single, and scored on Wilson's single. A walk to Kevin Seitzer loaded the bases, and George Brett's sacrifice fly scored Owen while moving up in the first half. Tearfall singled, scoring Wilson and knocking out Honeycutt, and Seitzer scored on a passed ball after Gene Nelson relieved.
Designated hitter Jerry Willard, who had led off with a walk, and Mike Davis, who had singled, both scored two saves in sacrifice fly to deep right-center.
Oakland got a run off Garber in the ninth when Davis scored on shortstop Angel Salazar's throwing error.
Terry Steinbach, who had singled,
loading the bases, and taken third on
the sacrifice fly, scored on Luis
Buni's bunt single over Gubiza's
head.
Kansas City rallied in the third inning, scoring four runs and giving the Royals a 5-3 lead.
Scoreboard
Scott Carpenter/KANSAN
Racehall
American League
Kansas City 6, Kansas City 5
New York 8, Toronto 5
Minnesota 7, Cleveland 3
Detroit 5, Milwaukee 1
Texas 8, California 2
Chicago 2, Seattle 0
National League
Chicago 5, Montreal 1
Pittsburgh 6, Philadelphia 1
New York 8, Chicago 2
Los Angeles 8, Atlanta 2
San Francisco 6, Cincinnati
Football
Sara Marchant, Alvin, Tex., freshman, is tagged out while sliding into home plate by the Creighton Lady Jays' catcher. Kansas lost 5-2 to Creighton at Jawhawk Field yesterday.
N. Y. Jets 31, Buffalo 28
New Orleans 48, Cleveland 21
Houston 20, L.A. Rams 16
Cincinnati 21, Indianapolis 21
New England 28, Miami 21
Kansas City 20, San Diego 13
Pittsburgh 30, San Francisco 17
Tampa Bay 40, Atlanta 10
Seattle 39, Dallas 24
Washington 34, Philadelphia 24
Minnesota 34, Detroit 19
L.A. Raiders 20, Green Bay 0
Denver 40, Seattle 17
MARLINS
Softball team throws away game
By MIKE CONSIDINE
By MIKE CONSIDINE Staff writer
Somewhere between the second and third outts of the second inning, the championship game slipped from the Kansas softball team.
In a matter of minutes, the Creighton Lady Jays scored four unearned runs on the way to a 5-2 victory over the Jahyahs yesterday for the KU Invitational No. 1 title.
"If I could take one iming away, we played pretty good ball," KU Coach Kaalum Haack said.
The Lady Jays fashioned the decisive rally from three KU errors and a pair of base hits.
"We made a couple of errors and a couple of miscommunications," Haack said. "We were being a bit nervous, but we were where the problems came in."
A single by freshman Kim Doley and a double by freshman Sara Marchant produced the Jaahwks' first run. Sophomore Roan Brazer tripped to right field and scored on freshman Shelley Burke's sacrifice fly to close the gap to 4-2 in the fifth innning.
Jayhawk starter Reenie Powell, a junior, allowed three hits and no earned runs through four innings
"I thought Reenie pitched a good ballgame." Haack said.
Creighton first baseman Jodie Schwartz belted an BRI triple in the bottom of the inning to add the Lady Jays' final run.
Kansas shut out Iowa State, 5-0 in yesterday's game behind four-hit pitching from Brazier. In Saturday's games, KU defeated Missouri 2-1 and fell to Nebraska-0ma 2-1.
Brazier struck out seven and
walked none in her initial fall start.
"I felt good coming in," Brazier said. "I was pumped up for it."
Freshman left fielder Jessica Hennig led off the first inning with a single. Senior designated hitter Renie Nobile walked and freshman Tammy Cooke singled, scoring Hennig. A fielder's choice by senior Gayle Luedek and a sacrifice by Brazier made the score 4-0.
A sacrifice fly by Noble drove in
"This weekend was good for us." Haack said. "Now we know what to do — where we need to improve."
the final run.
we played as good a game against Iowa State as we're ever going to play," Haack said. "We swung the bats, we ran the bases and we intimidated. We just had to have one of those games so they could see that they could do it."
Tennis players get experience but no medals
Chris Walker and Craig Wildey of the Kansas men's tennis team returned from the Tropical College Championships with some tournament experience, but no medals.
Wildew won his first-round match but lost in the second round to John Sullivan of Clemson, who was in the finals yesterday afternoon. He won two matches after the second round, and Florida in the semifinals of the consolation bracket.
Walker has struggled with injuries during the past year and was in need of tournament experience, which he lost two of his three matches.
Walker won the first set in both of the matches he lost, and Wildey had to face one of the top two players of the tournament in the second round. Wildey lost the second set 7-6 in 10-8 tie-breaker and had four set points.
By DARRIN STINEMAN Staff writer
"I'd say we were close to doing extremely well," Coach Scott Perelman said. "Walker fought hard all the way through the tournament. He didn't played all summer, and he needed the match experience. In my mind, both guys are capable of winning a tournament like that."
The double-elimination tournament consisted of 32 players, and each man was guaranteed to play at least three matches. Wildey played the second match in the minimum. Perelman said it was a good tournament for both players.
---
"Overall it was a good experience for these guys," he said. "They both were capable of doing better. I wouldn't say I'm disappointed, and I wouldn't say I'm happy, but I think both of these guys are going to be better off for having gone."
12
Monday, September 14, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
SportsMonday
KU student enjoys playing prisoners in softball games
By DAVID BOYCE
Assistant sports editor
Editor's note: Assistant sports editor David Boyce wrote this article based on his experience as a member of the intramural softball team, the Lawmen, who played the prisoners.
LANSING — The idea of playing softball against inmates at Kansas State Penitentiary appealed to Jerry Heuer two weeks before the actual game. But on Saturday, just before entering the maximum security prison, Heuer was nervous.
Who could blame him? A mite before entering the state penitentiary, Heuer nervously laughed at a sign that he'd "do not pick up hitchhikers."
"I don't know what to expect," Heuer said before reaching the prison. "From what I've seen on television, convicts are 7-foot, muscular men."
The sign is intended for motorists not aware that a state penitentiary is just up the road, and occasionally, prisoners do escape.
Heuer, along with 10 teammates from the University of Kansas, traveled 30 miles for an experience many said they would not forget.
Besides the initial terror of going inside the prison, Heuer also wondered about the level of competition.
"All they do in there is lift weights and play ball, but I'm excited to play," he said.
Before Heuer's team could go inside the prison, they waited about 30 minutes in the visiting room for security clearance from Lansing prison athletic therapist, Kenneth Clay. Clay would also escort the team throughout the prison.
While waiting, a receptionist
asked for the team's name. The team manager said Lawmen, and laughs could be heard from prison guards. The name was Heuer's idea.
Heuer's first impression of the prison was its size. He said it was a lot bigger than he had thought. The people in the visiting room also made an impression on him.
"It's kind of sad to see a young woman with many kids waiting to visit a relative," Heuer said. "It's another world."
And that impression came before he actually entered the prison.
Before the Lawmen could get in, they gave Clay their billfolds, watches and keys. Clay then told the team not to give the prisoners anything.
"They will ask for your hats, warm-ups and shirts," he said. "Don't give it to them!"
After that small lecture, the team went through several gates, and were 13.0ed with a metal wheelchair. The pump was placed on their left hand.
Once Heuer and his 10 teammates passed security clearance, they walked through an old building and into an open courtyard
"This place sort of reminds me of the dorms," said one teammate. "I bet they have better food."
The Lawmen were now completely inside the big house.
After trading a few jokes comparing the prison to KU's residence halls, the Lawmen got first taste of what prison life is like.
Walking to the field. Heuer and the rest of the team passed by inmates who whistled, tried to intimidate the players and, as Clay asked, asked for clothing items.
let me have
take hat," said one inmate.
Another said, "Man, look at the
team Clay brought in this time."
Heuer said he was extremely nery
vous walking past the inmates to
the softball field.
"The entire team was nervous," said
he Lawmen left Lawrence
ing and excited, but during
ing, one-minute walk, not one
attered a word. Most walk-
eir heads down, not wan-
at the prisoners who
am hit the softball
inmates present
's softball team
The rest of the
inmates are
urity guards,
or in their
d the in-
popula-
lift
sat
See HEUER. p. 13. col. 1
Gloomy prision life intrigues Lawmen softball team
By DAVID BOYCE
Assistant sports editor
In fact, every step inside the Kansas State Penitentiary, barbed wires and concrete walls were the main attraction.
LANSING — An upward view revealed vispy white clouds, the top three feet of trees and a guard tower. When looking straight ahead the eyes could only see barbed walls, old buildings and a 30-foot concrete wall.
This is what two KU intramural teams, the Lawmen and Johnny's Scum, saw Saturday morning and afternoon when they played the Lansing inmates in some friendly, vet competitive, softball games
The games were set up by Lansing athletic therapist Kenneth Clay, and are designed to give some Lansing inmates a break
during the weekend from the monotonous prison life.
In order for the inmates to tryout for the team, they must work or go to school. They also must show they can behave around people outside the prison walls, said Clay.
Clay said about 60 players tried out for the team in the early spring and he kent about 18 players.
"It gives us something to look forward to during the weekends," said Lansing right fielder Tom Bird.
Bird is serving a life sentence after being found guilty of killing his wife. Bird's lover, Lorna Anderson Eldridge, was found guilty of murdering her husband.
Bird is called "Reverend" by his teammates because before being sentenced to prison he was a clerkvman.
The murder trial was the subject of the made-for-television movie "Murder Ordained."
Once the Lawmen discovered Bird's identity, he quickly became the most intriguing of all the inmates. Although none would question him directly about his reason for being in prison, many approached him to talk about softball.
"I'm trying to make the best out of a bad situation," Bird said.
Bird said he enjoyed playing the Lawmen and Johnny's Scum because of the competition.
The Lawmen were trounced 17-0 but Johnny's Scum were more competitive losing 10-9 in extra innings and 13-9 in the second game. In all, Lansing inmates played five games against three softball teams from Lawrence and
won four games, raising their record to 70-19 this year.
The only game the inmates lost was to a Lawrence team called the Zit City Manglers. 18-13.
"I don't mind losing if we play a good game and the other team beats us," Bird said. "But if we play sloppy, then I am upset."
Tyrone Bradley, another inmate who is in for aggravated robbery, also enjoyed playing using softball teams and being interviewed.
"I'm the Reggie Jackson on this team, so you know I'm going to get the interview," he said to another team member. "You enjoy other teams come in."
Besides participating in athletics, such as softball or basketball, the inmates also get to watch an occasional movie.
After leaving the penitentiary, some KU students had a different perception of how they viewed the inmates.
it's easy to be for the death penalty," said Mark Faltermeier, a member of the Lawmen. "But after playing with some of these guys it seems inhuman to kill them. Some of them are really friendly; it's hard to believe they did something wrong."
much else we do," Bradley said.
"Remember, we are in here because we did something wrong."
"Other than that there is not
Pat Meacham, a member of Johnny's Scum, said it was an experience he had never gone through before, but he was glad he
"When I was in there I wondered
See PRISON, p.13, col. 1
KUAC board will 'adopt' minor sports
By MIKE CONSIDINE
Staff writer
The adoption process is about to begin for KU's non-revenue sports. The University's "minor sports" needn't like orphans any more.
need a feel of play. The new adopt-a-sport program isn't designed to bring about sweeping reforms in the Athletic Department. Its primary purpose is to give minor sports better representation within the Kansas University Athletic Corporation.
"We're finding ways for board members to do their job better and have greater involvement with industry." Redwood, KUAC board chairman.
The idea for adopt-a-sport grew from a suggestion made last year by the KUAC long-range planning committee that some way be found to gain greater insight into the problems of individual sports, Redwood said.
Redwood is currently soliciting preferences among the 16 board members and will be assigning the members to sports by mid-week.
The format will resemble one that new athletic director Bob Frederick worked with at Illinois State.
"We had a program with the athletic council there," said Frederick. "It was really successful. Usually board members are only familiar with revenue sports. All board members became more familiar with the overall program."
Board members will be rotated annually to get a better understanding of the needs of each of the University's sports.
Redwood said, "It allows board members to become more active with the actual putting of teams on the field, so board members can sort of contribute better for overall policy formation for KUAC.
"It allows them to get a perspective from the coach and student athlete directly, essentially lets them take a more personal interest in various sports."
Board members will be looking at scholarships, funding and normal board operations, then reporting them to the finance committee. Redwood said.
Frederick said that giving non-revenue sports a voice was the biggest benefit of the program at Illinois State.
"The changes will be in attitudes and understandings." Frederick said. "The coaches felt very good about having someone who almost became an advocate on the board."
Frederick said that the faculty board members actually aroused the interest of others in their departments. For example, the ISU soccer program found a new following when members of the school's chemistry and math faculty began watching its games.
Redwood said, "I envisage a board member who has, say, men's track, will come and watch the meets and show his encouragement. They'll get to know the athletes and get a good feel for what's going on."
"We don't know if it'll be success ful or not," Redwood said.
Sports Briefs
Cross country finds success
The Kansas men's cross country team upset Southern Illinois, 21-34, and the women placed second in the seven-season Nebraska Invitational during weekend.
The men were paced by sophomore Steve Hefferman (24:52) and junior Craig Watcke (24:59), who finished 1-2 in Friday's meet at Carbondale, Ill. Freshman Sean Sheridan (25:40) finished fifth, with junior Matt Bell (25:46) and freshman Sam Froese (25:54) claiming the next two places.
The women finished behind Nebraska on Saturday in Lincoln. The Cornhuskers had 21 points. Kansas, led by freshman Susan MacLean in fourth-place, scored 80 points. Senior Trisha Mangan was ninth for the Jayhawks.
"It was really incredible," said student assistant coach Ashley Benjamin. "The key to victory was the 14-second split between our fifth and seventh men. That shows we're working really hard as a team."
Quarterback club meets at noon today
The Kansas Quarterback Club will meet at noon today in the Summerfield Room of the Adams Alumni Center. At the meeting, Kansas coach Bob Valesente will discuss Saturday's game against Auburn and talk about the upcoming Kent State game. The meeting is open to all University students, faculty and staff. An optional $5 soup and salad lunch will be served. The club will meet every Monday throughout the season.
From staff and wire reports.
RUGBY
Lisa Jones/KANSAN
Korn Kirk, Lawrence resident, fights for possession of the ball as KU player Al Tebben looks on. The KU Rugby Club beat the Johnson County Club 32-6 in Saturday's match.
KU rugby eliminates K-State B team, 81-3
Substitute match turns into a victory as Garden City cancels at last minute
By CRAIG Staff writer
Little went wrong for the Kansas varsity rugby team as it beat the Kansas State "B" team 81-3 Saturday.
By CRAIG ANDERSON
The varsity had been scheduled to play Garden City Community College, but they cancelled at the last minute. KU Coach Rick Renfro then had to scramble to come up an opponent, which turned out to be the Wildcat second team.
Senior Paul King led the Jayhawk scoring with three tries. Pat King, Mike Menahan, Matt O'Donnel and Mike Menham each added two tries.
"We're trying to work into a roster of about 20 to 25 men who can play for the varsity," King said. "It's good to get a look at a lot of players in game conditions."
The lack of good competition Saturday, King said, had both good and bad aspects. He said it was hard to tell how far along the Jayhawks were as far as being able to compete with the better teams they will face later in the season. The opportunity to use more players, though, would help the team's depth later in the season, King said.
Senior John Brooks, varsity team captain, said he was pleased with the overall team effort. Though the outcome of the game was never really in doubt, he said he was glad to see that the second half had given the second half. Brooks said the rout gave the varsity a chance to work on their plays and ball handling.
"I remember the first time I went to Aspen," King said. "I was really impressed with the high quality of play up there. It'll be a challenge for us."
Also on Saturday, the KU club squad defeated the Johnson County "A"队 32-6. Club squad captain Larry Krisman led the Jayhawks scoring with three trys.
Kansas jumped to a 12-0 lead early n the first half and was never challenged throughout the match. Krisman said an early outburst was what he and his teammates were going for.
In the near future, the KU club team will travel to the Aspen Ruggerfest in Aspen, Colo. King said many members of the varsity would play on the club side because of the good competition that would be at Aspen. He said most of the top twenty teams in the nation, except for those on the west coast, would be at the tournament.
"We wanted to jump on them early, so we could work on our fundamentals," he said. "We still need to work on our ball handling." Krisman said the squad starter lagging in the second half needed it. "They still needed it."
The competition in Aspen, Krisman said would be tough.
"I don't know if we have the horses to win the tournament," he said. "We just want to go out and play the best we can."
University Daily Kansan / Monday, September 14, 1987
13
Sports
Heuer
Continued from p. 12
Heuer said "After the first hour, you forget you are playing against hardened criminals."
Although the inmates beat the Lawmen 17-0, Heuer managed to get a single.
"I'm not really embarrassed," Heuer said. "I would like to go back."
Once back in Lawrence, Heuer reflected on the experience. ___
Prison
Continued from p. 12
how they filled their day," Meacham said. "Everyday, waking up to the same people, wearing the same clothes and doing the same things is hard to comprehend."
Clay had told the teams how inmates would ask for things, but it did not hit home until it actually occurred.
"It is really sad," he said. "I was talking with one of the inmates and I realized that they were not going to be outside the concrete prison walls."
"But those guys are really friendly, and they really appreciated us coming."
Heuer was like many of his teammates. He did not care about the score of the game; the experience of going inside a prison and seeing how another segment of society lives was what counted.
Soccer
For both of KU's intramural teams, the funniest part of going inside the penitentiary was when inmates asked for clothing them.
Continued from p.11
That sort of friendly banter continued throughout the afternoon.
tribal player.
The player responded, "I like
my hat, plus you already have
a hat."
"Hey man, the hat. You want that hat?" said an inmate to a KU softball player.
The shutout by goalie Milonas, a freshman, came in his first college soccer game, MU coach Tim Dillon said.
hat:
"Man, I knew you would not give me that hat," the inmate answered.
"He was kind of nervous." Dillon said. "But the team empathized with him and rallied around him. He kept us in the game with great saves on a couple of occasions."
Play became rough in the first half
Members of Delta SIGma Phi on KU campus,
please contact Dave Broyles, 843-386-305
COMMUTERS: Self Serve Car Pool Exchange.
Main Lobby, Kansas Union
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Call us now. Carpenters Travel, 843-5698
"It was a cool experience for us as well as for them," said P.J. Morey, a member of the Lawmen. "It was so incredible talking with Reverend Bird."
INTERESTED IN LEARNING ABOUT A SALES CAREER?
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Gregor had knocked down a Tiger player minutes before he was injured.
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"Jon did a few things he should not have done. Jon was playing a great game to that point, he was just getting a little out of control," Shirtlife said.
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HILLEL
EVENTS OF THE WEEK
Monday, Sept. 14
Israel Info. Table
Study Abroad
Summer programs and more
Kansas Union - All Day
Wednesday, Sept. 16
Wednesday Lunch
11:30 - 1:30 Sunset Room
Kansas Union, Level Two
Thursday, Sept. 17
United Jewish Appeal
1988 Student Campaign
Planning Meeting
7:30 p.m. Hillel House
Sunday, Sept. 20
Parents' Weekend
Open House/Bagel Brunch
12:30 - 2:30 Hillel House
940 Mississippi
TUTORS: List your name with you. We refer to you as student. Students assist center 121 Strong Hall.
**FEED A RIDE/RIDER**: Use the Self Serv Car **oot Exchange**. Main Lobby, Kansas Union
**WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR** See our list of **Student Assistance Center**, 121 Strong Hall
ENTERTAINMENT
For more information call 749-4242.
if you request is Lawrence's Bent and Most Aef-
fortable and Sound and Lighting for Any Ocean.
841-140
Have Dices-Will Travel Mobile Sound Service.
Complete selection of dance music including
Progressive, Soul and Top 40 dance music. Ex-
cellent Equipment, Affordable
Mark Up at 740-499-8120.
ULTIMATE ENTERTAINTEMENT
Ultimate Mobile DJ System for All Occasion
metropolis
metropi mobile sound
JD Service in Lawrence
Experienced Club & Radio DJs
Music for all Occasions
Superior Sound & Lighting DJ Ray Velasquez - 8417083-
WANTED: LEAD SINGER for established rock
firing plant. Call Us at 841-9653, Direc-
tive Fire Station, U.S. Call Us at 841-9653
FOR RENT
Apartment for sublease October 1. 2 br, 2 bath.
Microwave, dishwasher, and on bus route.
749-5844.
Available immediately: bedroom very close to campus; $125/month and very low utilities 1341-0447
Available immediately: 2 br. apt. convenient to shopping & campus. Off street parking, A/C,
neighbors. $290/month. 1-681-8789
Feeling cramped? For rent a large 3-bedroom house, living room, family room with fireplace, large kitchen with dining area, stone, stove, washer/driller, garage, tenure paid $450/month.
BRAND NEW completely furnished 4 bedroom
appals available immediately. On the bus route and
in walking distance of KU. Call 749-4252 or
8 4 2 4 4 5 5 5
Female roommate(s)wanted, furnished 2 br apt.
Home office $1625 pls + 1/2 utilities.
845-5968
845-5968
Furnished room with shared kitchen and bath park One pet please. 841-5000 One pet please. 841-5000
Furnished two bedroom apt. one block from the University with off-street parking. No pets.
HOUSE FOR RENT Share large 5 m²/bath house CLOSE TO CAMPUS with LAUNDRY IN BASEMENT and 6th bfrm or study Two loving families living nearby need 24 more people to share rent and bats at 11th and Kentucky. Contact Darryl at 318-584-8123 or 318-585-1267. 1217 N.
GUARANTEED SPACE at Naimshim Airlines
WAITING LIST
LIST. Matt. B482-3391 for details anytime
1980 Chevette, good condition. $1000 Color TV.
19~37", 923-615-0314 after a 6 p.m. show
19~57", 923-615-0314 after a 6 p.m. show
10pm
a roommate I have a very nice brand-new apartment that comes with washer and dryer.
$200 plus utilities. 1 someone舍不得, 1 someone舍不得.
Café service. 934 0768. Must sub one bedroom, entire third floor of house. Very quiet. 2 blocks from campus. Call 230-3811 for immediate assistance. Call 230-3811 after 6 p.m.
FOR SALE
Room for rent in new townhouse (north Lawrence) $170 plus 1/3 utilities. Seek quiet, nonsmoking, graduate student. 842-923-Bob.
1980 Trans Am T*op. Very good condition. $4250.
842-7284.
1984 Honda Nighthawk S. 3,000 miles, 2 helmets,
and saddlebags. Must sell. Call 841-6762.
Mackinaw S. 300, 1000,
and saddlehubs. Must sell. Call 841-6762.
1985 Honda Elite Deluxe 150cc. Paid $1750, asking
Biodiversity Center, Berkeley
Biodiversity Center, Harvard vacuum, floorlam, picnics, coffee tables, 841-1499
Sunrise Apartment
Drumset; LUWDIG Dbl Bass, Rotos-toms, Pauce cymbal, 2 stands. Excellent condition. $60
and sashelpees. More info.
1985 Honda Elite Deluxe 156cc; Paid $1750, asking
$1250. Perfect condition!! Call 749-3525
Computer: Zenith-150, IBM Compatible, 20 MEG hard drive, RGB monitor, 60k plus, software $100 or best offer. Call 841-9447 mornings or after
Fender Rhodes, suitcase model, excellent condition,
$500. Call 1-722-0897.
For Sale. 1985 Kawasaki Ninja 600 R, clean,
fast, must sell. Call 749-254-9600.
Kawasaki, ONE, one
cymbal
cymbal Call Joe after 5 p.m at 8:43-243
Fender Gibbs, suitcase model, excellent condi-
tion
For Sale. CD player, AMS, one song and
disc replay. $125-negatable. 842-4594
For sale are classical collection collection 400-LFa *Lafayette* classical record to mint condition. Bob at Topkapi (Topkapi)
H. P. PROGRAMS. Five easy to use programs for the Hewlett Packard 1C calculator. Clearly presented step-by-step key in instruction; by a matrix, compared to binary conversion, synthetic division and more. Send $21 (chec m.o i. to: Wm. Kulmann, Dept. F., P.O. Box 1400, Kolla, Md.
FULLY HM PC/XT COMPatible fountain
computer. 1200/280 hand inward modeM
storage. $750, 841-1254 after 7 p.m.
*or - sale:* Litton large capacity digital microwave $120; Smith-Cornea erasable electric typewriter $150; both in excellent condition. 842-0659
Juniper Apartments
Offering luxury townhouses and
villas.
Stop by to see our
show unit at
9th and Michigan
or call:
542-807
for an appointment.
Office hours are 1-5 M-F
Introductory offer. PC compatible computer
feature monitor, mouse, 1SK, disk drives, DMHZ
MKDSS, software, GEM, basic, 1 year warranty
86/32J1 after b. p.m.
Korg Microperfect synthesizer, M-500 $200, Call
*v* 472.0887
Mint. 85 Schwanen Super Sport, Shimano 690 compensates. Maint. $749, sell at $200, 842-210-980
Migata 2¹³° Grandourd bicycle® both racks,
New is $650; must sell at $200
081-260-2600
081-260-2600
**** MOTHBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE.
Monday-Friday 10:50 p.m. on Saturday 10:24 p.m.
512 E. B, 794-746.
Aperçu
10,94 €
Garantie Garantie 30 lunes 2021
Fortino Torno $25 OBO 84-06-05
Motorcycle for sale 12,50 Endero-make offer (me
01/07/2021)
OBO 84-06-05
My name is Lake. I live on the second floor. I'm seeking a carpenter and much, much more. One year old carpet $50, fits dorm room. Dorm refrigerator $8. 3 component stresses $125, 814-487 for
Moped Honda Eversure 180s 3 baskets, cheap $175
Also, 1926 Gran Tortoise $250 OBO. B4-0145
***** New Cordless Bell Phone **********
Overhead (60'-100') Only
Outdoor (45'-80') Bell 611-824-7492
Bell 611-824-7492
Nishiki 10-speed with Shimano Comp. Beautiful.
Less than 50 miles $150 914-5463
Portable computer w/monitor, printer & modem,
tons of software. $400. Call 432-2215
Previously rental tuxes, will sell as a piece ($18) or separately #82-834 for more info. Dress for your event.
Sailboats: BIC 2005 Funfard with S2 sail-
board $27-$VINTA 115,110 liter 6.0 sail ad-
dressable
Save rent money-own your own mobile home
Two bedroom. Comfortable and spacious
Sussex 57018 A receiver and Papanicau cable:
$100. the pair PMR 6141-6211 after 5
seconds
rallistage review course for all four parts of CPA exam for $300. (A new one $45). Used once to pass the CPA exam on the first try. Call after 5 p.m. at 316-328-5694.
Twain matte, box springs, and frame. Like new. Ask $100 841-8491. Call 5:30 p.m. new.
Vacuums-Save big money. Reconditioned with 3 months guarantee. Prices start at $14.95. Lawrence Vacuum & Sewing Center, 916 Mass., 843-1267.
Wiy cent? Buy my 14k70 mobile home for only
$2,90 & pay less for house learning at KU. 2 hr. 2,
bath. A; C.resel for ready cash on graduation!
814-4294 or 814-6046 evenings.
AUTO SALES
new Datum pickup. Silver, 5xsped, A/C Must sell. Priced below book value, with new AM/FM cassette stereo and near new Topper thrown in. 842-496.
1963 Ford LTD. V6/A, PC PS, PB SW, 24 MPG!
or best offer Kitade 843-7592
D-BASE PROGRAMMER: 25% position to write and install the hard disk. Qualification requires gramming in D-BASE III, good writing skills, eight weeks' work, complete application at the Applied Computer Lab. C
74 VU Dashper, $300, needs little work. New tires,
shoes & brakes. 842-3738.
69 Fiat 124 Spider CONVERTIBLE—must sell him a best rewardable offer. NEW brake kit.
78 Chevy van air cruise, tilt, lAM FM cassette stereo CB. 310, radio V8, low mileage, excellent condition, $500 or make offer. QA42-1218 after
70 WM Besteil, excellent condition. No rust, heat
works, radio, white. NW Lawrence. $750
9-125 for details
FUN SPORTS CAR-1976 TR7, great condition,
$1500.00. Call 1-814-6974 (Lenexa).
CARS SELL for $15 (availage)! Also alps,
trucks etc. are now available. 802-657-6000 Ext
and Toll Free: 1-800-944-3012
19. Toyota Celica, Manual standard features war-conditioning, stereo, etc. Good condition.
74 VW Super-Beetle new parts. Good condition.
$1500 or best offer. 841-8752.
war-coating system, etc. blood tubes,
wear conditioning systems, etc.
Bertone XI-9-1948, leather interior, loaded 31K.
RESORT HOTELS, Cruisesmen, Airlines, Amusement Parks, NOW accepting applications for the Resort. For more information and an application, write National Collegiate Recreation Service; P.O. Box 3027, New York, NY 10016.
Female help wanted for housekeeping Monlys and Fridays, no to 9 p.m. Call 843-3888
Fragrance model demonstrate available SatURdays.
Approximately 14:16 hours total. Please
Need cooks for day shift. Apply in person 2-6 p.m.
at Laciere, 493 New Hampshire.
NEW CARS, NEW TRUCKS $250-$450 OVER
CONT. DELBERT D. THOMAS 818-8494
Borton X19-10
Borton 236
NEW CARS $499,841 - 317-4742
NEW CARS $399,841 $235-4549 OVER
Tune up your import car. $35. Parts and labor included, satisfaction guaranteed. Call Aaron, Carroll, 704-696-2281.
A/C, power steering, power brakes, crane; on-
overdive v 4. Load, excellent condition and
clean; $650 or make offer. Call 842-1238 after c
Hear duet on tour. Call the Green Hall on Friday.
Call 7-498-4200 to identify
Found-black dog, mixed breed, female, 19-20 inches. Tail with spotted tongue. Found on Friday night 8th & 9th. Call 641-841-295
10-696 Weekly up mail circulators? Rush self addressed stamped envelope: Opportunity, 9016 Wilshire Blvd, Box 226, Dept. Q, Beverly Hills, CA 90211
HELP WANTED
applicant at weaver's counsiness department.
Full or part work as a NURSE.
Nurse to staff NURSES, 842-0503,
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $10,940 or $290. vr now.
Call 605-8757-600. Ext. 1978 for current
address.
harrison grained
Lost. library book. "The Studies in the Aquastat-
cal." book call # 844473.
REWARD-For information leading to the recovery of a red 184 Kawasaki NJA90, stained wooden 9/8 from in front of 1425 Ohio between 11.5 am and 11.45 am. Did anybody see that?
WANTED! Campus representatives to promote Christmas and Spring Break ski / Beach trip packages. Earn FREE TRIPS & CASH! Call Sunsure Tour 1-800-321-5911.
RING13 Government jobs-your area.
105-888-5000 Call (602) 838-8885 EXT 4653
local advertising agency online sales账户
The Art & Design departments are hiring part-
time Student Gallery Monitors. These are work-
study positions. Gallery hours are between 8 a.m.
and 5 p.m. The positions require a bachelor's
degree; 300 art & Design Bldg. 844-4001.
CAMARO i30 bed berninaet, Red, auto, AM/FM,
AGA, upper steering, power brakes, cruise, tilt.
ATTENTION: STUDENTS! Natl firm preparing for Fall/Winter work. Learn and apply skills are awarded, internships are possible, & you may earn 2.3, 4 credits/qr or semester. Must apply now.
Videostore Help! Retail sales experience a must. Credit & collection experience preferred.
Videoservices 147 W. 23rd, 843-920.
Found a watch on the 6th floor of Wesley, late
Tuesday (Sept. 8) afternoon. Call 749-3119.
Buckey's Drive-in, a KU tradition for 26 years, has the openness for the noon hour shift, weekend shift, and night shift. Appl in person between i m and d 9 p.m. THANK YOU. BUCKY'S DRIVE-IN.
Love grey kilt with white paws and chest. Mak half-grown. From 1618 Kentucky, 841-2346
Found: watch near Green Hall on Friday,
September 4. Call 749-4205 to identify
Want your own business? Now is the time to start earning as an Avon representative. Call Julie at 843-9033 or www.843-9033.com
LOST-FOUND
MISCELLANEOUS
JESUS SAYS, "I am the good shepherd; the good shepherd hegivet for life the sheep." "I am the resurrection, and the life, that believeth in me, through life. I am the shepherd of men who liverth and believeth in me shall never Believest thou this?" "I am the was the truth, and the life; no man cometh unto the truth."
$10-$390 WeeklyUp, mailing circulars! No Quotes/bosses, information: RUSH self-addressed envelope CM/NA-CDQ POLB 7730 Rockford. IL 61126.
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14
Monday, September 14, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Sports
James Larson/KANSAN
15
Above, Kansas designated hitter Dan Benninghoff is greeted at home plate by his teammates after hitting a grand-slam home run. Benninghoff hit two home runs in the second game against Kansas City Kansas Community College yesterday. Below, Jarrett Boeschen, slides into home plate after a wild pitch by the KCKCC pitcher.
KU wins two of three in fall baseball debut
By DARRIN STINEMAN
Staff writer
Dan Bennington drove in six runs and hit two home runs in leading the Kansas baseball team to victory in the second of three five-inning games with Kansas City Kansas Concord and Quigley Field. The Jayhawks won two of the games.
Benningoh, a junior transfer student from Allen County Community College and a switch-hit, hit a solo homerun left-handed in his first at-bat of game two and followed with a grand slam from the right side his next time up to give the Jawhaves a 13-2 win.
Kansas won the third game as well, 5-3, but was held to only one hit in the opener by KCK pitchers Sean Whittar and Jon Facklin in an 8-0 loss.
The Jayhawks' pitching in game one wasn't as successful as KCK's. Mike McLead, KU's starter, walked in two runs in the seven-run second inning and took the loss.
Despite the performance of the team in the first game, Kansas coach Dave Bingham said he was looking more for winners than victories in the three mini-games. The Jayhawks were originally
scheduled to play one nine-inning game, but decided to play the three shorter games instead.
"It's really a scrimmage-type set up," he said. "We like to start our pitchers so that it's a win-loss situation. In a short game like that, it's impossible to come back and do things."
But in the second game, the Jayhawks did come back. With the help of five walks and two hit batsmen from KCK pitching and Banninghoff's heroes, Kansas was able to end the string of zeroes on its half of the scoreboard. But aside from Banninghoff, Bingham said he was displeased with Kansas' performance at the plate.
The Jayhawks' defense, which committed three errors in KCK's seven-run second inning of game one, received no praise from Bingham either.
"There were some fundamentals that we didn't execute as well as we should," he said. "It's timing; it'll come along a little later."
Sophomore Scott Taylor was the beneficiary of the Jayhawks' 13 runs in the second game and gave up only two runs, and sophomore Brad Hinkle was the winner of game three, as the Jayhawks won 5-3.
12 21
Nebraska quarterback piles up more records
KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- Let's see ... what Nebraska quarterback records are left for Steve Taylor to break next week?
The Associated Press
In the 1987 opener against Utah State, Taylor snapped the one-game Husker quarterback rushing record. Then Saturday, in a meeting of No. 2 and No. 3, Taylor found it rough going and scored for the win, firm and warmed a school-record five touchdown passes to fashion a 42-33 conquest of UCLA.
The UCLA defense choked back the Nebraska running game on 117 yards on 47 carries, its second lowest total of the 1980s.
"We had to throw the ball," said Husker coach Tom Osborne.
The weekend's action was a mixed bag for the Big Eight. Nebraska's victory combined with No. 1 Oklahoma's 28-0 shutout of North Carolina kept hopes alive for a No. 1 vs. No. 2 showdown in Lincoln, Neb. Nov. 1. In addition to this win, his visibility Baylor of a naming note by beating Baltimore 21, and Oklahoma State went to 2-0 with a 35-0 shutout at Houston.
But on the downside, Colorado was upset at home by Oregon 10-7, Iowa State lost at Tulane 25-12 and Kansas suffered a third consecutive humiliation with a 49-0 thumping at No. 4 Auburn.
Taylor's five touchdown passes tied the Big Eight record and erased the Nebraska standard which had been shared by David Humm, Vince Ferragamo and Turner Gill. What's more, he did it after bouncing back from an injured left shoulder. Taylor completed 10 of 15 passes for 27 yards and touchdown strikes of 9, 11, 48, 35 and 33 vards.
Nebraska 42, UCLA 33
"It felt bad at the time, but this was No. 3," Taylor said. "I knew I had to be careful."
"We only threw it 15 times and completed 10, so to me that's a good passing game." Osborne said. "But only run for 117 yards. That's abyssal. That's terrible. That's not even playing football. We better get a lot better than that. We lost four fumbles. If you had told me we would do that and just run for 117 yards, I'd say we'd get whipped by 21 points."
Oklahoma 28, North Carolina 0
If you had told Barry Switzer that his quarterbackward would run for 170 yards and four touchdowns, he would have said the Sooners were on their way to a comfortable victory. Jamelle Holoweley did, and the Sooners bolted.
a relatively easy time with the Tar Heels even though they set a school record with 19 penalties for 125 yards.
Oklahoma State 35,
Houston 0
Houston 0
Thurman Thomas totaled 111 yards in Oklahoma State's rout of Houston, which made the Big Eight 2-0 for the day against the Southwest Conference. Barry Sanders, who returned a kickoff 100 yards for a touchdown the week before, stung the Cougars with a 68-yard touchdown punt return.
"Our defensive game plan was excellent," said Oklahoma State coach Pat Jones. "It's a big step for us to beat a Southwest Conference team. A shutout is good any time you can get it."
Oregon 10, Colorado 7
BOULDER, Colo. — Redshirt freshman quarterback Bill Musgrave drilled an 8-yard touchdown pass to split end Terry Obee, and Kirk Dennis kicked a decisive 32-yard field goal early in the final quarter to lift Oregon past Colorado Saturday.
Musgrace, turning in a poised performance in his first collegiate appearance, completed clutch third in both of Oregon's scoring drives.
Colorado had the ball in Oregon territory 10 times in the game, but the Buffs' lone score came late in the opening quarter. Freshman fullback Michael Simmons burst up the middle 34 yards for the TD.
All of Iowa State's points in its first game under Coach Jim Walden came on field goals by redshirt freshman Jeff Shudak. His 35-yarder in the first quarter gave the Cyclones a short-lived lead. He also hit from 28, 35 and 32 yards to tie the school record.
Missouri 23, Baylor 18
The record book came in for a battering at Missouri, too. Tom Hearn's 29-year field goal in the first quarter was his school-record 32nd and strong safety Erick McMiliar broke the school career tackle record
After 1-10 and 3-8 seasons, Coach Woody Widenhofer desperately needed to open with a win.
The important thing is we got a victory under our belt, a game under our belt." Widenhofer said. "This team right now is ready to win, especially after today. This was a real critical win for our football team and program."
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REPRESENTATION:
THE PITTSBURG STATE EXPERIENCE
by Dr. Ed Galloway
presents
Kansas University-National Education Association
A Faculty Forum
September 15,1987 4:00 p.m.
Jayhawk Room Kansas Union
We invite all those interested in learning more about faculty representation at Pittsburg State to attend. Dr. Galloway has held a number of elected offices including President of PSU-NEA as well as being the chief negotiator.
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Details page 6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday September 15,1987 Vol.98.No.17
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Short add period stays for spring
Staff writer
By MICHAEL HORAK
Students at the University of Kansas will have only two weeks to add classes to their schedules once the spring semester starts, KU officials decided yesterday.
Department heads and deans of KU's professional schools decided to continue a policy started this fall that limited the add period to two weeks. Students need special permission to attend a class once that deadline has passed.
Gary Thompson, director of student records, said the decision to continue the policy was made this early in the semester because of the printing schedule for next semester's timetable. Add-drop policies have to be written in the Spring 88 Timetable, which must be completed by next week.
"It would have been nice to have another week to evaluate this, but we really didn't have the time," Thompson said.
A positive response from KU faculty was the main reason for deciding to continue the policy, several department heads said.
"I'm very pleased with the policy," said James Woelfel, director of the Western Civilization program. "The old policy created a certain amount of chaos. For the first third of the semester, you had students coming into class and you'd have to help them catch up."
In the past, students were given four weeks to add classes. Different departments within the University could place their own limitations for adding certain classes. For example, students from adding physics classes without special permission after the first day of the semester.
Several professors said they would need further reductions in the add period.
Shortening the add period to one
week would be even better," said Peter Casagrande, associate chairman of the department of English. "Students would get into class right away and wouldn't have several weeks of work to catch up."
The sooner that students are required to have their schedules finalized, the faster teachers can get their classes organized, Casagrande said.
I'm very pleased with the policy. The old policy created a certain amount of chaos. For the first third of the semester, you had students coming into class and you'd have to help them catch up.'
James Woelfel Western Civilization director
The policy changes this fall have led some professors to suggest that the University consider reducing the drop period, too. Currently, a student can drop a class until five weeks into the semester. This semester, that date is Sept. 25.
Some professors said they had had students who were enrolled in classes but who did not show up or drop the class until after the add period had ended. Other students could not get into those classes because they had been officially filled.
Thompson said reducing the drop period had been discussed. The University Senate, the campus governance body that sets drop policies, would have to review its rules before changes could be made.
However, Thompson said his office already was offering incentives to get students to drop their classes early in the semester.
BSU looks at ways to end Union fights
Staff writer
By JAVAN OWENS Staff writer
Black Student Union president Brian Dougherty asked the BSU general assembly last night to consider how it might alleviate the fights that sometimes have accompanied its parties at the Kansas Union.
Dougherty and other BSU executive board members invited Capt. Ralph Oliver and Lt. Jeanne Longaker of the KU police to talk about police security at Union parties. But Dougherty cautioned BSU members not to turn the meeting into a persecution session.
"We should think about why we're having these parties," Dougherty said. "We have a serious problem and we need solutions, fast."
BSU is among several campus groups that sponsor parties at the Union. But BSU members said last night that their parties presented a special problem because they attracted people who were not KU students, including many students from other universities. Some of those people start fights, BSU members said.
On Aug. 29, at an Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity party at the Union, James Jenkins, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore and a member of the black fraternity, was stabbed in the hand.
The same night, the sound of three or four gun shots came from the 1200 block of Oread Avenue while police officers there 300 party goers from the Union.
Later, police found a handgun in the parking lot across the street from the Union. But the gun had not been fired that night.
Dougherty said one solution could be to limit parties to KU students. Another solution might be to discipine the KU students who started trouble.
"Can we discipline our own groups?" Dougherty asked of the assembly. "If not, there just may not be any." There is no doubt. There just may not be any parties.
Thousands of dollars in damage has been done to the Union as a result of fights, Longaker said. She said officers on duty at parties were required to check hallways and bathrooms because vandalism had become a critical side effect of some parties.
In the agreement, the groups promised to brief KU police on any potential incidents that could occur at their parties. But Oliver said some of the groups had not kept their side of the bargain.
After Dougherty's opening remarks, Oliver said that groups that rented rooms in the Union had made a commitment with the police last February.
Another problem that Longaker said students should consider was the room in which they held parties. BSU members said they used the Kansas room because that room had a minimal renting fee.
HARRY
BROWN
Needles lawsuit will wait
Nick Jackson, Topeka senior, holds an umbrella as he and Scott Packard, Osawatomi senior, practice the University of Kansas fight song. A brief rain shower yesterday afternoon forced band members, who were practicing behind Oliver Hall, to take cover.
Plavin' in the rain
By AMBER STENGER Staff writer
The mother of a Lawrence boy said yesterday she would wait for the results of medical tests before deciding whether to take legal action against the hospital where her son played with used needles.
On Sept. 6, her 6-year-old son and a 7-year-old friend crawled into a dumpster at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, 325 Maine St., and played with disposed hypodermic needles. The needles were used because they had been pricked by the needles. They were pretending the needles were darts.
The dumpster where the boys found the needles did not have a lid.
But Pat Parker, director of pharmacy and chairman of the hospital's infection control committee, said, "The needles are always in a sealed container. They went out in sealed container into our trash can. The kids had to crawl into the trash can and break open the container to get into it."
The 6-year-old's mother said the children had kicked the containers into a fire.
Since the incident, the hospital has replaced its dumper with two vehicles.
The 6-year-old's mother said she was concerned the boys could be contaminated with AIDS. She said she was told that a person had been tested for AIDS the day before the boys played with the needles.
Parker said he did not know whether that was true, but that AIDS testing was common.
"AIDS testing is a relatively common process at most hospitals, and just because a person is screened for AIDS, it is not mean that person has AIDS," he said.
Judith Hefley, hospital community relations director, said last week that the boys had not been tested for AIDS contamination. AIDS contamination is confirmed when AIDS antibodies are found in blood. However, the antibodies can take from six weeks to a year to form.
The 6-year-old's mother said the
student was tested for AIDS in
about month.
Parker said a variety of substances could have been in the syringes the boys played with.
"Probably the most likely things would be saline solutions — salt solutions used for infusions, needles associated with those infusions and needles associated with drawing blood," he said. "If the material that they got into came from the pharmacy, for instance, there might be
See HOSPITAL, p. 6, col. 1
Elizabeth Dole to leave cabinet post
The Associated Press
After meeting with President Reagan for nearly 15 minutes, Dole told reporters she would leave the Cabinet Oct. 1 and would begin campaigning full time for her husband with a 12-state swing through the South.
WASHINGTON — Elizabeth Dole announced yesterday she was resigning as transportation secretary in the Reagan administration to help her husband, Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., win the presidential nomination next year.
"I want to be a major part in the campaign and do everything I can to help."
Some Dole strategists have been pushing for weeks to get Elizabeth Dole, an energetic and popular cam-
At times, Elizabeth Dole has been considered a possible vice-presidential choice, and during the 1984 Republican convention, there was some talk, sometimes only half in jest, of a Dole-Dole ticket.
pager, more actively involved. She has been one of the most sought-after speakers in the Reagan Cabinet and in recent months has spent much of her time on the road. Sen. Dole is expected to declare his candidacy later this year.
"I've been for a Dole-Dole ticket just for economy purposes," the senator sometimes joked in speech, one limousine and one airplane. "I like limoes and one airplane."
In Wisconsin, Vice President George Bush said he wasn't worried about Elizabeth Dole's campaigning
In a letter to Reagan, Elizabeth Dole said the decision to leave the Cabinet came after considerable soul-searching but, she said, "the need to elect a successor who can build on your administration's record of achievement has persuaded me to leave off at this time."
Reagan called her invaluable, but said he understood why she was laid down.
Her departure creates a major Cabinet vacancy with only 16 months left in Reagan's term.
skills. "Listen, have you met my wife? She's good, she's tough, she's able. I have a secret weapon myself." Bush told reporters.
The Transportation Department has been in the spotlight with rising
Sen. Wendell Ford, D-Ky., chairman of the Senate aviation subcommittee, commenting on Dole's resignation, said she has served "through a very important transition" as the airlines were deregulated. He expressed hope that her successor would push for increased financing for measures aimed at increasing air safety.
A possible successor may be Patricia Goldman, a moderate Republican who is vice chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board.
Sen. John Danforth, R-Mo., who at times has been sharply critical of Dole on automobile safety issues, called her an energetic secretary.
complaints from airline travelers and concern about air safety.
Judge Robert H. Bork definitely isn't a shoie-in nominee for Supreme Court Justice. In fact, Bork probably won't be confirmed by the Senate Judiciary Committee in hearings that begin today, said Pete Rowland, associate professor of political science.
Bork's confirmation by Senate not a sure thing, professor says
By VIRGINIA McGRATH Staff writer
"Bork's interpretations of the Constitution are so out of step with the way most Americans see it." Rowland said. "And I think there are problems with his integrity and temperament. He makes inflammatory statements that would be distinctly inappropriate on the Supreme Court."
See related story p. 2.
"For years he has established himself as a controversial judicial writer. He has shot from the hip a lot. He is an author of unscrupulous legal reasoning." *Rowan*
Bork's chances of confirmation depend on his performance in the hearings, said Rowland and Allan McGill, associate professor of political science.
"The hearings could make or break him. He is said to be an slouget speaker, so he will be a good witness in his own behalf." Rowland said.
Rowland is working on a book about how the politics of judicial appointments affect judicial decisions.
Cigler said, "The vote is likely to be close, but unless there's more information than I'm seeing, it's likely he will be approved. Unless there's something of a character nature that comes out in the hearings."
court's swing vote, so with the new appointment the court could move toward either moderation or conservatism.
Bork holds a conservative opinion on how the Constitution should be interpreted. He thinks the Supreme
Bork's interpretations of the Constitution are so out of step with the way most Americans see
it. Pete Rowland associate professors of political science
Pete Rowland
Bork's nomination has caused controversy for several different reasons. Whoever hits the position vacated by retiring Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr. will alter the court's political makeup. Powell was the
Court should follow a strict interpretation of the original intent of the Constitution.
Bork has written in the past that the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment applies only in racial
"You can't differentiate between
situations. The court, however, for more than a century is defined to be a judicial institution.
Bork also thinks that abortion should not have been legalized by the Supreme Court, because such a decision is not in the court's domain but rather in that of individual states. Bork also has written that certain First Amendment rights can be abridged, and that privacy can, in certain instances, be regulated by government.
Controversy over Bork's conservative ideology has led his supporters to say that too much attention is paid to his politics instead of his judicial competence. But sometimes it is difficult to divorce the two, Rowland said.
political philosophy and legal philosophy, because currently the courts are political institutions as well as legal institutions," Rowland said.
Cigler said, "The high court is an important position. The political orientation of the judge has always been taken into consideration."
Both Cigler and Rowland said that President Reagan appointed Bork with political considerations in mind. Bork's politics is only fair, they said.
"It was a political appointment so it became a political debate." Götter said.
Rowland said, "In Reagan's defense, he said when he was campaigning that he would nominate like I博 Kork. That's what he's done."
---
2
Tuesday, September 15. 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
U.S. officials to protest detention of diplomat arrested in Panama
PANAMA CITY, Panama — The U.S. Embassy said yesterday it would file a protest with Panama over the detention of a U.S. diplomat who was arrested as he watched men in civilian clothing fire at anti-government demonstrators.
"We plan to protest, but I can't say anything beyond that," embassy press secretary Cynthia Farrell said.
David Miller, the embassy's economic counsel for two years, was arrested Sunday by agents of
Panama's military intelligence and taken to a jail in the suburb of San Miguelito. He was released shortly after midnight to U.S. Ambassador Arthur Davis, Farrell said.
Pope calls for end to abortion, euthanasia
The government newspaper Critica claimed yesterday that Miller was arrested because he instigated Sunday's demonstration.
In Washington, State Department spokesman Rudi Boone said Miller was observing a demonstration of the fire to his head, and he was detained.
POHENIX, Ariz. — Pope John Paul II held a tiny, premature baby in his arms yesterday, then denounced abortion and euthanasia and repeated his condemnation any form of test-tube fertilization.
The meeting, the first of its kind,
He also reserved time during his one-day stop in Arizona for a talk with American Indians.
included 16,000 Indians from 195 tribes and officials of their dioceses. There are 285,000 Indians on the nation's 52.9 million Catholics.
The pontiff's first stop after arriving from San Antonio, Texas, was at St. Joseph's Hospital, where he visited three children in their rooms and stopped in a playroom to see 10 others.
Iraq wants Iran punished for evading truce
BAGHADD, Iraq (AP) — President Saddam Hussein yesterday urged the United Nations to take punitive measures against Iran for failing to respond to a Security Council call for a cease-fire in the Persian Gulf war.
lar. But there was no independent confirmation of any significant military action.
Iran and Iraq accused each other of starting new fighting to wreck the peace mission of Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuel
Perez de Cuellar arrived in Baghdad on Sunday after two days of talks in Tehran, Iran where President Ali Khamenei of Iran told him there could be no end to the war until the U.N. branded Iraq the aggressor and punished the country.
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) — This country's best-known actress, Janet Suzman, is directing one of its top actors, John Kani, in the first professional production of her play "Io" with a black in the title role.
It is Suzman's debut as a director and the first Shakespearean part for Kani, a 1976 Tony Award winner for his Broadway role in Athol Fugard's "Sizwe Banzi is Dead."
Connoisseur of sand announces winner
PALMETTO, Fla. (AP) — Siesta Key Beach in Sarasota was declared the whitest and silkiest sand in the world yesterday by a marine expert who felt, looked at and even tasted grains from 29 resort spots.
The Great International White
Sand Beach Challenge took four months to organize and 90 minutes to sift through by volunteer judge David Aubrey, an oceanographer and director of the Coastal Research Center at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution on Cape Cod.
Reagan says Soviet's visit unlikely to produce accord
From The Associated Press.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Reagan said yesterday the superpowers still faced difficult issues before they could reach an arms agreement, and the White House cautioned it was unlikely a missile accord or summit date would result from talks with Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze this week.
On the eve of Shewardnadze's visit to the White House, Reagan instructed U.S. negotiators to present a new draft treaty on intermediate-range forces, known as INF. It calls for elimination within three years of all medium-range nuclear missiles, which have a range of about 600 to 3,000 miles. It also would abolish within one year shorter-range missiles, which have a range of about 300 to 600 miles.
"With these new actions taken by the United States, it is now up to the Soviet Union to demonstrate whether or not it truly wants to conclude a treaty, and not to endorse its sites." Reagan said in a speech to the National Alliance of Business.
The Soviets have proposed a timetable of five years for dismantling medium-range weapons and one year for shorter-range missiles.
He said the proposed treaty contained the toughest-ever measures against cheating, a fact the administration cited in minimizing chances for an imminent announcement on a missile accord or superpower summit.
Reagan's speech and the new treaty draft set the stage for three days of meetings between Shewardnadze and Secretary of State George P. Shultz that could be crucial to the fate of an INF agreement.
Sultz and Shevardnadze will win, with three hours of talks at the State Department Tuesday and then go to the White House. There, they will sign a previously negotiated agreement to set up nuclear risk-reduction centers in Moscow and Washington to lower the chance of accidental war
Accompanied by Shultz, Reagan will confer with Shevardnadze in the Cabinet Room and then meet with him over lunch.
Shewardnadze and Shultz then will go back to the State Department for more talks and confer again tomorrow and Thursday. The discussions will be held both attend the special U.N. General Assembly session in New York.
In a statement announcing the treaty draft, Reagan said the superpowers had come a long way toward an
agreement and that a "historic agreement . . . is now within reach.
"Further, some of the details they have provided have not met the test of ensuring verification and confidence in compliance," he said.
Separately, Reagan said that arms control would not be the only topic for discussion. In a letter to a U.S. Jewish group, he sharply criticized treatment of Jews in the Soviet Union and said political pressure on Moscow must be maintained.
Constant issues remain to be resolved, including verification," the president said. He said the Soviets had agreed in principle to a number of U.S. verification requirements but had yet to provide some key details.
Reagan credited the Soviet leadership with some positive steps in human rights but said there were indicators of possible future tightening on emigration and a growth of anti-Semitism.
American arms negotiators presented Reagan's new treaty in Geneva and then quickly boarded a plane for Washington. The full team of U.S. arms negotiator joined the head of the strategic and space weapons, will be in Washington for working-group meetings with Soviet counterparts.
Exposer of Iranian scandal shot
The Associated Press
BEIRUT, Lebanon — The Lebanese journalist who disclosed the secret U.S. arms sales to Iran was shot and wounded yesterday by a gunman riding a motorcycle.
A doctor said Hassan Sabra, publisher and editor of the Beirut weekly magazine Ash-Shirna, may have been blinded by the gunfire.
Sabra, 38, suffered four bullet
bounds to the head, chest
chest (the assaults were in
the foreign hostages held in Lebanon
"He is in stable condition but might lose his eyesight from the head wound," said one doctor at the American University Hospital when Sabra emerged from three hours of surgery to remove the bullets. The doctor spoke on condition of anonymity.
Sabra, a Shilite Moslem, made enemies through his reporting in Ash-Shiraa on Iranian politics and
He was heading to the magazine's office in Muslim west Beirut's Mossesbit district in his chauffeur-driven white Mercedes-Benz when the assailant, riding on the back of a motorcycle, opened fire.
Police said Sabra was in the back seat with his 12-year-old daughter Nissir, who suffered a minor injury when she met that grazed the left side of her chest.
Sabra's driver, who doubles as a bodyguard, told reporters he jumped out of the car and fired his pistol at fleeing assailants on the motorcycle.
"But I do not know whether the assailant was hit," the driver said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
on Sabra, raising speculation that one of the two motorcycle assailants may have been killed.
Police said the body of an unidentified man bearing bullet wounds was taken to the American University Hospital two hours after the attack
"We are trying to establish the identity of the dead man in order to determine whether he was involved in the assassination attempt," said a police spokesman, who cannot be named under standing rules.
Sabra is known to have close ties with Ayatollah Hussein Montazeri, the appointed heir of Iran's revolu-
tion in March, Ayatollah Ruhul-
khomeini.
Sabra gained international fame when his magazine made the first disclosure last Nov. 1 of the secret American arms sales to Iran.
Montazer heads the militant wing in the Iranian government that suppressed a series of States. Montazer's supporters have criticized less militant leaders.
Hearings to begin for Bork
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Supporters and opponents of Judge Robert H. Bork exchanged verbal jabs yesterday on the eve of Senate hearings that will help determine the fate of one of the most pivotal Supreme Court nominations in history.
The outcome of the confirmation fight is too close to call, with perhaps a couple of dozen moderates in the Senate to commit to secure holding the balance of power.
During a speech to a National Alliance of Business audience, President Reagan made another pitch for Bork, saying that "too often, charac- assassination has replaced an in principle in Washington."
"Destroy someone's reputation and you don't have to talk about what he stands for," Reagan said. "Well, I hope Judge Bork's critics will be candid about why they oppose him and not fabricate excuses for attacking him personally. That way, we can avoid it and also create an important constitutional principle, and when the votes are counted, America will win."
The principle that Reagan was referring to was Bork's belief that "laws should govern our country, and if you want them changed, you should convince the elected legislatures to change them, not unselected." The point of the restraint shouldn't be controversial in our democracy, but it is."
The American Civil Liberties Union, which departed from its own traditional neutrality on judicial selections to oppose Bork, said the Court's recent judgement conservatism in recent interviews did not conceal his real views.
"He is fundamentally outside the mainstream," said Morton Halperin of the ACLU. Recent interviews only show he's trying to backtrack, he said.
Halperin said Bork, in extensive writings and speeches during the last few years, had espoused conservatism and viewed a retweets of 30 years ago. Halperin said.
Among those defending Bork and raising questions about the propriety of the Senate in examining a nominee's political ideology is former Chief Justice Warren E. Burger.
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If only typewriters let you proofread your work before they printed it on the page.
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Not so on a Videowriter. Spelling problems can be corrected simply by pressing the key marked "spell."
It counts words.
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On an ordinary typewriter you have to do it with your finger.
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From time to time you want a copy of what you've typed, right?
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, September 15, 1987
Campus/Area
3
Local Briefs
Student shot with pellet gun at greek house
A KU student was hit by a bullet from a gun early Sunday morning while he was leaving a party at the Palm Paifraternity, 1602 W. 15th St.
The student told Lawrence police that he had been invited to the party by friends who lived in the house. When he arrived, he was refused entrance because he was not on the party guest list.
The student told police that a house member at a second or third-floor window shot him in the upper arm with the pellet gun. The student did not receive medical treatment. Lawrence police are investigating.
Docking to give talk about management
Former Lt. Gov. Tom Docking will speak at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow at 252 Robinson Center. Docking, who has a master's degree in business administration from the University of Kansas, will speak about public and private management as part of the School of Business Executive Lecture Series.
Amateur radio club to give free classes
The Douglas County Amateur Radio Club will offer a nine-week course starting Thursday for those who are learning in learning about amateur radio.
Klissa Rueschoff, secretary of the Douglas County Amateur Radio Club, said the purpose of the course was to help students pass a Federal Communications Commission test and receive a novice license.
The class will be at 7 p.m.
Thursdays in the basement of
Lawrence Fire Station No. 1,
Eighth and Vermont streets.
The class will be free, but students will
have to buy a manual and tapes.
Primary guide book aids Missouri voters
Missouri Secretary of State Roy Blunt has published an eight-page guide to help Missouri voters
In 1986, a primary replaced the party caucus system that had been used to select presidential delegates to national conventions.
"The 1988 Missouri Presidential Primary" is designed to answer questions such as how presidential candidates would win delegates. Copies are available from the Missouri Division of Elections. Office of the Secretary of State, Box 778, Truman Building, Jefferson City, Mo., 65102.
Layout and design workshop planned
A layout and design workshop will be at 7 p.m. Sept. 23 in room 303 of Staffer-Flint Hall.
The workshop is sponsored by the KU chapter of the Public Relations Student Society of America.
Sharon Bass, associate professor of journalism, will demonstrate layout and design techniques from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Participants will be given a sample page to design from 8:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.
Registration deadline is 5 p.m.
Sept. 16. Registration forms can
be obtained in room 200 of Stau-
fer-Flint.
From staff and wire reports.
Carlin endorses proposal
By NOEL GERDES
Staff writer
Former Kansas Gov. John Carlin endorsed the Board of Regents Margin of Excellence proposal yesterday during a monthly comment at KANU-FI.
"We in Kansas have reached a point where we must make a further commitment to higher education in order to maintain the quality we have come to expect but which is surely slipping away from us," Carlin said.
Margin of Excellence is the Board of Regents three-year plan to bring Regents schools' budgets to 65 percent of the amount it had in 2011 to use faculty salaries to equal the amount peer institutions pay their faculty.
"The Margin of Excellence program is an opportunity to turn those statistics into real dollars and real revenues in higher education," Carlin said.
Carlin was governor from 1979 to 1986 and served eight years in the state Legislature before that. He now is a lecturer in urban studies at Wichita State University. He said that after listening to university officials make budget requests for 16 years, he now had firsthand experience with the scarce amount of money at Regents schools.
"Seeing is indeed believing," he said
Students train on outdated equipment and often as many as 12 faculty members share one secretary, Carlin said. Experienced fast learners make less than some first-year public school teachers with bachelor's degree, he said.
Tad Ayres, general counsel for the Regents, said that the Regents had not asked Carlin to endorse the Margin of Excellence proposal, but he did not say whether former governor's name carries influence in Topeka, he said.
The Regents plan to ask others, such as business leaders, newspaper editors and prominent alumni, to endorse the proposal, he said.
Lisa Jones/KANSAN
MORRIS
Snow job
Dust and sparks飞 as Gary Hupp of Topeka saw through a wall at Snow Hall. Construction workers were cutting holes in the west side of Snow on Monday to prepare for installation of a six-story stairwell.
Man dies in bicycle accident
By a Kansan reporter
A 29-year-old Lawrence man died late Sunday night after his bicycle collided with a car at the intersection of 23rd and Ousdahl.
The man, Jeffery L. Mesenbrink,
608 Kentucky St., was hurled by the collision onto the hood of a red Volkswagen Beetle and into the windshield. His head and chest broke through the windshield.
According to Lawrence police, Mesenbrink was traveling north on Ousdahl about 7:30 p.m. He was hit by the Volkswagen as he headed north through the intersection as the light turned green.
Mesenbrink was taken by ambulance to Lawrence Memorial Hospital. He went into surgery for multiple internal injuries about 9 p.m. and was pronounced dead at 11 p.m. Douglas County coroner Alan Sanders said Mesenbrink died from injuries suffered to his head and chest
The driver of the Volkswagen, Kristine A. Patti, 29, of 101 Ohio St.
While attempting to make a left turn on 23rd, she collided with the bike.
The police report did not indicate whether Mesenbrink was wearing any protective equipment. There were no skid marks indicating that the Volkswagen had made a fast stop, according to the report.
Patti told police that she didn't see the bicycle and was well into the turn when the bicycle hit her right front fender.
The Douglas County district attorney's office will investigate the accident further before deciding whether to file any charges.
Dave Furnas, a St. Louis junior who witnessed the accident, said Mesenbrink was riding at a high speed down he hill on Ousdahl moments before the accident.
Mesenbrink was employed at Volume Shoe Co. in Topeka. He had moved to Lawrence about a year ago and worked for the Bon Department Store.
Time to pay the piper nears, but drum corps lacks funds
Staff writer
By MICHAEL MERSCHEL Staff writer
The last notes of the Horns on the Range drum corps show faded from Kansas Memorial Stadium in July, but the bills from the show still linger for the KU band's honorary service organizations.
Kappa Kappa Psi fraternity and Tau Beta Sigma sorority, sponsors of the July 22 show, still owe $4,000 to Drum Corp International, said Randy Timm, a coordinator for the show and Kappa Kappa Psi member.
About 1,500 people paid $7 or $8 a ticket for the show — 500 people short of the break-even. Timm said.
He said the fraternity and sorority, which operate together on most functions, would have no problems raising the money through fund-raisers but wouldn't be able to meet DCI's deadline for payment. The deadline is 60 days after the show, which would be Sunday.
Leigh Anne Stout, the other coordinator, said the groups hadn't decided what they would do about the debt.
added every 30 days after Sept. 20.
Stout said.
Timm said that the groups had considered getting a loan but that most banks wouldn't consider loaning to them because the groups lack collateral. Timm said that the money could be paid back easily by May.
DCI, with headquarters in Chicago, Ill., has been understanding Timm said, and isn't threatening legal action to collect the money. But penalties for late payment will be
The fraternity and sorority raise money by operating concessions at KU home basketball games and by selling band jackets and T-shirts, said Jon Pinnell, Kappa Kappa Psi president.
Pinnell said that the debt was not causing big problems for the fraternity and sorority but that they wouldn't be able to consider any major expenditures and would scale back some of their activities, such as parties for marching band members.
Timm said one reason the show didn't make money was because the groups were not able to secure an outside sponsor. Timm said he thought that was because people in Lawrence were unsure about what to expect of a drum corps.
Corps performances at the show ranged on a West Side Story theme by the Hutchinson Sky Ryders corps to a three-ring circus by the Star of Indiana corps of Bloomington, Ind.
Stout said a lack of advertising money also cut down on attendance. Posters, announcements on radio and TV, are the most used of mouth were the only promotions.
"Everyone assumes drum corps is the same thing as marching band." Timm said. "It's not. It's a much bigger and higher form of entertainment."
Both Stout and Timm said that having the show on a weeknight had caused some problems for out-of-towners.
Despite the problems with the show and the debt, both Timm and Stout, as well as the presidents of the band fraternity and sorority, called the show a success and said they would have to show to Lawrence again next year.
Because of a good response from the crowd, Timm said he thought Lawrence could host a show yearly and turn big profits.
Because the DCI championships will be in Kansas City, Mo., next year and because DCI rules prohibit shows within 150 miles of each other during a year, the KU group would have to contract with an organization besides DCI to bring corps to Lawrence.
Some students at the University of Kansas are acting in a play that is a fairy tale about nuclear disarmament.
That's right, a fairy tale.
Students who live in Hashinger Hall and members of the KU Free Theater Co., a student group, are putting on a humorous half-hour production of "Passion," a play by Edward Bond. But the play does have a serious message.
Scott Heim, Little River junior and an actor in the play, said, "It's kind of a children's theater fairy tale about the nuclear arms race."
The play is directed by Neil Labute, director of the KU free theater, and costumes were designed by Carolyn Kirkland. Wichita senior
The scenic rendering and painting were done by Phillip Schroeder, Olathe senior.
Performances will be at 6 p.m. today and tomorrow at Potter's Pavilion near Potter Lake. If it rains, the performance will be at Hashinger
KU play is a fairy tale with a serious theme
Staff writer
The play, Heim said, is about a court magician who invents a nuclear bomb for his queen. The
Bv KIRK ADAMS
Other actors are Kate Godman, Kettering, England, sophomore, as queen; Jay Karnes, Omaha, Neb, senior; as prime minister; Kristi Keefe, Pittsburgh senior, as an old woman; Brent Wright, Overland Park, senior, as a soldier; Diane Bosilevac, Shawnee freshman, as Jesus Village, Jeanette Benoit, Paul Village, Budda; Mark von Schlemm, Leavenworth graduate student, as an angel; Tim Furnish, Westwood freshman, as an angel, and Jeff Plinsky, Topeka freshman, as the narrator.
Godman showed Labute a copy of the script last year. Because Godman plans to leave for England soon, the two wanted to do another play together. Labute said. The two have been in several plays together.
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belly to it." he said of the play.
Labute characterized the play as a dark comic fable about nuclear war. Its narrator, he said, is made to look like a plague victim.
queen and her prime minister, not realizing the destructive capacity of the bomb, decide to use the bomb on a neighboring country. That country develops its own bomb and retaliates in kind.
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This committee is instrumental to the organization and administration of one of the nation's oldest and most prestigious Track and Field Meets.
BECOME PART OF THE TRADITION! Working with the Kansas Relays can be an exciting and rewarding experience. Applications will be accepted through FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25. Interviews will be conducted the following two weeks. Stop by the Kansas Track Office, Room 143 Allen Field House today and fill out an application
4
Tuesday, September 15, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Professional teachers
Nations must laugh at the United States when we financialy display where our priorities lie. The latest knee-slapper comes from the National Football League Players Association.
14. wants unrestricted free-agency, guaranteed contracts and increased pension benefits. If players do not receive these demands, they have threatened to strike Sept. 22.
How long are fans going to put up with the greed of professional athletes? Maybe the fans should stage their own walkout. Better yet, why not put all money that would have gone to pro football players into education coffees?
The average NFL player's salary has tripled in the past five years; teachers' average salary in Chicago remains at $29,700.
Conversely, the Chicago Teachers Union strike is something we should take seriously. Teachers are asking for a mere 15 percent salary increase over the next two years.
As usual, the players probably will have the last laugh and fans will keep pumping money into their greedy pockets. Meanwhile, the teachers will continue fighting for money they actually need and deserve.
it was a meeting of East and West, but this time it was not the United States and the Soviet Union.
Instead, leaders of East Germany and West Germany met for a two-day summit in West Germany. East German leader Erich Honecker became the first leader of his country to visit West Germany. That itself is progress. And West German Chancellor Helm Kohl plans to respond with a similar visit.
German lessons
Informal diplomatic relations between the two countries seem to have begun. And the leaders met on their own initiative, without the intrusion of the United States or the Soviet Union.
During the summit, Kohl pushed for the reunification of Germany. Honecker pushed for full diplomatic recognition of East Germany by West Germany. The leaders could not reach an agreement on this point but at least they are talking. Honecker and Kohl did, however, agree that neither country favors shooting on the border.
East Germany and West Germany should accept each other as they are. They should be able to co-exist on peaceful terms, maybe even on friendly terms.
Dogfight
This dog will not have his day at a Prairie Village middle school.
This message could apply to the United States and the Soviet Union also. Superpower summits starring Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev and President Reagan should head in the same direction. The countries should recognize their differences and respect each other.
T-shirts bearing pictures of Spuds Mackenzie, the dog of beer commercial fame, have been banned from the Indian Hills Middle School.
School officials who saw students wearing the shirts recently had the students turn the shirts inside out and promise never to wear them again.
The reasoning behind the ban was that the shirts promoted beer drinking, contradicting anti-drug programs in the school.
The catch is that by banning these shirts, school officials direct even more attention toward them and increase the intrigue in the students' minds of getting away with wearing one.
That is just the opposite of what the "just say no" progam is all about.
And besides, the beer commercialism is broader than Spuds. If they ban Spuds, it's only logical to ban all shirts with beer or liquor slogans. And hats, too.
liquor stogans. Also, too.
Cigarettes are harmful as well. The Prairie Village school officials may as well ban shirts and hats showing the Marlboro man while they're at it.
And Led Zeppelin played at ear-piercing decibel levels can harm the hearing. So they could band their music, too.
A little ban goes a long way.
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board
News staff
Jennifer Benjamin...Editor
Juli Warren...Managing editor
John Benner...News editor
Beth Copeland...Editorial editor
Sally Streff...Campus editor
Brian Kaberline...Sports editor
Dan Ruettimann...Photo editor
Bill Street...Graphics editor
Tonn Ebben...General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Joanne J. Hardy ... Business manager
Robert Hughes ... Advertising manager
Kelly Scherer ... Retail sales manager
Kurt Messersmith ... Campus sales manager
Greg Knipp ... Production manager
David Derffelt ... National sales manager
Angela Clarke ... Classified manager
Ron Weems ... Director of marketing
Jeanne Hines ... Sales and marketing adviser
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GARBAGE BARGE II
Baseball known for pinch spitters
Editor's note: Mike Royko is on vacation and submitted some of his favorite columns. This appeared July 8, 1976.
A Wisconsin pharmacist has developed a new chewing gum that he says stimulates the flow of saliva. He says the gum will be useful for athletes in avoiding dryness of the mouth.
The developer, Curt Muller of Prairie du Sac,
sent me a couple of sticks of gum, which he calls
Quench, and I tried it. He's right. After only a few
chews I slobbered all over my desk and shoes.
I can recommend the gum to anyone who wished to cultivate more, and especially to baseballs.
It has become rare to see a baseball player who can really spit well. In the past, this talent was as highly developed as hitting, throwing, scratching and bench-suckling.
Almost every player used to have a large plug of tobacco in his cheek, which stimulated the flow of the juices, and made high-velocity spitting possible.
Mike Royko Syndicated Columnist
In Chicago we were blessed with several of the all-time great spitters. The White Sox had Nellie Fox, who was cheered as ardently when he spit as when he got a hit. And in Cubs Park there was Hank Sauer. In truth, Sauer was not an accurate spitter. He was more of a massive drooler. But he had a great following. They liked getting their feet wet, I guess.
Part of the benefit of spitting was physical. If you didn't spit, with all that tobacco in your jaw, you might drown. But it also had psychological benefits. When a batter stepped to the plate, he would stare balteally at the pitcher for a long moment, then deliberately spit a long, brown stream of tobacco juice in the pitcher's direction.
Another less visible benefit was that the large wads of tobacco, and the demands all that spitting placed upon the mouth, made talking difficult. Thus ballplayers were usually silent. And in their silence, they took on heroic stature because the fans did not realize how dumb they were. In contrast, today's athletes don't chew or spit, they are free to talk, and they soon become renowed for their stupidity. Had Mark Spizik chewed tobacco he might yet have played Tarzan.
The pitcher would then stare at the batter and respond with a menacing stream of his own. The battle was then officially joined.
"Willis could spit with a combination of power and accuracy that was unequal." Veed said.
everywhere.
the pool before he must have had an extraordinarily large cheek he must have carried a big wad.
Possibly the finest spinet in baseball history, according to Bill Veeck, an expert, was a little-known player named Willis Patrick. He spent most of his career in the minor leagues, however, where he left great brown spots that will never be erased.
"But his skill at chewing and spitting almost tragedy. One day he collided with a catcher and swallowed his entire chait. It must have weighed
two pounds. He collapsed at home plate, and the way he lay there, we thought for sure he had died. But when he came to, as sick as he was, he popped another plug right back into his mouth, wrapping paper and all. What a competitor."
veeck regrets the decline of spitting. But he says that in today's baseball world, with color TV, it might present problems.
"Those players, when they all got caused, a fine brown mist all over the place. If this got on the camera lens, everybody's TV picture might be a sort of beige."
One of the lesser-known spitters was Slats Grobnik, who began chewing tobacco when he was only 12. In a few years, it had helped make him one of the city's great softball pitchers
In softball, unlike baseball, spitting on the ball was legal, and Slats would douse the ball thor-
It had a devastating effect because when the batter hit the ball, it splattered all over him, including his eyes.
This caused the batter momentary blindness, and when Slats really had his juices flowing, hitter after hitter would run screaming in panic from the playing field. It was really exciting. In his greatest game, Slats pitched a no-hitter, and opposing team had to be lled away by their hands.
Slats eventually quit chewing when he discovered the most gross piece did not like young men with aneurysm.
After that, he wasn't much of a softball pitcher, but at least his teeth returned to their natural green color.
Cola companies wage war on TV screens
You've seen it on television. It's big, it's expensive, it's expanding and it won't go away. This is a battle that has lasted longer than the Iran-Iraq war, but hasn't received the publicity it deserves simply because people are fighting it with money rather than the more popular automatic weaponry and heavy artillery.
It is the cola war — one that is being waged in our very homes. Recently, there has been a casualty. Little Billy Johnson of Eudora was mad at his brother, Johnny. Real mad. When Johnny started asking his mother to buy a six-pack of Coke instead of two six-packs of Pepi, Billy "became frantic," according to his mother.
Not long after, while eating dinner, Billy intentionally made a funny face while Johnny had some of the carbonated beverage in his mouth. Johnny's drink came spewing out of his nose, and he lost consciousness. He was later pronounced dead. Johnny had blown his little brains out in the "accident."
It was this ugly incident that prompted me to investigate the war further.
Both Coca-Cola and Pepsi have perpetuated this ugly conflict and have pulled the American people into the syrup war. The citizens of this country protest on which cola, if either, is the world's best
Pepsi has had its eye on the cola title since it began its media blitz years ago. From Pepsico Inc we have been introduced to the Pepsi generation, who apparently would follow Moammar Gadhali into a boiling sea of mucus if he were holding a can of their product. Pepsi also brought
Jon Gregor Staff Columnist
us a Lionel Richie concert, complete with the new generation and its favorite beverage. Finally, we have the Pepsi challenge and a David Bowie-Tina Turner "Weird Science" commercial. All of this entertainment with helpful information to boot!
Pepsi has also launched an obnoxious campaign in which "Balki" of TV's "Perfect Strangers" challenges various victims of frontal lobotomies gone awry to choose the best-tasting cola. While the Pepsi generation smacked bubble gum and "ooh'd" and "aah'd", those of us with living brain cells planned Balki's demise in the ratings.
Coke hasn't been very respectable in the war, either. Aware of the blunder or of removing original Coke and replacing it with new Cokes, the American people witnessed a horrific birth.
A beast named Max reared its ugly Headroom. With Max came the study of good taste — or Cokelogy. This is Coke's failed attempt to provide brain food for the Pepsi generation. I have concluded that Max is Coke's Allen Ginsberg for the '80s. Instead of pushing LSD, Max pushes flavored syrup and carbonated water. This campaign is obviously aimed at converting those who
think that New Coke tastes like camel spit. LSD was no picnic, but there were plenty of idiotos who paid good money for it. Coke must have realized that now the LSD generation's offspring is ripe for the ripening—often. Same scam, different suckers
Coke and Pepsi have also introduced their own variations of the cola theme. Coke has Diet Coke, Cherry Coke, Diet Cherry Coke and caffeine—free Diet Coke. Pepsi counters with Diet Pepsi Free. Coke has also fought its smaller competitors in the soft drink market.
To take on Dr Pepper, Coke introduced Mr. Pibb. In the case of 7-Up, Coke produced an uncola of its own called Sprite. Dirty chemical warfare, the likes of which haven't been seen in the Iran-Iraq conflict.
On top of all this, R C cola has attempted to "go out of its way" to slip into the race for the crown.
To put all of this into its proper perspective, I have consulted some Lyndon LaRouche followers. Unreliable sources claim that LaRouche believes the three companies are conspiring to divide all cola drinkers on the issue of which is best and, with the help of Henry Kissinger and Queen Elizabeth, they will take over the confused and factional world.
There is one good side to this theory. It seems that if this goal is accomplished, Coke, Pepsi and Royal Crown have agreed to have Ivan bulldozed and made into a giant parking lot for the planned "Middle-East Safeway" store. An ugly war with a happy ending.
Jon Gregor is a Leavenworth junior majoring in broadcast journalism and political science.
BLOOM COUNTY
I. I WANT TO GROW UP... AND BRING DOWN DUMB MEN IN HIGH POSITIONS!
I WANT TO BECOME A GAME SHOW HOSTESS AND EARN MILLIONS! I WANT TO STAR IN A JAMES BOND MOVIE! OR A ROCK VIDEO!
OR BE A PROFESSIONAL CHEERLEADER!
by Berke Breathed
THE OPPORTUNITIES ARE INFINITE ! I MIGHT EVEN BE ... MISS AMERICA ! YES, I WANT GROW UP TO BE... 9/15
A BIMBO.
YA GOTTA CHASE YER DREAMS, BABY.
---
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, September 15, 1987
Tuesday Forum
5
Groups support blacks chilled by campus life
Being at KU often reminds me of the time I spent as a foreign-exchange student in the small mountain village of Archanes, near the northern shore of the island of Crête. When I first considered going to spend the summer as a foreign-exchange student in Greece, it didn't occur to me that the people would have no conception of what a black American was.
It baffes me to realize that some KU students seem to share the same sentiment. The most amusing thing was that some of the questions the citizens of Archanes asked and the statements they made were the same as many that have been posed by my fellow countrymen:
what are you?" "Did you know you are a normal person?" "It's OK that you are black." Sometimes it seems as though black Americans are foreigners in the land where they have lived, prospered, suffered and died for the past 400 years.
And if that's not bad enough, I've heard statements such as: blacks are only perpetuating racism and segregation by having organizations that seek to support and protect their rights.
I truly wish that protection could be omitted as one of the reasons for having an organization, but it can't because we still run into discrimination and assaults on our basic rights.
Recently, a new wave of racism has swept across America — the clash between whites and blacks in Forsyth County, Ga., the murder of a black man in New York City by white youths, not to mention the numerous race-related conflicts at universities all over the country.
Last year at the University of Alabama, members of white sororites protested efforts of Alpha Kappa Alpha, a black sorority, to move into a house on the campus's sorority row. The white sororities' main argument was that the move would disrupt their lives with noise and distress off campus, particularly by black men. Two days after AKA's moved into their new house, a cross was burned on their front lawn.
These problems are not confined to the South. Officials at Dartmouth blamed a drop in applications submitted by minorities on racial incidents at that institution. And there are many other reports
of racial tension on our country's campuses. So it is apparent that black organizations are still needed to defend the rights of blacks and help resolve race-related problems.
These organizations also function as support systems. The Black Student Union, or BSU, is one of the organizations dedicated to helping black students adjust to life on campus. And they not only serve black students, but they work to provide services for the entire student body. BSU was instrumental in forming Supportive Educational Services, which now provides academic advising and tutorial service to all students of the University of Kansas. BSU also initiated steps to set up an African-American Studies program, which gives black students a chance to learn about their heritage and helps white students to understand more about blacks, thus helping to lessen the damage that ignorance can cause.
I know how it feels to need the support and help that these groups give. I spent the first three days of my freshman year at Gertrude Sellards Pearson residence hall. For some reason, I was placed in a single room, despite the fact that I had requested a roommate. I was upset because I didn't know anyone and my room didn't come equipped with a built-in friend or at least someone who was forced to notice me. I then decided that it wasn't so bad; I would have privacy and I could always go out and make friends. So I set out to meet a few people and I received some polite hellos and even some short conversations, only to find myself at night sitting in my room alone.
Every night all of the girls dressed up and headed for parties that I could never find out anything about. I began to search for someone that might be receptive to me. My search for other faces the same color as mine was fruitless and after two days of solitude I called home and yelled, "I want my car now. I have to go find some black people." My car arrived a few days later and I cruised in my bright little red Fliat to the other side of campus and found out that there was a Black Student Union function at Potter Lake.
I was saved.
I have heard stories like mine from other black students many times. It seems as though nobody
but other black students and organizations included us in their plans, so we are almost forced to seek one another out, not because we only want to associate with other blacks, but because people always seek out the friendliest face in a crowd.
This is what upsets me most about finding out that many people think blacks somehow perpetuate racism by having organizations
Black groups preclude integration of cultures
As any visitor to the University of Kansas can testify, the University is, in fact, a segregated institution. A walk down Jayhawk Boulevard reveals separate, non-interacting social groups of black students. Campus bulletin boards promote all-black social events. The newspapers are scattered with stories of "black leaders" and their efforts at recognition for one group or another.
"T
The cliques (at KU) are unbelievable, and you very rarely see people of different racial backgrounds mixed together in large groups. And for many new black students the University of Kansas is a very cold place.'
Lynda Bassa student
"E
For the mainstream, efforts to welcome blacks have proven frustrating. As with the unexplained rejection of any invitation, confusion and bitterness have resulted.'
and groups that work to protect and support them.
Dan Houston student
People are people, right? But here at KU it seems to make a lot of difference. The cliques here are unbelievable, and you very rarely see people of different racial backgrounds mixed together. We now own new black students, the University of Kansas is a very cold place.
Black organizations provide support, entertainment and other services just as all campus organizations do. And I know of no black organizations on this campus that bar whites from joining. At KU, racism surfaces occasionally in subtle ways, but we can create noticeable divisions between people of different racial backgrounds.
I don't believe anyone on this campus actually sits around practicing the archaic ritual of thinking up ways to discriminate against minorities, but a little more effort could be used to plan activities that all the students of this university feel welcome to attend.
But until then organizations such as the NAACP and Black Student Union will have to exist. Lynda Basa is a Kansas City, Mo., sophomore majoring in journalism.
The responsibility for this segregation is difficult to pinpoint. Certainly the attitudes and actions of past generations of white students created the problem. However, in the immediate present, the so-called "black leaders" should bear much of the responsibility. These leaders gain their strength by maintaining separate organizations for blacks, and by propagating the myth that there are still whites-only institutions on campus. These are blacks saying to other blacks, "Hey, we are different."
What they won't admit is that the opportunity to end segregation is here. This generation of students at the University is less prejudiced than any before. Admittedly there are still biggs, but most of their actions could be explained, if questioned thoughtfully, as nothing more than bravado borne of insecurity.
Generally, white students are eager to welcome blacks as individuals with virtually unlimited potential. The doors are open now!
However, most black students continue to follow their leaders past open doors. They continue to be misled into believing they
wouldn't be welcome in, or enjoy participating in mainstream establishments.
For the mainstream, efforts to welcome blacks have proven frustrating. As with the unexplained rejection of any invitation, confusion and bitterness have resulted. If black students, as individuals, do not begin to move into mainstream campus life where opportunities exist, these invitations may be revoked by our disillusioned successors at the University. Future generations may grow up without any sense of our unity as a species.
Obviously there are many cultural differences between black and white students. We've lived "across the tracks" from one another for too long, in adjacent yet separate communities.
However, these differences should be not a deterrent but an incentive to interact. We have so
much to offer one another; we should take the best of both sides of the "tracks" to fully realize the accomplish of this academic community.
Black leaders who advocate changing the systems of society by establishing separate components are making themselves heroes while endangering the cause for which they claim to fight. It is neither fair nor nice to deem them a threat before being to join and then to join only as an entire block. This approach can only breed antagonism on both sides.
Black leaders must realize that the University is an ideal place to demonstrate the untapped potential of blacks to contribute to the systems of society by functioning as individuals within them.
Staff columnist Dan Houston is a junior from Tulsa, Okla., majoring in advertising and political science.
THE FAR SIDE
9.15
Jimmo
By GARY LARSON
"OK, you've got me over a barrel ... but how do I know these are all the negatives?"
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6
Tuesday, September 15, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Hospital
Continued from p.1
intravenous solutions. It's hard to speculate."
Parker said that the 1 hospital's method of disposing needles adhered to established practice. Until June, the hospital disposed of needles and syringes in an incinerator. That incinerator broke down and is expected to be replaced, he said.
The Centers For Disease Control in Atlanta have published recommendations for preventing virus transmission in health-care settings.
In an Aug. 21 CDC report, hospital waste was said to be usually no more infectious than residential waste.
Also, the report said, "... there is
no epidemiologic evidence that hospital waste has caused disease in the community as a result of improper disposal. . . Hospital wastes for which special precautions appear prudent include microbiology laboratory waste, pathology waste and blood specimens or blood products."
Watkins Hospital also follows recommended procedures when& dealing with laboratory waste.
Candye Waitley, nurse health educator at Watkins, said all needles used in the hospital laboratory were autoclaved, which means they were sterilized, before they were thrown away.
However, the process of disposing needles not used in the laboratory is different.
waitley said that after a needle was used, it automatically was separated from the syringe. The needle would then fall into a plastic container and would not have to be touched by health-care workers.
The containers are taped closed and are labeled with warning signs. The containers then are placed in special bags. The bags are thrown away in dumpsters and hauled away with the rest of the hospital's trash.
On Campus
French Table is scheduled at 11:30 a.m. today at Parlor C in the Kansas Union.
■ "Liberation Theology: The Gospel, Human Freedom and The People of God," a seminar, is scheduled at 4:30 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
■ Tryouts and practice for the KU Men's Soccer Club are scheduled at 5 p.m. today at Shenk Complex, 23rd and Iowa streets.
An orientation meeting for ushers for the KU Concert and Chamber Music Series is scheduled at 5 p.m. today at Skilton Lounge in Murphy Hall.
"Overcoming Math and Science Anxiety," a workshop by Chico Herbison, counselor at Supportive Educational Services, and Barbara Ballard, director of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, is scheduled at 7 p.m. today at the Pine
Room in the Kansas Union.
Room in the Kansas Union.
*An Amnesty International meeting was scheduled at 7 p.m. at the Rowing Room in the Kansas Union.*
*"Science and Quackery," a lecture by Robert P. Hudson, chairman of the department of history and philosophy of medicine at the University of Kansas Medical Center, is scheduled at 8 p.m. today at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union.*
From the KU Weather Service
On the Record
- Jewelry valued at $3,130 was taken between 11 p.m. Friday and 3 a.m. Saturday from a KU student's apartment in the 1400 block of Eddingham Drive. An intruder slashed a window of the residence to get in, Lawrence police reported.
A VCR, tape box and tapes valued at $3,288 were taken between 10 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. on Saturday, February 24, at the Bank of Ohio Street, Lawrence police reported.
A 1890 gray Mazda valued at $7,000 was taken between midnight and 1:45 a.m. Sunday from a residence in the 2100 block of Broad Road, Milwaukee, police reported.
Lawrence Street
A 1922 Chevy pickup valued at $300 was taken between midnight and 4 a.m. Sunday from KU parking lot 63 in the 1900 block of 19th Street, Lawrence police reported.
Lawrence Price:
An AM-FM radio/cassette valued at $650 was taken between Thursday and Friday from a car in the 140°
block of Westbrooke Street Lawrence police reported.
Cash valued at $425 was taken between 6:30 p.m. and 8 p.m. Friday from a residence in the 2500 block of Montana Street, Lawrence police station.
A moped valued at $439 was taken between Friday and Saturday from a parking lot in front of a residence in Shadrack, 101 East Street, I Lawrence county police reported.
A camera and cash valued together at $288 were taken between 5 p.m. Wednesday and 8:30 a.m. Thursday from a residence in the 2300 block of West 26th Street, Lawrence police reported.
A hydraulic floor jack and drive impact gun valued together at $475
were taken 9:30 p.m. Friday from a business in the 2300 block of Louisiana Street, Lawrence lawrence reported.
Four tires valued at $200 were taken between 3 a.m. and 6:45 a.m.
Saturday from a business in the 600 block of East 22nd Street, Lawrence lawrence reported.
A VCR valued at $300 was taken between 3 a.m. and 9 a.m. Saturday from a residence in the 800 block of New York Street, Lawrence police station.
A 12-speed bicycle valued at $425 was taken between midnight and 7 a.m. Saturday from a residence in the 800 block of Mississippi Street, Lawrence police reported.
- An AM-FM radio/cassette with stereo and radar detector valued together at $745 was taken between Thursday and Friday from a residence in the 500 block of Minnesota Street, Lawrence police reported.
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WEATHER Lawrence Forecast
STUDENT GET A 28% GROUPS:
Heavy rain
HIGH: 78°
LOW: 66°
Skies will be mostly cloudy with rain and thunderstorms likely today. The high today will be near 80°, and the low tonight will be in the mid-60's.
5-DAY
WED
Rain
79/65
HIGH LOW
THU
Showers
82/64
FRI
Thunderstorms
77/60
SAT
Rain
75/55
SUN
Sunny
69/48
North Platte
75/55
Showers
Omaha
75/60
Thunderstorms
Rain Storms Snow Flurries Ice
Goodland
74/52
Showers
Hays
77/57
Thundershowter
Salina
78/62
Thunderstorms
Topeka
78/64
Thunderstorms
Kansas City
78/65
Thunderstorms
Columbia
82/67
Thunderstorms
St. Louis
84/68
Thunderstorms
Dodge City
79/60
Thundershowers
Wichita
84/68
Thunderstorms
Chanute
86/69
Thunderstorms
Springfield
85/69
Thunderstorms
Forecast by John Doluse
Temperatures are today's high and tonight's overnight low.
Conditions are forecasted for this afternoon.
State fair fans are hog-wild about pig-racing attraction
The Associated Press
The starting gates opened. In seconds, Porkburger Express sprinted to victory and gobbled up the sandwich cookie waiting in a tin plate at the finish line.
HUTCHINSON — The traditional pre-race bugle call "Boots and Saddles" sounded over the public address system, and the eager squeals from the four entrants reached a swine-tingling pitch.
Welcome to the most talked-about attraction at the 1987 Kansas State Fair — pig racing.
a good show.
Joe Hedrick, who trained the pigs, said people liked watching the races because they were something new and involved animals and competition.
Crowds of 300 or more fairgores pack in around a 40-foot long, half-circle racetrack as many as five times a day to watch free, three-race sessions. The competitors include Magnum P.I.G., Hambo, Seattle Slop and Arnold Schnautenhager.
a good show.
Shortly before race time, Hedrick,
dressed in a pair of jeans, western
shirt and an immaculate white straw
cowboy hat, disappears for a few
moments. When he emerges on the
platform next to the race track he is
wearing a beat-up hat, red bandana,
red and white checkered shirt and
faded bib overalls.
His voice and personality change. He works up the crowd using tape-recorded corny versions of barnyard standards. He delivers explanations and instructions on pig racing in a strange accent.
strange accent.
"I use a little combination between Cajun and a southern drawl," he said.
the 42-year-old owner of Hedrick's Promotions left behind careers as a high school teacher, coach and rodeo clown. His 40-acre home base near Nickerson is an exotic animal farm that has about 30 miniature donkeys, 40 llamas, 15 zebra, 15 camels and 20 ostrich.
amies and 20 other
Besides the pig races, Hedrick
operates a petting zoo and sells camel rides at the Kansas State Fair. He has two other petting zoos and another camel ride unit that also travel nationwide to fairs and other shows.
A chain of sandwich shops is sponsoring the pig races in Hutchinson and provides spectators an opportunity to win $1-off coupons if the pig they select wins the feature race of each session.
Hedrick starts training the pigs when they are four weeks old. The performers at the fair are seven months old and weigh about 140 pounds.
The races have proven to be crowd-pleasers. People walk away marveling at how fast the hightailing hogs run.
It's an attraction that almost wasn't, but Hedrick said he's glad to be in the pig-racing business.
"I had a guy six years ago talk to me about it," he said. "At the time, I thought it was stupid."
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, September 15, 1987
State/Local
7
Graduates to form government group
By a Kansan reporter
A new graduate student government group will form this fall to provide graduate students with more representation.
The new group, called the Graduate Representative Assembly, was created by the new Graduate Student Council constitution announced Tuesday. Each department offering a graduate degree may choose one representative to attend Assembly meetings.
"The Graduate Representative Assembly will greatly increase graduate student involvement, which is what we've always been looking for," said Mike Anderson, chairman of the Graduate Executive Committee.
GradEx decided to send letters to each department to notify them of the new group.
At a meeting last night, GradEx accepted Michael Foubert's resignation as chairman and unanimously elected Anderson to replace
Foubert resigned to become the Graduate Student Council's executive coordinator, a paid position.
After the meeting, the committee interviewed candidates for the
T
-Mike Anderson
The Graduate Representative Assembly will greatly increase graduate student involvement.'
Chairman
Graduate Executive Committee
part-time positions of editor of the Graduate Newspaper and administrative assistant to the Graduate Student Council.
Student even
Foubert said GradExd had raised
both salaries by about $25. GradExd
will pay the editor $475 to $500 a
month and the administrative
assistant $425 to $450 a month,
depending on how many hours a
week each works.
Foubert said seven students had applied to be editor and six students had applied to be administrative assistant.
Anderson said that the Graduate Newspaper usually was published four times a year but that he hoped it would be published monthly this year.
TOPEKA — Executive Director Larry Montgomery said yesterday he saw an excellent chance that Kansas, at least four other states and the District of Columbia would create the nation's largest multi-state lottery this week.
Kansans pursuing multi-state lottery
are excellent that the states will proceed (with the multi-state lottery)," said Montgomery, who will represent Kansas at the meeting.
very this week. Representatives of the lotteries of Kansas, Iowa, Oregon, West Virginia, Rhode Island and D.C. will meet at a hotel in the Georgetown section of the district this afternoon. If all goes well, they will sign an agreement Wednesday morning creating the multi-state lottery, Montgomery said.
The Associated Press
said. "I think at this point the prospects
If everything goes according to plan, the multi-state lottery hopes to offer games in the participating states in January or February.
Missouri also could be a late entrant in the multi-state lottery, Montgomery said. However, its Legislature has told Missouri not to join, and that state's legislative oversight committee was deciding today whether to allow the Missouri lottery to join despite the opposition.
New York's Legislature recently adjourned without enacting legislation authorizing its lottery to join the multi-state organization. But it is supposed to consider the issue again when it reconvenes in December.
Illinois, another big state that could join the multi-state lottery, has received legislative authorization to join but has decided to wait and see what New York does, Montgomery said.
The Kansas director said he saw advantages to having the group of smaller states go ahead and start the war.
multi-state lottery without the big states.
"Also, it provides a new game for these states, and if the big states join later, it raises the size of the pals in the lottery or the lottery and rekindles interest in it."
The advantage for Kansas in joining the multi-state lottery, Montgomery said, is that it can provide larger prizes than a state the size of Kansas could possibly achieve otherwise.
"First, it gives all of the states about the same odds (for having someone from one of those states win), and it allows us to design a game that's in everyone's interest."
Station to trade oldies for new-age Wave
By MARK TILFORD Staff writer
Staff writer
A Kansas City-area radio station has caught the Wave.
new-age, light rock and contemporary jazz music. The service has no disc jockeys.
Te Wave is a radio service delivered to subscribing stations around the country. It is based in Chicago and provides listeners with a mix of
KZZC-FM 98.9, a radio station that broadcasts from Fairway, will join Sept. 24 with two California stations in broadcasting programs from a syndicated satellite network called the Wave.
People aged 25 to 49 will be the target of the station's new format, Herschman said.
"We wanted to be the first in the Kansas City market in something," said Susan Herschman, an account executive for KZZC and a 1987 KU graduate. "We're going to support the Wave."
"We're going for more of an upscale, educated person, who
makes at least $40,000 a year," she said.
The call letters of the station will change to KCWV.
The station switched from an allhits format last September, when it was known as ZZ99.
The station now plays popular music from the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s.
Station KPWZ in Los Angeles is the only station on the country that now broadcasts the Wave, but stations in San Francisco and San Diego will join Kansas City at midnight the day
of the format change.
Herschman described the new-age format as a light, instrumental form of music.
The station also will play the music of vocal artists, including Steve Winwood, George Benson and Al Jarrau.
The station also has invested about $750,000 in new technology to make the station the most powerful in the Kansas City area, Herschman said.
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8
Tuesday, September 15, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
N.J. Bell may use new service
Opponents say call identification system violates privacy
The Associated Press
NEWARK, N.J. — A service that would tell New Jersey Bell customers who was calling before they answered the telephone represents an invasion of privacy that also could reduce calls to emergency hot lines that rely on anonymous tips, opponents told a regulatory panel yesterday.
The state Board of Public Utilities is considering the proposed Call Identification service, described by New Jersey Bell as a way for customers to "see who is at the door before opening it."
Although opposed by New Jersey's public advocate and American Civil Liberties Union chapter, the service has the support of law enforcement officials who see it as a way to thwart obscene callers, reduce sales solicitation calls and assist in the tracing of numbers during emergencies.
Call Identification, which New Jersey Bell said is offered only in Orlando, Fla., displays the telephone numbers of incoming calls on a small screen hooked to the phone. The system also allows the service and six other features in Atlantic City and the New York suburbs of Hudson County.
Raymond Makul, director of the public advocate's Division of Rate Counsel, told the utilities board that
the benefits of Call Identification did not exceed the related potential for public harm.
Approval of the service would mean that "we are being looked out for by our Big Brother. Big Brother Bell." Makul said.
Edward Martone, executive director of the ACLU in New Jersey, said in a letter presented to the utilities board:
"Call Identification must be seen as a new toy for the over-zealous bureaucrat, the over-ambitious salesperson and over-inquisitive
Opponents said the service would violate the agreement between New Jersey Bell and customers who paid extra for unpublished numbers. Martone aid he would consider filing a class-action suit on the customers' behalf.
Those opposed also said people giving anonymous tips or getting information from referral hot lines unwittingly reveal their identities.
For example, Makul said, customers might be reluctant to participate in New Jersey's tax amnesty program or get birth control information if they thought confidentiality was not assured.
James Louis, the state's deputy public defender and director of a
program that handles child abuse and neglect cases in family court, said the service would have a chilling effect on child abuse reports.
But the superintendent of the state police, Col. Clinton A. Pagano, said he saw Call Identification as a welcome relief.
The utilities board could rule within a week on New Jersey Bell's request for a two-year test. The telephone company conducted a sixth-month experiment at an Atlantic City casino hotel.
the City casino hotel.
If the board grants the trial period, opponents can either supply the board with new information against the project and ask the board to reconsider or appeal the decision to the appellate division of the state Superior Court.
Proposed rates for Call Identification are $6.50 per month for residential customers and $8.50 per month for businesses. The company hopes to offer Call Identification and the other services to customers across the state by 1989.
The other services would allow subscribers, for a fee, to block calls from certain numbers, retain the last number from which a call was dialed, repeatedly dial numbers, use tones to distinguish callers, give priority to forwarded calls and allow tracing of the last call received.
Sting on child porn successful
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — More than 100 people are under indictment for indulging in child pornography, the Justice Department announced yesterday. Two nationwide government sting operations netted the accused when they answered advertisements that offered material containing graphic depictions of child sex.
graph or negatives showing minors involved in sexually explicit conduct.
In the operation, dubbed Project Looking Glass, postal inspectors sent letters advertising child cloat to people whose names had turned up on previously confiscated mailing lists of purchasers of such material.
Five Kansans were among those indicted in the operation, according to federal authorities. One of them, Harold D. Lamb, Mackville, was charged with nine counts of sending or receiving pornographic photo-
The other Kansans were each charged with one count of sending or receiving pornographic materials involving minors, authorities said. They are Barry A. Snyder and Dickie Bickley, 45, Newton a Wichita postal clerk; Kenneth G. Slowinsky, 32, Overland Park; and Thomas A. Thompson, 40, Salina.
Attorney General Edwin Meese III disclosed at a news conference that dozens of U.S. Postal Inspection Service investigators and Customs Service agents had been operating undercover as suppliers of kiddie porn at least since the beginning of the year.
Child pornography, Meesse said,
"affects all of us and victimizes those
most vulnerable, our children." He
said pornography could never be consented to by the children victimized by it, nor could porn be condoned by society.
Federal search warrants to recover the pornographic materials were issued following delivery. The material consisted mostly of magazines, videotapes and movies seized in earlier raids on porn traffickers.
"Project Looking Glass is intended as a strong message that the Postal Service will not tolerate the use of the mails as a vehicle to traffic in child pornography and perpetuate the sexual victimizing of our children," said Chief Postal Inspector Charles R. Clauson.
Clauson said that, in 35 instances during the investigation, suspects admitted to, or evidence was found of, sexual molestation of children.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, September 15. 1097
Sports
9
Lendl wins third straight U.S. Open Navratilova becomes triple winner at Open
No.1 seed overcomes illness and beats Wilander in marathon match
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — For years Ivan Lendl couldn't win the U.S. Open. Now he can't lose to it.
Lendl's bid for a third straight Open title appeared on the Wilhelms yesterday after he lost the first.
Lendl, a 27-year-old Czech who lives in Greenwich, Conn. lost three straight Open finals from 1962-84 before starting his winning streak in 1965 with a victory over John McEnroe.
It was the first set Lendl had lost in the tournament. Worse, he was suffering from the flu and facing a player who specializes in long, tiring baseline rallies.
"It's something I never dream of," Lendl said. "It's unbelievable. If somebody told me three years ago, when I had lost my third straight final, I wouldn't have believed it. I would have said that person was crazy."
But Lendl rallied to beat the 23-year-old Swede 6-7 (7-9), 6-0, 7-6 (7-4), 6-4 in a 4-hour, 47-minute match at the National Tennis Center.
Lendl, who has also won three French Open titles, said his illness drained him during the match.
"I was out of juice for the last 3½ sets," he said.
"It was strength of mind and a little bit of luck. In this kind of match, there's such little difference between the players."
between the players.
Lendl thrust his fists upward in joy and covered
his face with his hands after closing out the matel with a backhand service return down the line. Both players had held serve in the final set until the 10th game.
ginner Lendl and McEnroe are the only men to win three consecutive U.S. singles titles in this Open era.
Wilander, who has won two French and two Australian Open titles, was in his first U.S. Open final.
"I was surprised to be in the final," he said. "But after the way I played in the tournament, I thought I could win it."
It was Lendal's second victory over Wilander this year in a Grand Slam final, with the first coming on the slow red clay at the French Open. The U.S. Open is played on hardcourts, a faster surface
Open a player or a backcourt. Wilander, a classic baseliner, said he tried to be aggressive against Lendl, who has a more varied attack.
1. was the one who was attacking. "Wilander said, 'But you can't do it all the time. I can't attack any more for my style. I don't have that good a volley and he passes so well."
The match, postponed Sunday because of rain,
started under sunny skies at 2:11 p.m. EDT. When it ended at 6:58 p.m., the sun had set and the stadium lights were on.
Wilander, who was more emotional than usual during the match, won the first-set tiebreaker
after saving one set point with a forehand passing shot.
That broke Lendl's 25-set winning streak at the Open. He hadn't lost a set at the Open since losing the third set in his quarterfinal victory over Henri Leconte last year.
The set, which lasted $1\frac{1}{2}$ hours, ended when Lendl hit a forehand that landed inches wide of the sideline. Lendl argued briefly with chair umpire Richard Kaufman, who declined to overrule the line official's call.
Wilander broke Lendl in the fifth game of the first set when he ran down a Lendl drop shot and hit a handfire cross-court winner. But Lendl broke back in the eighth game to even the set at 4-4 and both players held serve to force the tiebreaker.
The last player to win the U.S. men's titles title without losing a set was Neale Fraser in 1960, eight years before the tournament was opened to professionals.
Trailing for the first time in the tournament, Lendl began to attack more at the net and stormed back to even the match in 28 minutes. Wilander won only five points in the entire set, including one off Lendl's serve.
In the third set, both players reverted to long baseline rallies and neither could hold his serve in the first four games. Lendl broke again in the fifth game, but lead, but Wilander broke back in the next game.
NEW YORK - Martina Navratilova became the first triple winner at a Grand Slam event in 14 years yesterday and also passed the $1 million mark in career earnings at the U.S. Open.
The Associated Press
Navratilova added the women's doubles and mixed doubles championships to her singles crown.
She teamed with longtime partner Pam Shriver for a 5-7, 6-4 2-victory over Kathy Jordan and Elizabeth Schrader as the losers led 4-1 in the second set.
She then won the third title at this tournament by teaming with Emilio Sanchez for a 6-4, 6-7, 7-6 victory over Betsy Nagelson and Paul Anacone in mixed doubles.
The last triple winner at a Grand Slam event was Billie Jean King, at Wimbledon in 1973. Margaret Court was the last triple winner at the Open, in 1970.
"It was about as nerve-wracking as it can get," Navratilova said after she and Sanchez saved two match points and wasted six. Her smash down the middle of the court clinched the victory. Then, she leaped in the
air and hugged her Spanish partner. "I've been so close so many times," she said. "At the end, I was thinking, 'If it happens, it happens. Maybe I'm not destined to win the triple.'"
"I looked at the draw and said we should win both doubles. I was most uncertain about the singles, but I thought I had a good chance to win."
She beat Steffi Graf, seeded No. 1 to her No. 2 ranking, 7-6, 6-1 for the singles title on Saturday.
Navratilova's earnings in her 15 Open appearances total $1.135 million. She has won four singles titles, two doubles and two mixed doubles championships.
The 30-year-old won $250,000 for her 1987 singles championship, the 1989 team competing with Shriver for their 18th Grand Prix double titles, and $13,000 with Sanchez.
"Once you are in the final at a Grand Slam, it's easy to keep your energy up," she said of the Open tournament. "You have to do it through the tournament."
"I learned a lesson not to take the other two events seriously enough to bother me in singles."
KU volleyball seeks NU's success rate
By ROBERT WHITMAN
Staff writer
The University of Nebraska doesn't have a volleyball program that Kansas coach Frankie Albitz wants to copy.
Albiz just wants to copy the Cornhuskers' success. A major aspect of that success is a strong showing in the Big Eight Conference.
The Jayhawks, 4-2, will have a chance to carve out a part of Nebraska's success for themselves at 7:30 tonight when the two teams meet at Allen Field House for a dual match.
Nebraska, 6-0, is ranked seventh in the nation, according to the latest American Voleball Coach Association poll. The poll gathers the votes of 50 volleyball coaches scattered throughout the country.
The Cornhuskers have also won all 11 Big Eight championships in volleyball and were 10-0 in the conference's regular season last year.
"I don't want to emulate anybody. I just want a strong program," Albizt said. "I just need time to recruit. They recruit some pretty good athletes."
Nebraska returns three starters from last year's team, but it lost three seniors who were All-America players, including Karen Dahglern, the Big Eight Player-of-the-Year and Broderick Award winner, which is given to the country's best player.
Kansas outside hitter Judy Desch said that she thought the Jayhawks might have a chance to beat Nebraska this year.
"We beat them in the spring tournament without those three girls," Desch said.
Desch said that the Cornhuskers should have some heavy hitters to test the Kansas defense, such as 5-11 senior Kathi DeBoer.
DeBoer leads the Big Eight with an average of 5.41 kills a game. In the Nebraska-Mizuno tournament over the weekend, DeBoer had 66 kills in three matches, including 25 against Penn State, which set a school record for Nebraska.
The Jayhawks counter the Nebraska hitter with a strong defense. Kansas has the third, fourth and fifth best players in digs per game in the conference with Shannon Ridgeway, Monica Spencer and Jodi Oelschlager.
HAWKS
Chip Budde, Lawrence freshman, watches a scrimmage from the sidelines. Budde was red-shirted last year but is now the starting center for the Kansas football team.
Redshirt year benefits Kansas center Budde
By CRAIG ANDERSON Staff writer
Not playing football last year turned out to be a good experience for Kansas starting center Chip Budde, a redshirt freshman.
Budde said the redshirt year helped him get physically stronger and helped him learn the Kansas offensive system better. He said Kansas' starting center last year, Paul Oswald, was a great role model for him. Oswald, an 11th round draft pick, now plays for the Pittsburgh Steelers in the National Football League.
"Paul had kind of a quiet personality, but he was always there to help me when I needed it," he said. "He was a great player last year. I want to emulate some of the things that he did."
Kansas offensive line coach Jan
Quarless agreed that the redshirt
year helped the 6-foot-2, 260-pound
Buddle.
"It it helped him immensely," he said. "Mentally, it helped him as much as physically because he was able to become acquainted with our system."
When Budde signed a letter of intent with the Jayhawks as a Lawrence high school senior, he weighed 230 pounds. Quarless said Budde's adding 30 pounds since he was a testimony to his work habits.
Budde said he wanted to add about nine more pounds this season to get to his best playweight. He said with his height he didn't feel like he would need much more weight than that.
"I want to be smaller than the noseguards I play against," he said, "I don't size that is important being thin and hard. Hard work and technique are."
After watching Oswald perform last season, Budde said the big turning point in his own young career came when a replacement had to be found for the graduating senior Oswald during the Jayhawks' spring practice. During the spring drills, Budde, still in his first year, had to assume a leadership role in the offensive line. He said being put into a position of being a leader and not so much a learner, as he had been before, made him feel more comfortable.
weren 'always practicing because of injuries,' Budde said. "Then Bryan (Howard) and Jay (Allen) went down with injuries. Suddenly, I was the only projected starter still practicing. I enjoyed the little leadership responsibilities I had."
Budde said the closeness of the offensive line made him feel good about his role on the team. He said the veterans always accepted the younger players and tried to make them comfortable.
"Jim (Davis) and Bob (Pieper)
"They (Auburn) were as good as we expected they would be," he said. "The things we expected we were going to be able to do, though, we just couldn't accomplish."
Budde's individual play in his collegiate debut was satisfactory. He also excited about himself because his team had lost 49-0 to Auburn.
Quarless said Budde had played well in the Jayhawks' opening game.
"He met all expectations," he said of Budde. "He had some low snaps when we were in the (shotgun) formation, but, overall, he played well for a freshman. What he lacks in technique and experience, he makes up for with hard work and enthusiasm."
Budde said the lack of recognition that offensive linemen often receive didn't bother him. He said senior guard Steve Isham and junior center Jay Allen called themselves the "no press brothers" because of their lack of attention from the media.
"It's part of the job, and we expect it," he said. "When we do get media attention, though, we apreciate it."
Budde said that the Kansas team this year, as well as the program overall, would continue to improve throughout the season. Position by position, he said, Kansas was as good as Alabama and he knew, though, that the Jayhawks still had to prove themselves on the field.
"We know the program isn't where it could be," he said. "We've got some great athletes on the team, but something just hasn't clicked yet. I know we're going to be successful this year and in the next few years. We don't doubt ourselves."
Bears' defense helps defeat Giants, 34-19
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — Mike Tomczak threw for two touchdowns and ran for a third, and the tough Chicago defense pressured New York's quarterbacks to help the Bears win the battle of the Super Bowl champions 34-19 last night and reassert their dominance in the NFL.
The victory ended a 12-game New York win streak that had begun at the seventh game of the 1986 regular season. Last night's win was every bit as dominant as Chicago's 21-0 win in the 1985 playoffs that the 1986 champions wanted so badly to avenge. The Bears were beaten by Washington last year, one game short of an NFC title game meeting with the Giants.
Tomczak, filling in for the injured Jim McMahon, looked very much like the McMahon who led Chicago to
the 1985 NFL championship.
He completed 20 of 34 passes for a gain of 292 yards, including third-quarter touchdown passes of 56 yards to Willie Gault and 42 yards to Ron Morris. He sneaked over from the 1-yard-line with eight seconds left in the half to give Chicago the lead for the first time at 10-7.
But it was a defense led by Mike Singletary and Wilber Marshall that turned the game. The defense registered eight sacks for 53 yards in losses, seven on Super Bowl MVP Phil Simms and one on Jeff Rutledge, who had to enter the game twice when Simms was knocked groggy.
Dennis McKinnon also had a 94- yard fourth-quarter punt return for a touchdown that clinched the game, the second straight defeat for the Giants on a season-opening Monday night game.
Scoreboard
Baseball
American League
Milwaukee 6, New York 4
Detroit 3, Boston 0
Toronto 18, Baltimore 3
Chicago 8, Minnesota 2
Kansas City 8, California 5
Texas 2, Oakland 1
Cleveland 11, Seattle 8
National League
New York 6, Chicago 5
Philadelphia 3, St. Louis 2
Atlanta 3, Cincinnati 2
San Francisco 4, San Diego 3
Houston 8, Los Angeles 1
Football
Chicago 34, New York Giants 19
Black pitches K.C. past California, 8-5
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Bill Pecota's fifth-inning double snapped a tie and reliever Bud Black stopped California for six innings as the Kansas City Royals beat the Angels 8-5 last night.
Pecota's double off reliever Jack Lazorok, 4-6, scored Wilcoff Wilson, who started the inning with a bunt single and then stole the 84th base of
The blow broke a 5-1 tie, and Kansas City added two runs in the seventh off Lazorko. Danny Tartarbull singled home one run, and another run scored when Angels catcher B乔 Boone throw the ball into center field on a double steal by George Brett and Tartarbull.
The Royals moved to within 3/4 games of first place Minnesota in the American League West because the Twins lost to Chicago 8-2.
Lazorko replaced Sullivan, who was seeking his 320th career victory, to
California had pulled to within 5-4 when Boone hit his third home run of the season in the second inning.
Frank White singled home two runs, and Steve Balboni followed with a three-run homer, his 23rd of the season and fourth in five games.
Black, 7-6, relieved Royals starter Milden Perez, who was making his second major-league start, with the Royals leading 5-4 in the third innings and runners at second and third and no one out. Black gave up four hits, struck out three and didn't walk a batter in his six-inning stint.
The Angels took a 3-0 lead in the first on Wally Joyner's two-run double and an RBI double by Johnny Ray. But the Royals came back with five runs off Don Sutton in the bottom of the inning.
Inning streak finally ends for Ripken
TORONTO — Baltimore shortstop Cal Ripken had his consecutive inning streak ended at 8,243 last night when he was replaced defensively in the eighth inning of the Orioles' loss to the Toronto Blue Jays.
The Associated Press
Ripken started the streak on June 5, 1982, and it covered 908 games, in which he played every innning.
According to the Orioles, the streak was believed to be the longest of its kind in major league history.
Ripken grounded into a fielder's choice in the top of the eighth, then was replaced by Ron Washington at shortstop in the bottom of the inning.
"For the moment, I don't know what I feel," said Ripken, who received handshakes from his teammates. "It was so strange to be out of the game. Period. It been so long since I sat on the bench."
10
Tuesday, September 15, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Sports
Networks ask schools to run games Sunday if NFL players strike
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — CBS and ESPN are interested in televising college football on Sunday if a strike shuts down the NFL, but the coaches of the Big Eight's most attractive teams are saying, "No thanks."
"We wouldn't move our games to Sunday," said Coach Barry Switzer, of No. 1 Oklahoma. "There would obviously be problems."
Tom Osborne, of the second-ranked Nebraska Cornhuskers, said, “We’ve been tentatively approached about that. I would be opposed to it. It’m not saying Nebraska wouldn’t do it. But I guess if they asked me, I’d say no. It isn’t that I feel you can’t play football on Sunday; I used to. But I just kind of hate to see us make a pro-type move. It seems like we do everything to accommodate television now — move games to 4 p.m., move them back to 11...television time outs ...we’re doing anything for a buck.”
"In our state," Osborne said, "we have some people drive 300 or 400 miles or more. They've made reservations and plans. But if you change your game, it works a hardship on your fans."
Iowa State Coach Jim Walden said that playing a football game on Sunday could cause the team to lose a day of preparation if the team's next opponent didn't play that Sunday.
"I don't know I could say I wouldn't do it," Walden said. "But I think it would be very important to know who I'm playing the next Saturday. I'm sure you'd see a lot of teams be afraid to do it. Jerry Falwell and some of the boys might get mad at us."
But Kansas Coach Bob Valesente said, "As long as they give us a chance to go to church first, I will be happy to play on Sunday. Yeah, we'll
play any time.
Missouri Coach Woody Widenhofer added, "College football is in need of money. I can see doing something like that to help our administration and our university."
play any time."
If the NFL does experience a long strike, some television dollars may be available for schools that would be willing to inconvenience their fans and themselves and move the games to Sunday. The College Football Association contract calls for each team on a national telecast to receive about $300,000. An unspecified percentage of the total revenue from the game also is placed into a participation pool for all 63 CFA schools. There have been reports that CBS has offered to double the amount the schools receive if they switch their games to Sunday.
games to Sanlian.
Chuck Neinas, executive director of the CFA, declined to say how much money CBS had discussed.
"We have been contacted by CBS and the seven members of the television committee are now contacting their constituent members to gauge their sentiment," he said. "So far, I would say that it has been mixed."
"I don't think we're going to be in a rush to make a decision on this simply because the whole situation is relatively uncertain," Neinas said. "I would say we're not here about games, but if it occurs, it won't happen until October. People can't be expected to make a change on short notice."
The NFL Players Association has set a strike date for Sept. 22.
"It's not as simple as it looks," Neinas said. "Some conferences and independents have a syndicated package and there are commitments there. In addition, of course, there are activities planned around games, and some institutions are in places
Sports Briefs
Women's golf team places sixth at Iowa
Junior Susan Pekar had the lowest score and the lowest total score for the Kansas women's golf team as they placed sixth at the University of Iowa Invitational.
For the second straight tournament the scores have been higher than Weiser expected. No one other than Pekar broke 80 the entire weekend.
843-7628
Pekar shot an 81 on the first day of the event and carded a 75 on the second day but again shot an 81 in the final round for a total of 237. The next lowest score on the team was 245 by sophomore Sherri Atchison.
eattle Minnesota won the event, and they were followed by Iowa, Iowa State, Wisconsin, Nebraska, Kansas, Southwest Missouri State and Northern Iowa.
Men's golf team grabs early lead
The Kansas men's golf team grabbed a first-day lead in the Jayhawk Invitational at Alvarm Country Club. The Jayhawks, with a 588, were 14 strokes ahead of Nebraska at the end of the first round of 36 holes. The final 18 holes of the tournament will be played today.
Kansas had two golfers in the top five — John Bruning in fourth and Brian McGreevy in fifth, Rudy Zupeit, usually a Jayhawk but playing unattached, turned in a 146, which was good enough for second.
Behind Kansas and Nebraska were Wichita State with a team total of 605 for 36 holes, Iowa State with 610, Kansas State with 615, Oklahoma City with 617 and Southwest Missouri State with 653.
From staff and wire reports.
Jayhawk Triathlon Sunday, September 20,1987
600 meter Swim, 16 km Bike Ride, 4.5 km Run
* Entries Due 5:00 p.m. Wed., Sept. 16
* Sponsored by KU Recreation Services
* Entry Fee $10.00
Rm. 208 Robinson
Questions? Call 864-3546
111
Questions? Call 864-3546
es
GODFATHER'S PIZZA NOW PRESENTS . . DOUBLE COUPONS!
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843-6282
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yello sub
a new yello sub
new yello sub has surfaced,
tearing the town apart!
Our new store at 1814 W.23rd not only makes it easier for you sub lovers on the South side of town to enjoy our lovely subs, it also helps us deliver to your home more quickly. Please use these guidelines when you call in your deliveries to get your meal as quickly as sub-humanly possible.
If your address is NORTH of 15th Street call Yello Sub Campus at 841-3268
624 West 12th
If your address is SOUTH of 15th Street, call Yello Sub 23rd at 841-ASUB 1814 West 23rd
10:00 am - midnight Sunday - Thursday 10:00 am -1:00 am Friday and Saturday
PAID ADVERTISEMENT
"GROWTH" DEVOTEES FILL COMMISSION CHAMBER WITH GLOSSY BUBBLES
After being described as "lazy" by a Chamber of Commerce member, I offered to work alongside him in several nursing homes for a prolonged period. When my adversary proved unable even to acknowledge my response, I realized he was just another victim of Chamber propaganda.
Chamber members can be described as bubbly and optimistic but Chamber propaganda is very potent stuff which often reduces the recipient's reasoning capacity. For instance, the June 17th University Daily Kansan notes that "Wyondotte County Sheriff John Quinn . . . is warning . . . civic, church, and charitable organizations . . . traditional fund-raising activities, such as raffles and cakewalks, won't be allowed because they are gambling and therefore illegal. . . An activity is considered gambling if it is a game of chance in which people pay to participate and winners receive prizes . . . (because of) Quinn's efforts to fight gambling . . . St. Patrick's Catholic Church cancelled a cakewalk that was a part of its ice cream social."
Yet those usually circumspect Chamber people are vigorously promoting a periodic state lottery "in which people pay to participate and winners receive prizes" because most of the revenue derived from this "game of chance" will be used for . . . you guessed it . . . economic development.
Chamber propaganda concerning the proposed bypass has claimed many victims. Some of these now distraught folk attended the July 28th City Commission hearing about the bypass in order to voice their support of the project. Although, according to the April 16th, 1986, University Daily Kansan, "(County Commissioner) Nancy Hiebert thinks a proposed bypass south of Lawrence can be an economic development gold mine for Douglas County...and) ease overcrowding in the streets that follow the growing development to the west of Lawrence," and a Kansas Department of Transportation study reveals that most of the traffic on 23rd street is local and therefore will be only slightly affected by a bypass, these victims of Chamber propaganda assume this bypass will eliminate their current traffic problems.
Ms. Heibert feels the creation of an "economic development gold mine" is one function of a governing apparatus, yet not one of the Chamber's distinguished members—neither Mr. Toebben, Gage, Longhurst, Whitenight, Johnson, Zinn, Hill (Howard or Stephen), Billings, McGrew, nor Professor Redwood—can name a capitalist theoretician from Adam Smith to George Gilder who advocates having the public pay for economic development stimuli. (I long ago offered to buy Bob Johnson a steak dinner if he could name one such theoretician. However, his search is foredoomed to failure because publicity-funded economic development is the stuff of which socialism, not capitalism, is made.)
Because Chamber propaganda rhapsodizes only about potentially profitable activity in the private sector, the victims of said propaganda are soon rendered unable to grasp the fact that the vital work without which this nation cannot remain free is in the public sector. While our country needs good schools, literacy centers, day care entities, nursing homes, public transportation, doctors, nurses, family farms, food distribution centers, soup kitchens and full employment, Chamber zealots and other "growth" devotees continue calling for more publicly-funded economic development which primarily benefits the already affluent operating in the private sector.
Those glossy "growth" bubbles floating about the City Commission chamber the other night looked great, but we should remember that, according to Webster's Third New International Dictionary, a bubble is "something that lacks firmness, solidity or reality." William Dann 2702 W. 24th Street T
(PAID ADVERTISEMENT)
2702 W. 24th Street Terrace
1
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, September 15. 1987
11
Nation/World
Report appraises space station plan
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — NASA's plan to build a space station with the shuttle will be difficult and risky and could lead to loss of still another space shuttle orbiter, a National Research Council committee said in a report released yesterday.
The study said that the space agency's plan to build a space station by the mid-1996 ranked as the most ambitious and lengthy task NASA had ever undertaken and that to be completed it could not be constructed cheekily.
Using the space shuttle to build the station, said the report, would pose about a 60 percent probability of the loss of another orbiter. It said NASA should prepare for that loss by planning to build still another reusable spacecraft.
"We should expect to lose an orbiter — not necessarily with accompanying loss of life — about once every five to eight years," said the report.
In a reply to the report, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration disagreed that use of the shuttle to build the station would be risky. NASA said that it had recently redesigned the station for use in orbit for the current shuttle system.
The National Research Council is a private, non-profit agency set up by Congress. Its report is the result of a four-month study commissioned by the White House, the National Security Council and NASA
The NRC report generally supported NASA's current space station design plan but found that the station would cost more than NASA claimed and would require a closer evaluation of the risks involved. It also said that, to be successful, the program would require a long-term commitment by the government and the American people.
The NRC report said spare parts and test hardware could add $200 million to $3.9 billion to the cost of the station, now estimated at $14.6 billion.
NASA did not endorse the suggestion that a fifth orbiter be built, stating that the agency remained confident the current fleet was adequate for supporting the space station program.
NAA already is building an orbiter to replace Challenger. NRC committee chairman Robert C. Seamans Jr. said that NASA should build yet another orbiter, bringing the eventual shuttle fleet to five, to prepare for possible loss of another in addition to Challenger.
In a reply to the NRC report, however, NASA said the additional cost estimate in the study was much too high. The agency put the additional cost for testing and spare parts at only $200 million.
Seamans said the committee found that for the space station project to succeed, it would require consistent and adequate funding.
WRITING A RESEARCH PAPER?
Attend The
RESEARCH PAPER WORKSHOP
VILLA GIRL'S BOOK CLUB
Tuesday, Sept. 15
7:00 to 9:00 p.m.
4057 Wescoe Hall
FRREI
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Presented by the Student Assistance Center.
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please contact Drew Breaves: 843.3895
PHARMACEUTICAL SALES CAREERS
Visit with a recruiter from Merk, Sharp and Dohme and learn about the company and careers in this field. Make an appointment at the University Placement Center, Level One, Burge Union. Times available for students of all levels. Sign up now for October 5 visit.
ILYAYA
Hillel
שָׁלוּא
TS OF THE WEEK
Wednesday, Sept. 16
Wednesday Lunch
11:30:1:30 Kansas University
Sunset Room, Level 2
Thursday, Sept. 17
United Jewish Appeal
1988 Student Campaign
Planning Meeting
7:30 p.m. Hillel House
Sunday, Sept. 20
Parents Weekend
Open House/Bagel Lunch
12:30-2:30 Hillel House
940 Mississippi
For more information call 749-4242.
Just starting and you're already stressed out?
Get the kinks in at Lawrence Massage Therapy.
gift certificates available too! (Tell your roommate!)
Shade diaper changes! Bruce and Martha go to school if you so!
I L...Y...A. Y...A.
SUNRISE PLACE
pub & Michiean
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In winter when the Certificate is worn and attached to the coat of arms, the Month of September is the Year National Hero and Eighty-Sixth.
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817-409-3656
WANTED: LEAD SINGER for established rock band. Call Dr. Marshall at 841-963-2200, Dire Straits, or U.S. Call Dr. 841-963-2200.
ULTIMATE ENTERTAINMENT
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ENTERTAINMENT
Apartment for sublease October 1. 1 bth. 2 bath.
Microwave, dishwasher, and bus routs
BRAND NEW completely furnished 4 bedroom apts available immediately. On the bus route and in walking distance of KU. Call 749-4252 or 8 4 2 4 4 5 5 5
Have Discs-Will Travel. Mobile Sound Service.
Complete selection of dance music including
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Available immediately; bedroom very close to campus; $128/month and very low utility costs.
Brain computer interaction
Brain computer simulation 2 b.
Applied mathematics 3 a.
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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
Available immediately? 2 br. apt. convenient to shopping & campgrounds. A/C. /U
FOR RENT
FOR SALE
Must attend one bedroom, entire third floor of house. Very quiet, 2 blocks from campus. $240/month. Available immediately. Call 842-3831 after 6 p.m.
Room for rent in new townhouse (north Lawrence) $170 plus 1/3 utilities. Seek quiet, nonsmoking student. Graduate. $492-832.Bob.
loving and even in our mund or situate. Two fun-
gities, rent and e-mail. (gyus) need 2-4 more people to share rent and bills at 14th and Kentucky. Contact Baird at 310-845-1212 or 310-845-2689. Dayly: 1217 N.
GUARANTEED SPACE at Naisthim Hall for '86
and '87. The space is available for lease.
LFCTT M4, 823-281, for details anytime
19° - $200. 913-651-8910 after 6 p.m.
1980 Trans Am T-top. Very good condition. $4250.
$42,794.
189 WAIT amplifier Peavey Special 130 Channel
189 WAIT amplifier, old earl. 820, $250, 842/6158
z. bedroom apartment-bus route, $255. Call 610-4044. Call the morning or evening.
wearing prince's 1 year dress
1980 Chevette, good condition. $1000. Color TV,
'19"-$200. 913-651-8910 after 6 p.m.
1984 Honda Nighthawk S 3,000 miles, 2 helmets,
815 Honda Elite Deluxe 100cw:救火 $715, asking
150s. Perfect condition!! Call 749-3852.
In Absolutely Awesome Array of Antiques, collectibles and new stuff we have: hardback and 2 price paperback books, full line of new comic plays. Playbies, Penthouse, etc., loads of antique, indian, and contemporary items in a variety of colors, for any occasion, antique toys, fine art glass, doll house furniture, miniatures, fiesta, and the best selection of antique furniture in the area. Quantities Fillea Flea
sion, antique toys, fine art glass, doll house furniture, miniatures, fiesta, and the best selection of antique furniture in the area. Quantilella Picture Market, 1 New Hampshire, Open Sat & Sun
Dramestr. LTLDWF Dbl Baa. Role-To-Mane. Passs.
Possible to take 2. p.m. at 834-4234.
Callable. Take 2 a.p. m. at 834-4234.
**OUSE FOR RENT** Share K15 bremn/ bcmh/bmh
BASEMENT and 46 bhm or study.
2 fun-fun
bases.
AT&t wall phone $40. Mountain bike $50. Lawn
atterspader. $25. Children book. Call 814-5317.
Computer. Call 814-5317. Compute. Bike mount $699, plus software,
$1100 or best offer. Call 814-6949 morris or altre-
x.
For Sale 1855 Kawasaki Ninja 600 R, clean.
fast. must sell. Call 749-324 anytime!
For Sale: Litton large capacity digital microwave $120. Smith/Corona electric carrier typerwriter $180. both in excellent condition.
$495.60
FULLY IBM PC/XT COMPATIBLE fountain
computer 5804-8412 under MODERN
IBM PC/8412
**for** state: classical record collection 400 LP's
**for** county: to mit condition. Bob at
862 907. Topic: A.
H. I.P. PROGRAMS. Five easy to use programs for the Hewlett Packard 12C calculator. Clearly presented step-by-step key sequences; 3 by 3 matrix, demailed to binary conversion, synthetic division and more. Send $2.10 (check m.o.) to: Wm. Krupp, Dept. I, 510 Borgsburg, ROLL 604, Rolla
Korg Micropresets synthesizer M-500 $200. Call
1-913-723-0887
Migata 2¹³ Grandurning bicycle, both racks,
New is $600, must sell at $390
OBI 080 - 290
OBI 100 - 290
**** MOTHALL GOOD USED FURNITURE
512 e 9th 784-796-891
512 e 9th 784-796-891
Mopeds Honda Express 1800, 3 basketless, car $175.
Also, 1970 Gran Torino 2000, 841-0905.
Motorcycle for sale. 175 Endoro-make offer (no less than $400). Call Chris at 841-3462.
My name is Luka. I live on the second floor. I'm selling carpet and much, much more. One year old carpet $60. Its dorm room. Dorm refrigerator component套件 $123. $814-447
*****New Cordless Bell Phone***
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Nikor PC15 shift iems 800 $/s 11.5 Nikor K175,
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power flash power flash 650 $/s 892.77578
VNiA w/ high power flash. $675 842-7357
Nikhil 10-speed with Thompson Comp. Beautiful
design. $699
Less than 50 miles $150 814-5463
Portable computer w/monitor, printer & modem
Portable computer w/monitor & modem
toms of software. $400. Call 432-2215.
Records - Huge sale! One day only!
Holdstone, 9:30-5:00, this Sunday, September 29
Previously rental taxes, will sell as a price ($35) or separately #82 834 for more info. Dress for a party
Total review report会对 all four parties of the CPA to pass the CPA exam on the first try. Call after 5:30.
Sailboats BHC 2055 Funkboard with 5.7 foot
aluminum deck. Includes:
beam boom - $480 or will separate - 1.642-622
Save rent money—own your own mobile home
Two bedrooms Comfortable and spacious
LOST-FOUND
Sale: sofa sleeper and 10-speed at 739
Massachusetts, Miller Furniture.
Vaccums-Save big money. Reconditioned with
Lavender, Lawnens & Sewing Center, 916 Mass.
www.lawnensandsewingcenter.com
1980 Datum pickup. Silver, 5peed, A/C Must sell. Priced below book value, with new AM/FM cassette stereo and near new Topper thrown in. 842-4366
Twint matress, box springs, and frame. Like new. Newsking $100; 81-849; 861-5: 30 p.m.
Wry went? Buy my kk13 mobile home for only $2,900 & pay less for housing while at KU, 18 Kr. b/c. A/C resell for ready cash on graduation! 814,429 or 814-0640 evening
Sherwood 5100 A receiver and Panasonic turn-
table $100. The pair PIR 841-6021 5 after
9.3.
AUTO SALES
1983 Le Car, immaculate, saurowr, stero; $1095,
1984 Le Car, rough, 49g; $845, 768-580 or
1985 Le Car, smooth; $295, 480-600.
19290 Ford LTD. V6_A/C,PS_PB,SW_24 MPG!
$2990 or best offer. B437-8532
$10-$69 Weekly w/ship mail circulating. $Rush sale
$8-$24 Weekly w/ship mail circulating. $Broad sale.
Wildview Bldw, Box 228, Dod. 239, Q. Beverly Hills,
Dod. 239
194-837
194-838
VW Dasher, $300; needs little work. New tires.
69 "Fit 124 Spider CONVERTIBLE-must sell immediately. Best reasonable offer. New brakes,
ATTENTION: STUDENTS !!! Nail firm preparation for Fall/Winter work. #7/75 to start. If you do not have a nail drill, the students are possible, & you may earn 3, 4, or credit(s) for a semester. Must apply now!
78 Chevy van, air, cruise, tilt, AM/FM cassette套
cable. B.C. radio, 350 V, 8 low mileage, excellent
condition, $2500 or make offer. Call 842-1236 after
6 p.m.
D-BASE PROGRAMMER: 25% position to write and maintain student records programming using Zenith hard disk. Qualifications: experience programming in D-BASE III; good writing skills; computer knowledge required for weekly hours. Complete application at the Applied English Center, 204 Lippincott, 864-4606.
Tune up your import car. $35. Parts and labor in-
satisfaction guaranteed. Call Aaron.
819-629-1028
Burkay's Drive in, a KU tradition for 26 years, opens for the noon-hour shift, weekend shift, and night shift. Apply in person between 1 a.m. and 5 p.m. THANK YOU BURKAY'S DRIVE IN.
79 Toyota Celica Manual standard features air conditioning, water temperature, ee good condition.
Found: black checkbook neck near the Catholic Center. If you can identify, call Mona. 864-205-305.
Lost: book library, "The Studies in the Acquisition of Annaphora". Please call 864-6473.
CAMARO-1884 Bermintta. Red, auto. AM/FM,
A/C power, steering power, brakes cruise, ult, overdrive V, -6 Load, excellent condition and
known. 3650m or make offer. Call 942-3123 after 6pm.
NEW CARS, NEW TRUCKS $450-840
CONT. DELIERT D. THOMAS 813-849-840
27 wM Beese, excellent condition. No rust heat
warn radio, white wM Lawrence. #750
760
HELP WANTED
CARS SELL for $155 (average!) Also jeep,
Dodge, Ram, Toyota available. 805-887-6000 Ext.
S?rk79 for details
Found-a on the 4th floor of Wescoe, late Tuesday (sept. 8) afternoon. 749-319-319.
REWARD-For information leading to the recovery of a red 1849 Kawasaki NAIJA 900, stowed studently 9% from 1425 of 1425 Ohio at 9 a.m. and 11.45 a.m. Did anybody see anything?
FUN SPORTS CAR-197 TR, great condition,
$1500.00. Call 814-694-1064 (Leneax).
Bortane XL91-198, leather interior, loaded, 31K,
good condition. 841-4609 or 831-4742.
Female help wanted for housekeeper Mondays and Fridays, noon to p. 5 a.m. Call 843-386-386
Full or part-time work as NANNY You set the hours. Child Care Coordination Service #843-386
GOVERNMENT JOBS $10,000-$15,000 Now
GOVERNMENT JOB $10,000-$15,000 Now
843-687-660-778 R: 9758 for current federal list
H A R D E E C
H A R D E E C
H A R D E E C
H A R D E E C
Help wanted, part-time day shift hours. Apply in person. Burger King. 1107 West 6th Street.
WING! . Government. job your area.
need cooks for duty shift. Apply in person 2-6 p.m.
L. Lecture, 745 New Hampshire.
415.000-$68.000, Call (602) 638-8885, EXT. 4055.
Local advertising agency seeks account sales
sales representative. Call (847) 2811 1911.
A R D E E E
W wanted: students of working its extra case
S wanted: students on the turnipkeeper
Hardie's now accepting applications for all shifts.
Good pay, flexible hours, meal discounts, free toll
allowance, and a pleasant atmosphere can all be
provided.
Applications accepted anytime. Call 843-8203
$400-$600/month. Application deadline: 9/23/87 at
5 p.m. Duties include participating in program
and training sessions to produce reports and/or other specific
output. Requires qualifications. Completion of
satisfactory progress on application.
labor/technical school; current enrollment at KU- be willing to work for at least 2 years. Send resume to the following address, Services, University of Kansas, Computer Center, Lawrence, Missouri, KS. Employer will accept any legal secretary.
Part-time legal secretary wanted. Experience desired, not required. Computer computer, typing, and writing skills.
RESORT HOTELS, Cruisesmen, Airlines, Amusement Parks, acceptance offices, and career positions. For more information and an application; write National College Recreation Service, P.O. Box 2081, Cincinnati, OH 45230.
The Art & Design departments are hiring part-
time Student Gallery Monitors. These are work-
style positions. Gallery hours are between 8:00
and 10:30. Applicants must be a high school
symphony, 300 art Applicant Bldg., 864-4410.
There are a few openings left for evening and weekend shifts at Nainshil mall cafefer. If you need some extra cash, hurry in to Nainshil mall for the same position. EOFE/MOH/A17
Videostore Help!! Retail sales experience a must. Credit & collection experience preferred Videoxpress, 147 F W, 23rd, 843-9206.
Want your own business? Now is the time to start earning as an Avon representative. Call Julie at 843-6064晚宴
We have openings in carpentry, electrical and
general labor crews. If you are willing to work
hours of overtime and the ability to work all
days of 8-12:00 or 8-1:30 M-F, we would like you to apply
Housing Maintenance Shop, 2305 West 15th,
Rockville, MD 19870.
MISCELLANEOUS
10$360 Weekly UP, mailing circulators
10$360 Workday UP, mailing circulators
envelope: CM-NA/DQ PQLR 7730
envelope: CM-NA/DQ PQLR 7730
Workshops - Our mechanic will teach you how to change flat tires, turn steering wheels, come in 1, 2 or all 5 sessions. $5 each. Saturday, 10 a.m., begins September 19. Sunflower, 804 Massachusetts,
JESUS SAYS, "The Comforter, which is the Holy God, whom the Father will send in my hands He Himself, who remembers me, whatever I have said unto you. Peace I leave with you, my peace give unto you, not to be troubled, neither let it be afraid." Church of God (Holiness), 724 n. 7th.
HEADACHE, BACKACH, ARM PAIN, LEG PAIN Student and most insurance accepted. For complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Magk Johnson 843-9379
Pregnant and need help? Call Birtbirth at
Confidential help/free pregnancy
testing.
ROLL OUT
THE BARREL
Refill your "HAWK" glass only $1.00
Ski FREE AT VAIL/BAYREC CREW! 4 day packages, from $19 per person including luxury co-doo and skiing. Add extra nights, just $18 per person. Call +800-8235753 today!
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Capture that golden tan with a boudre portrait from Photos Plus. Call Mike or Gracie at 749-3706 or weekends.
SKY KEYSTONE for Thanksgiving, November
25-29. Low package prices, include air/ hotel/kis
rental/transfers/lift tickets. Call 843-5698.
*see available without air.
Small established foreign car repair shop for sale in Leroyne, Injurious, 841-5496
"CRIMSON SUN PHOTO" is looking for young women interested in developing a modeling portfolio. 15% now cost. Call 841-8689
VIRTUAL CONSULTING: Tutoring and programming for computer science computer science elementary and elementary engineering, projects and other works. Reasonable prices for individuals and groups.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749.
we have a new store that you can get cash on almost anything of value. Also, good buys on cameras, jewelry, stereo equipment and inlays! Jawahk Pawn & Jewelry, 1800 W. 6th, 749-1919
FLASHBACK PHOTO fast and dependable party picture service. Call 843-8770 to book your next session.
Paco Bear: PURRRR!!! Who needs catnip?
Kitten
PERSONAL
same, D.C.
T.B.-Phone number is impossible. Want to talk?
Name time/place. D.C., P.O. Box 1017.
GRAF/X / Scientific and statistical illustration,
graphic designs, phone aid, also water-cooler
phones. Phone 800-692-3744.
ARE YOU CREATIVE
BUS. PERSONAL
Declare, confirm, inform
your related occupation field.
Find out our Air Write
Handbook for Write
their Air Write
N. Valley KC61 8602
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ekachrome processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W services. PASSPORT $6.00. Art & Design Building. Room 206. 804-4767
THE ETC SHOP is open Sunday from 11-4. New shipment of cotton sweaters. 732 Massachusetts
MATH TUTOR Algebra through multivariable
calculus (000-1413) 5 years experience. $8/hour for
1 student. $8/hour for 2 students. $4/hour for 3
students. Get the very best! 814-0148
JAM FAOYS for all your party favor needs. Hats, shirts, paddies, glasses. If you have a unique favor idea, call us and we'll find it for you. 843-8700
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $8/hr$, 843-9032
Leaving Town?
Airline Tickets
at airline counter prices
no extra service charge
Make your travel
arrangements
on campus
Service for:
See Maupintour travel
travel arrangements
* Eurail and Japan Rail Passes
* Car rental—Hotel confirmations
* Travel holidays
* Travel insurance
ON CAMPUS LOCATION
ON CAMPUS LOCATION in the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
Maupintour travel service
749-0700
BEFORE YOU BUY,
Check the KANSAN.
Our advertisers
might save you money.
MUSIC*****
Rock Radio - Mobile-Music Party, Bash
Music Rodeo P.A. and Lights, Maximum Audio Wizard.
Call Record 749-1275.
Now in Lawrence: inexpensive 4-track encas-
dor, DJ sound and light company, private guitar and bass lessons. Basic Productions, 843-4243.
PRIVATE OFFICE ob Gbv and Assertion Ser-
vice.
bass lessons. Basic Productions, 842-4243.
PRIVATE OBJECTive Ob-Jg and Abortion Ser-
tion
Overlavery risks...NA.Verbans
Prompt action and abortion services in
contact with the NSA.
teaching experience Call Dennis at 842-1035
SEWING-AUTERATIONS-love to sew for others
QUALITY Tutoring, Statistics, Economics, and Math. All levels. Homework assistance, test preparation, or general review. MA (communication) teaching experience. 842-1053. 842-1065. FAXS: 914-278-9050. TEENS LOOK to see for others.
Special Student Membership
$150 per semester
Racquetball, Tennis
Exercise Equipment
Graystone Athletic Club
reasonable rates. Please call Juice at 843-4390.
SUNFLOWER DRIVER SCHOOL. You
driver's license without patrol testing upon su-
cessful completion. Transportation is
2500 W. 6th Street 841-7230
tronic Typewriter. 842-3246
AAAbolutely Fast Typing is Back! Dependable
Reasonable Rates, Late Night Typing Available
1-Der Woman word processing. Former editor will transform your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct, quality-tertiary type. Call 842-395-6736 for e-mails.
2 Smart Word Processing Spelling Corrected,
Very Reasonable. Call Foster 749-2740
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing. Judy; 842-7945 or Lissa; 841-1915.
TYPING
A-1. reliable professional typing. Term papers, Theses, Resumes, etc. Reasonable IBM Electronic Typewriter: 842-3246
Kathy 841-2400 days, 749-5258 eve.
ACT NOW: PAPERS-THESES-RESUMES
WRITING LIFEINE 841-3409
WRITING ELF LINE 81 574
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS,
MOMMY'S TYPIING is back from Australia !!
842 3378 pm 9 ppm, please
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing.
Term papers, sheets, dissertation, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter quality printing. spelling corrected. 892/747
specically is foreign students. Call 841-3220.
For professional typing/word processing, call Myra. 841-4900. Fall special $1.20/page, double-space nica
KU RECREATYH Typing and word processing.
KU BUILD TABS Typing and word processing. Pickup on campus. Monon
School. Pickup on campus. Monon
School.
Quality typing or word processing for thesas, resumes, term papers, applications. Professional editing, composition available. Raleigh M.S. Degree.
41-8226 Earnings-event
Quality Tying includes excellent spelling, punctuation, grammar, editing. Fast reliable service. Pickup delivery available. 834-0247
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional work processing, manuscript creation, letters, letter writing.
WANTED
WRIGHT'S TYPING SERVICE: Term papers, theses, miscellaneous, IBM Selectric. Spelling corrected. 843-9554
Need money? Tell me you all sports ticket. Ask for Jenn at 864.6947. Please call!
PROFESSIONAL TYPING. 842-4868 before DD
p.m.
Band needs secure baseboard or garage in which to practice and store equipment. We practice in a 24-hour building and hire for $85 per month. Call Bill E.驾 843 279 2178. Male or female grad student, or matriculated undergård to a new 2 br apartment 2 blocks from the Union. $180 plus 1/2 units (Cash only).
Roommate wanted: Female, $165 per month. Includes utilities. Close to campus/downtown. Call 304-8281
Tutors. All subjects: 44 individuals, 8/4 group.
Submit application, transcript, schedule of classes and tutoring times. Supportive Educational Services. 66-3971.
- Policy
Wanted: ALL SPORTS TICKET - Make fast $$$.
call at John 748 4966.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wanted: All Sports Ticket. Will pay well for it!\
Call: 842-7095.
Classified Information Mail-In Form
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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. ******************************** classified advertising*
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| Words | 1 Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | 10 days | 15 days | 1 month |
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| 16-20 | 3.35 | 5.00 | 7.05 | 11.30 | 16.55 | 20.75 |
| 21-25 | 3.90 | 5.80 | 8.10 | 12.60 | 18.10 | 22.60 |
| 26-30 | 4.40 | 6.55 | 9.15 | 13.90 | 19.70 | 24.40 |
| 31-35 | 4.95 | 7.35 | 10.20 | 15.25 | 21.25 | 26.25 |
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101 announcements 300 for loan 500 help issued 800 services offered
100 entertainment 310 auto sales 700 personal 900 gifting *99*
100 insurance 320 motor vehicle insurance 700 health insurance
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Date ad begins ___ Make checks payable to:
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---
12
Tuesday, September 15, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Lisa Jones/KANSAN
Happy birthday
Jan Holliday, Great Bend senior and morning news anchor, will join other staff members of KANU-FM 91.5 to celebrate the station's 35th birthday today. The station, KU's public radio station, went on the air at 1:45 p.m. Sept. 15, 1952.
Commission to discuss sales tax
By a Kansan reporter
The Lawrence City Commission tonight will discuss programs and projects to which the city could benefit. The department sent sales tax proposed by the county,
The commission meeting begins at 7 p.m. at City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts streets.
The Seem-to-be Players, a non- profit children's theater group, has voiced its support for the sales tax. A new bill would also marked for arts and humanities.
City Manager Buford Watson said the commission would hear comments from area groups.
group's board of directors, said, "The Seem-to-be Players feel it is an appropriate use and want to go on record supporting it."
Support from the city government would help the players do more of what they are already doing, such as children's programs and workshops, Longhurst said.
David Longhurst, a member of the
Plan may help Stouffer Place
A community center and an academic resource center might be constructed at Stooufer Place apartments but not before KU administrators spend five to 10 years deciding whether they are needed.
By BEN JOHNSTON
Staff writer
Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said yesterday that a group of KU administrators would meet in the student housing building to discuss new student housing construction.
"At this point, we are at the experimental stage," Stoner said. "At the meeting, we will likely kick around some ideas."
Stouffer Place apartments is a University of Kansas housing complex open only to students who are married or have children. It is east of Daisy Hill between 16th and 19th streets.
Stoner said Stouffer Place was one area under consideration for new construction because it might need the community center and academic resource center.
"For some of their meetings, they have been using several churches on 19th Street," Stoner said. "They have also been using the basement at McColum Hall and a vacant apartment at Jayhawk Towers to do lab experiments."
The administrators at the meeting and others who later become involved in the process will eventually decide who would do the planning necessary before any student housing construction could begin, Stoner said.
"We have four likely possibilities," he said. "The housing office could do it, facilities planning could do it, the state could become involved or a
private company could do it."
Stoner said administrators not know whether Stouffer Place needed the new settings until he completed whole study and made recommendations.
Stoner said the planner would take two years to examine all the student housing on campus before recommending what construction should be done. The recommendation would be based on what the planner thought was the greatest future need of students, he said.
The final decision on the Stouffer Place buildings would then be made by administrators who would set up a timetable for construction, Stoner said. Construction might not begin for several years after administrators reach a decision on University construction priorities, he said.
KU's neighbors plan to speak up
By VALOREE ARMSTRONG Staff writer
Members of Lawrence's newest neighborhood association expressed concern last night about the possible increase in planning plans at the University of Kansas.
About 75 people attended the first general membership meeting in Lawrence High School of the University Place Neighborhood Association.
the crowd looked around the high school music room. "We'll have the Christmas party at his house."
Lynn Weis, president of the group, opened the meeting by asking whether Chancellor Gene A. Budig was present, because Budigi's house is within the group's neighborhood boundaries of Louisiana Street, Naismith Drive, 19th Street and the KU campus.
Weis said that the University was the largest landowner in the area and that it would benefit both KU and the neighborhood association for the two groups to work together.
Bob Soppelsa, vice president and head of the association's environmental impact committee, said the committee had questions about three upcoming University building projects.
"We're concerned about water run-off from the University and traffic congestion resulting from new building plans." Weis said.
270,000-foot-square building which will be connected to the east side of Haworth Hall on Sunnyside Avenue. Another project is a multi-level parking lot with room for 600 to 800 cars that KU officials have proposed to build the field just north of Walkins Hospital or just north of Allen Field House.
"Oh good," he said and laughed as
Soppela said those projects would bring sewage and water run-off and traffic and noise problems with them. He said he'd already met with Allen Wiechert, director of facilities planning.
The group also is concerned about long-range plans for a theatre and arts center at the University.
"I assured him we want to be friends with him," Soppelna said.
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Cash Back
NOW!
Student Dividend Payments Begin
Bring in your receipts from last semester's cash purchases at the KU Bookstores and receive a 6% cash rebate. Redeem your period 81 receipts with your student I.D. at the customer service areas of either KU Bookstore location. Always save your cash receipts from the KU Bookstores because they mean money in your pocket every semester.
Period 81 receipts renewable thru 12/31/87
KU
KUBookstores Kansas Union Burge Union
Rain, rain go away
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details page 6
Wednesday September 16, 1987 Vol. 98, No.18
(USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Teacher petitions for books
By JENNIFER ROWLAND Staff writer
Foreign language students who are trying to learn without a book have bookstores to blame, language department professors say. But campus bookstores say out-of-stock books are the result of enrollment fluctuation and uncertainty of sales.
Sylvie Grignard, French 230 teaching assistant, started a petition Sept. 8 calling for the Jayhawk Book Store, 1420 Crescent Road, and the Kansas Union Bookstore to order sufficient numbers of textbooks for students. She said she started the petition because about one-fourth of the students in each of her two sections didn't have their textbooks.
The Union bookstore has 230 books in stock now, but Grignard will continue to circulate the petition.
"If we don't do something, maybe next semester it will be worse," she said.
David Dinneen, a coordinator of French programs, said the problem plagues many students.
"It's an old story and it's very frustrating." Dinneen said. "It's a very serious problem because a number of teachers were having their students Xerox pages of the books because they didn't have the books."
Grignard said, "It was frustrating because we were already falling into a cycle of failure."
Girnard circulated the petition in Russian, German, Spanish, French and English classes and department offices.
She has 500 signatures from faculty and students now and hopes to double that by Friday, when she will give the petition to the Jayhawk and Union bookstores and the language departments.
Mary Pechous, Kenosha, Wis,
freshman, said she bought her
French 110 books the fourth day of
classes.
He blamed the book scarcity on a University-wide enrollment increase and underestimation by the French department on the number of books
"I kept checking the bookstore each day and I saw it on the shelf and I grabbed it as fast as I could," Pechus said.
Steve Jewett, textbook coordinator for the Kansas University Bookstore, said that he was surprised by how many books were in stock.
But Debbie Douglass, office assistant for the French and Italian department, said French enrollment reflected an approximate 100 student drop from estimates used in book orders because some students drop or switch sections after classes begin.
The Union bookstore has French 110 books on order from the publisher, which doesn't have them in stock. Those are expected in late September.
Jewett said, "Apparently it's very difficult for anyone to figure out how many people are enrolled in these things."
"We can't get them because they're not available." Jewett said. Unfortunately that situation happeased her semester in some course somewhere.
Jewett said the bookstore sometimes orders fewer books than the departments request, but sometimes it orders more.
Bork says his philosophy is neutral
"What we order is what we think will sell," he said. "The problem is none of us can not only predict the enrollments, but we can't predict the sales. Students have other sources for books besides here."
Bork said he disagreed with the court's reasoning in that case that created a "free-floating" right of access to government offices under state's right to ban contraceptives.
"That liberty, which the Constitution clearly envisions, is the liberty of the people to set their own social processes of democracy," he said.
Bill Muggy, manager of Jayhawk
BATHON 6,5 col.1
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Supreme Court nominee Robert H. Bork, denying that his judicial philosophy is either liberal or conservative, said yesterday that judges must be dedicated to restraint and respect for democratic processes.
The federal appeals court judge, in an opening statement to the Senate Judiciary Committee considering his nomination, said:
"My philosophy of judging is neither liberal nor conservative. It is simply a philosophy of judging which
"What I objected to was the way in which the right of privacy was created," Bork said. "Legislatures can constitutionally regulate some aspects of sexuality and family life. (The question is) has the legislature a reasonable basis for what it has done."
tives even by married couples.
In response to questions from Judiciary Committee Chairman Joseph R. Biden Jr., D-Del, Bork defended statements he had made criticizing an important Supreme Court ruling in 1965 that struck down a Connecticut law barring the use of contracep-
gives the Constitution a full and fair interpretation, but where the Constitution is silent leaves the policy struggles to Congress, the president, legislatures and executives of the 50 states and to the American people."
Meeting head-on some of the attacks of liberal critics, Bork said he valued judicial precedent and singled out for special praise the 1954 Supreme Court ruling that outlawed school segregation.
school segregation
That ruling, Brown vs. Board of Education, represented perhaps the greatest moral achievement of our
constitutional law, Bork said.
He also said that as a Supreme Court justice he would look differently upon past court rulings than he had before, a scholar earlier in his career.
their own values rather than interpreted the Constitution deprived the American people of liberty.
"It is one thing as a legal theorist to criticize the reasoning of a prior decision, even to criticize it severely, as I have done," he said. "It is another and more serious thing altogether for a judge to ignore or overturn a prior decision. That requires much careful thought."
Bork said judges who imposed
Fred Sadowski/KANSAN
The studying edge
'Quacks' thriving, prof says
Derrick Gomez, Topeka sophomore, chooses a highly quiet place to study. Gomez found his space on the east side of Wescoe Hall yesterday afternoon.
A professor from the University of Kansas College of Health Sciences told about 200 people last night at Woodruff Auditionium that "quack" doctors in medical science were thriving as never before.
Rv KIRK ADAMS
Robert P. Hudson, chairman of the department of history and philosophy of medicine, spoke on "Science and Humanities" at KU's Humanities Lecture Series.
Staff writer
Hudson said that although most U.S. citizens were well educated, many of them accepted unverified ideas as true.
He said that according to a 1984 Gallup poll of people who had high school diplomas, 69 percent believed in angels, 59 percent believed in extrasensory perception or ESP, 55 percent believed in astrology, 28 percent believed in clairvoyance and
Hudson said that Forbes magazine recently published an article that warned readers that Uri Geller, who is famous for performing alleged feats of telekinesis, might have the power to predict changes in the stock market.
In addition, Hudson said that scientists at Stanford University had studied some of Geller's feats and certi- ties, having valid occurrences of telekenesis.
24 percent believed in Bigfoot. He said that educated people were just as likely to believe in unverified phenomena as uneducated people.
Hudson said, "This is not as surprising as it might seem. Among many magicians, scientists are the easiest subjects to deceive.
He said that this was because scientists spend entire lifetimes learning to trust their senses, and
magicians spend their time learning to deceive peoples' senses.
Hudson said that because people were stubborn in their beliefs, and because scientists could be so easily fooled, science education probably couldn't make the public or the media more skeptical.
Hudson discussed the case of John R. Brinkley, a doctor who performed surgery in the 1920s to transplant goat glands in the sexual organs of men and women. Brinkley claimed that the operation would make elderly men virile again and make sex more pleasurable for women. Hudson said that Brinkley, who performed hundreds of these operations and became a millionaire from the practice, was a perfect example of how quacks can exploit science for their own profit.
"Who knows what's in the heart of physicians who treat you," he said.
U.S. must help contras North's ex-courier says
By VIRGINIA McGRATH
Staff writer
OVERLAND PARK — The United States must continue to support the contras in Nicaragua in spite of past human rights violations, the former courier to Lt. Col. Oliver North said yesterday.
Robert Owen, the former courier, spoke to about 75 people at Johnson County Community College as part of the Campus Activities Board lecture series.
Owen testified under a grant of immunity in the Iran-contra congressional hearings last May. He now works for an informational project that focuses on Nicaragua, he said. The project is part of the National Forum Foundation, based in Washington D.C.
Owen said Nicaragua's proximity to the United States made the political situation there important.
cal situation and it's important.
"A war down there would be the first war you could drive your pick-up to" Owen said.
Owen said that the contras had made human rights violations in the past because many contra members were uneducated and untrained. "When you give them a gun, mistakes are made. Civilians will be
killed," he said. But human rights violations have decreased, Owen said, because the contras are now better trained.
Owen said he first went to Central America when he worked as an aide to Sen. Dan Quayle, R-Indiana. He has since been to Central America 25 times. After working for Quayle, Owen joined a public relations firm.
He met contra officials when they came to the public relations firm seeking help. Then in 1984, he left the firm and began working to help the company. In 2003, the express had stopped aid to them. He met North at this time, Owen said.
"I thought it was inappropriate and immoral that the U.S. Congress would start out funding the resistance and then, when they're deep in the field, walk away from the commitment," he said.
Owen started an organization called the Institute on Democracy, Education and Assistance.
"For a year and a half, we tried to keep the resistance alive," Owen said. "We succeeded in allowing the resistance to maintain itself and even grow."
After Congress resumed aid to the contras in 1985, the U.S. State
Department and United Nicaragua Opposition contracted Owen's organization to help distribute $27 million in congressional humanitarian aid
Owen said that much of the investigations surrounding the Iran-contra affair could have been avoided if there had been better communication between the White House and North.
President Reagan and Attorney General Edwin Meese decided to go public with what they knew on Nov. 25, 1986. Owen said, "They should have waited a day and called in Ohio." He told me that he did. "He told him, you work for me, if we're going to tell the facts let's tell them all."
Nikki Hayday, Overland Park resident and a student at the college, said she agreed with Owen's views about the contrasts.
"The shock that hit home was when he talked about the geographic relevance of this project."
Tristram Hunt, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa, who is also a student at the college, didn't agree with Owen.
"There was too much idealism and not enough pragmatism." Hunt said.
Docking guided by his past
Staff writer
Loss to Havden doesn't faze third-generation politician
By MARK TILFORD Staff writer
"My upbringing has taught me the importance of public service at a state level," said Docking, who will attend at the University of Kansas today.
The past may be the best map to discover the future political travels of Tom Docking, the unsuccessful Democratic gubernatorial candidate.
He will speak at 2:30 p.m. in 252 Robinson Center. The lecture, "PUBLIC and Private Management," is sponsored by the business school and is open to the public.
Docking narrowly lost the governor's race in November to Republican Mike Hayden.
He was elected lieutenant governor in 1983 and served for one term with former Gov. John Carlin. Docking's father, Robert, and grandfather, George, were both Kansas governors.
Docking said yesterday that it was too soon after the election to seriously consider future political activities but that his long-term ambitions were in the state government, especially the executive branch.
"The executive branch provides a style of management that I admire most," he said. "The responsibility is to support the shoulders of the chief executive."
Docking, 33, lives in Wichita and is a partner in the law firm of Regan and McGannon.
Endowment Association's $100 million, five-year fund-raising effort.
Locking also is serving on the steering committee for Campaign Kansas, the Kansas University
Docking said the financing of education would get worse.
"I think it is tough," he said, "and it's going to get worse before it gets better. I'm afraid to say."
Though he still is disappointed about the election. Docking said he was pleased about his campaign's management.
6 I.
— Tom Docking
Former Democratic
gubernatorial candidate
I'm pleased we ran a race like we ran. It was a good race and didn't dip into personal animosity like so many campaigns today do,'
Hayden put up a tough fight, he said.
"I'm pleased we ran a race like me," he said, "it was a good race and didn't dip into personal animosity like so many campaigns today
"We were doing battle with a well-
organized campaign He had several incumbent legislators campaigning for him in the grassroots."
"The issue is flat not going to go away. It will still be a controversial issue."
Docking said he was frustrated that nothing came out of the special legislative session Hayden called to try to pass a highway improvement bill.
a naze to arm-chair quarterback the guy," Docking said, "but I was surprised by the lack of communication he had with the Senate and the House.
Docking said his stand on one major issue, the death penalty, might have cost him votes.
Despite polls near time of the election indicating that most Kansans favored reinstating the death penalty, Docking campaigned against it.
Hayden campaigned on a promise that he would pass the death penalty, but the state Senate defeated a bill in April.
But he called Hayden's initial $1.7 billion plan excessive.
"It would have meant the largest tax increase in our state's history." Docking said. "There is never a right time for a package of that cost to be passed. I was hoping that a much less expensive package would be passed. Highways are critical to the future of the state."
Inside
The Best of KU
An added feature in today's newspaper is the Kansan Magazine. This month's magazine, focuses on the best of KU.
He said that through fund-raising efforts, his campaign debts had been trimmed from about $50,000 to about $20,000.
The rest, he said, should be paid after Michael Dukakis, Democratic presidential candidate and Massachusetts governor, pays a visit to a Sept. 27 fund-raising campaign in Wichita.
Docking praised Dukakis for turning around Massachusetts' problems of high unemployment and declining population.
"He made some tough decisions in a tough state to do it in," Docking said.
Docking declined, though, to say who he would endorse as the Democrat.
His wife, Jill, is actively serving on the Dukakis campaign.
Docking is a Lawrence native and received his bachelor's degree from KU. He also earned his master's degree in business administration here in 1980.
Wednesday, September 16, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Reagan, Shevardnadze sign pact to open channel between capitals
WASHINGTON - President Reagan and Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnaze yesterday signed an agreement to reduce the chance of accidental war through the establishment of "nuclear risk reduction centers" in Moscow and Washington.
U.N. chief says little of peace trip to gulf
since the "hot-line" link was established after the Cuban missile crisis in 1962. The new facility will be used to transmit notifications required by arms control and confidence-building agreements.
Reagan said he looked forward "to the day when General Secretary Gorbachev and I can sign even more historic agreements in our common search for peace."
BAGHADD, Iraq — U.N. Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuelar ended his Persian Gulf peace mission yesterday, saying he discussed "the outline of a plan" to implement a U.N. Security Council resolution calling for a ceasefire in the 7-year-old Iran-Iraq war.
But Perez de Cuellar gave no indication before he flew out of
Baghdad for New York of how successful his quest had been.
Perez de Cuellar spent two days talking with top Iranian government leaders in Tehran, then flew to the Iraqi capital Sunday night for talks with President Saddam Hussein, Foreign Minister Tariq Aziz and other senior Iraqis.
Robertson to announce candidacy Oct.1
CHESAPEAKE, Va. — Pat Robertson, the television evangelist whose fervent following has surprised his establishment Republican rivals, said yesterday he will be a candidate for the 1988 GOP presidential nomination.
the most unusual announcement of any Republican candidate in this century when I make my formal announcement of candidacy on Oct. 1." Robertson told a news conference at his campaign headquarters.
"We are preparing what may be
Skeptics go fishing for Loch Ness Monster
LONDON — A fleet of sonar-
equipped boats will probe Scotland's murky Loch Ness next month in the most thorough — and skeptical — search for the elusive Loch Ness Monster.
"It will be the largest scientific expedition ever undertaken on the mysterious lake," said Operation Deepscan leader Adrian Shine, a 38-year-old salesman from London.
Two superpowers closer to an arms agreement
WASHINGTON — President Reagan and Soviet Foreign Minister Edward Shevardnadze expressed hopes yesterday for a nuclear arms agreement to crown a superpower summit, and U.S. officials reported the two sides were moving closer to an accord.
Shevardnadze, during a plenary session and luncheon at the White House, twice said that Moscow had not had a chance to thoroughly review a new U.S. arms proposal but that it looked like things would work out, according to a U.S. official who paraphrased the Soviet minister.
The Associated Press
Both sides appeared upbeat, although U.S. representatives cautioned against expecting an announcement this week about an arms agreement or a summit date.
Shewardnadze's visit is viewed as a critical step toward wrapping up an agreement to abolish intermediaterange nuclear missiles from the Soviet and U.S. arsenals. The Reagan and沃克 word would have Reagan and Gorbachev at a summit, which U.S. officials expect to be in late November.
Arriving at the White House after almost three hours of talks with Secretary of State George Shultz, Shevardnadze gave Reagan a letter from Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev.
Shewardnadze said the letter did not contain proposed dates for a superpower summit. But U.S. officials disclosed that the letter said a summit would be a reasonable step, assuming there was something substantive to be signed, such as an
One official, who declined to be identified, said that the letter indicated the Soviets wanted to make progress on an agreement and that the letter was fairly optimistic in the sense of achieving one.
arms agreement.
"There are good things in that letter," Shevardnadze told reporters in the Oval Office. "No date, but a summit is necessary." The letter dealt extensively with arms control issues, including strategic and space weapons as well as intermediate-range nuclear missiles, officials said.
Shevardnadze did not elaborate on the letter's contents, but Shultz said the three days of talks with the Soviet official were off to a good start.
From The Associated Press.
Reagan, ask if any progress had been made, said, "We're just beginnin-
Descendants of signers gather to join Constitution celebration
The Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA — Scattered relatives of the 39 men who signed the U.S. Constitution 200 years ago, people ranging in occupations from trucking to opera to health clubs, are gathering to share a common heritage.
"I view the Constitution as the last great secular hope of mankind," said Walker Fry Rucker of Greensboro,
One member of each family also will march in a mammoth parade tomorrow. The youngest marcher will be 9-year-old Elizabeth Warrick, a fifth-grader who is a descendant of John Langdon of New Hampshire.
N. C., who runs a trucking company and is a descendant of George Washington's sister.
About 500 people whose ancestors signed the Constitution will attend a private reception today. Tomorrow, the 200th anniversary of the signing, one descendant of each of the 39 signers will sit on a platform with former U.S. Chief Justice Warren Burger for a ceremony commemorating the event.
One descendant who wouldn't miss the celebration is Frances Warrick, 66, another of Langdon's progeny.
The Associated Press
Pope draws L.A. crowd for parade
LOS ANGELES — Pope John Paul II opened his visit yesterday to the world's entertainment capital with an appeal to cling to a responsible moral life even if it means being out of step with majority opinion.
The notorious Los Angeles freeway traffic flowed unusually smoothly as a crowd estimated by police at 300,000 turned out to see the pope that took him through Hispanic, Chinese and Korean areas.
Speaking to 6,000 young people at Universal Studios Amphitheatre — an address linked by satellite to youth gatherings in St. Louis, Denver and Portland, Ore. — the pope linked suicide with spiritual emptiness.
Planners had hoped for between 1 million and 2 million people for the parade in the nation's largest Roman Catholic archdiocese.
"Why does it sometimes happen that a seemingly healthy person, successful in the eyes of the world, takes an overdose of sleeping pills and commits suicide?" the pope asked. "Why, on the other hand, do we see a seriously disabled person filled with great zest for life?
The pope's motorcade ended with a prayer service at St. Vibiana's Cathedral, where the pope sounded a familiar theme — the difficulty and importance of applying morality to speech and deed in secular America.
"The one has lost all hope," he said. "In the other, hope is alive and dead."
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Local Briefs
'Super board over schools to be discussed
A state Board of Regents subcommittee will meet at 3 p.m. today in Topeka to discuss merging the administration of Kansas' 19 community colleges and seven Regents schools under one 'super unit' which will be held at the State Department of Education, 120 E. 10th St.
A student advisory committee, composed of the student body presidents of the Regents schools, will meet at 4 p.m. today at the Adams Alumni Center. They will discuss the state's open admissions policy and try to develop a student philosophy about the issue.
Both meetings are open to the public.
KU gets four stars from college guide
The New York Times Selective Guide to Colleges has given the University of Kansas a four-star rating for its academic programs, social activities and overall quality of life.
KU's rating, plus a 1,000 word description of the University, was written by New York Times education editor Edwin Fiskie. The guide will be available in bookstores in late October. Preliminary copies of the article were sent to KU officials last week.
A four-star rating indicates that a university is above average and has particularly distinguishing academic features and a serious academic atmosphere. Fiske said yesterday. A five-star rating is the best.
"More of the Midwest's best and brightest are turning down invitations to prominent eastern schools (yes, even Harvard) to attend this relatively inexpensive public institution in the middle of Kansas," the article said.
KU English, foreign language, chemistry, philosophy, journalism, architecture, urban design, allied health and engineering programs are noted as outstanding in the article.
Students offer plans to curb party violence
Black Student Union and Black Panhellenic officers met yesterday with KU police, Kansas Union and University Events Committee officials to try to reinstate their privilege to have parties at the Kansas Union.
The Union parties have been put on hold until a solution is found to the violence that has accompanied the parties. BSU and Black Panthericism presented their proposals during the two-hour meeting.
Jim Long, director of the Kansas and Burge Unions, said he would look at the proposals and the would meet again next week.
The proposals included moving the parties to the Burge Union or other University buildings, requiring a KUID to get into the parties and posting a sign explaining what behavior is not welcomed at the parties.
Correction
Because of a reporter's error, Pennie von Achen's name was misspeaked in Friday's Kansan. Von Achen is a biologist who is searching for the Northern Crawfish frog.
From staff and wire reports.
Salaries. state image hinder search for dean
By MICHAEL MERSCHEL Staff writer
Starting a search for a new dean and filling several faculty vacancies means the School of Social Welfare has started a period of change this year, Assistant Dean Edith Black said yesterday.
But some of those positions might be hard to fill because of the location and the salaries at the University of Kansas, she said.
The school had to turn away about 50 people who wanted to enroll as part-time students in Kansas City and Lawrence. Black said.
The faculty is short-staffed now, with three positions unfilled. That means the school has had to keep an eye on the number of students admitted and limit the number enrolled in some areas. Black said.
The school also is short-handed because several faculty members have started a phased retirement, which means they only work part time. Several professors also are on leave or sabbatical.
One professor, Ann Weick, isn't teaching because she is acting as dean while the search continues. The former dean, Patricia Ewalt, resigned in July to take a similar job at the University of Hawaii-Honolulu.
A search committee for the new dean, named by the academic affairs
office last week, will meet for the first time Monday, said Marylee Brochmann, associate professor of
the choice of faculty really means the future of the school.'
T
Edith Black Assistant dean
social welfare and committee member.
to have a new dean selected by July.
Black said the dean and faculty appointments would effect the school for years to come.
"The choice of faculty really means the future of the school," she said. "Things will be different as who were here a long time leave."
Brochmann said the school hoped
The school is hiring part-time faculty and expanding a program that brings in professional social compensate for the teacher shortage.
The school hired three people for three positions last year, Black said, but two of those hired won't start until next fall.
She said that people had left the school for a variety of reasons but that better salaries at other schools often helped people decide to leave.
Black said that good faculty were available. But turing them to Kansas might be a problem not necessarily because of pay scales, she said, but because of misconceptions of what the state is like.
"That's a problem with our school and the University as a whole," she said.
Black said the school had been working with groups such as the Chamber of Commerce to try to show presence as a nice place to work and live.
Prof says KU needs a union
By NOEL GERDES
Carl Lande, KU professor of political science, said, "I think you are getting to the heart of the problem with distribution. People in higherpaid disciplines generally are convinced that unionization will come at their expense."
Staff writer
Galloway said Pittsburg State did not cut anyone's salary to give someone else a raise. They asked for increased salaries across the board, and then raised those salaries that were significantly lower than average.
Faculty salaries at the University of Kansas would be less if the faculty at Pittsburg State University hadn't formed a union, a Pittsburg State professor said yesterday.
Ed Galloway, the professor, spoke to about 10 people at a faculty forum in the Kansas Union on the union experience at Pittsburg State. Galloway is a past president and a past negotiator for the Pittsburg State chapter of the Kansas National Education Association. The forum was sponsored by the KU chapter of the NEA.
Galloway said after the speech that because Pittsburg State faculty were under contract for salaries during a state budget cut in 1982, the Regents cut salaries at other schools less than eight might have if the union had not existed.
"We also are a tangible encouragement to the Regents to be a little bolder with the Legislature when they make decisions regarding Regents budgets." Galloway said.
Pittsburg State faculty elected the PSU-NEA as their union representative in 1974. The Pittsburg State union is the only faculty union at a university in Kansas.
He said that despite the opposition, the faculty union had brought its faculty a fair grievance hearing system, an increase in morale, a salary distribution system and a salary distribution system, in addition to other benefits.
On Nov. 17 and 18, KU faculty will vote on whether they want a union represented by the KU chapter of NEA, the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors, or no union at all.
Salary generation is the process of determining how much money to request from the Legislature for salaries. Salary distribution is how the money that the Legislature appropriates is divided among the faculty.
Galloway said the Pittsburg State administration and the Regents had been uncooperative with the faculty union.
10 20 30 40
Squeaky clean
Lyle Snook of Cardinal Janitorial Supplies and Services, Topeka,
squeegees the windows of the press box at Memorial Stadium. Snook was
cleaning the windows yesterday morning. The company does the job once a year, he said.
Senate committees pass financial bills
Staff writer
By BRAD ADDINGTON Staff writer
All five of this year's Student Senate standing committees met for the first time last night to elect officers and review legislation that will be discussed at tonight's Senate meeting.
the finance and cultural affairs committees passed a bill allocating $7,000 to help finance the 11th annual Jayhawk Jazz Festival. The committees also pass bills allocating $800 to raise KU Jazz Ensemble in financing "Fantasy to Stan Kenton," a concert planned for November.
The money would come from the Senate's unallocated account, which now stands at $223,057.87. The student fee comes from the Student Activity Fee.
Ron McCurdy, jazz coordinator for the department of music and dance which is in the School of Fine Arts, spoke in support of the bills.
When McCurdy asked members of the cultural affairs committee whether they had heard of Stan Kenton, no more than half of the members said they had. Stan Kenton was a leading jazz musician and band leader from Kansas who gained national prominence.
"I don't think we're going to have a problem packing the house," McCurdy said.
The finance committee also passed a bill allocating $5,800 to finance the KU Higher Education Rescue Operation (H.E.R.O.) campaign. The campaign is designed to increase state support for higher education.
Martie Aaron, campus director of Associated Students of Kansas, said the funding was crucial to KU's increased participation in the campaign.
"We'd lose the commitment of about 50 people who have been working on the H.E.R.O. committee," she
said. The money would be used for mailing and advertising, she said.
The finance committee also passed a bill allocating $589 to purchase a memory expansion kit for the computer in the treasurer's office.
Spencer Colvin, Senate treasurer and sponsor of the bill, said the computer's current memory couldn't handle all of this year's accounts.
The student rights committee passed a bill that would grant committee voting status to the administrative assistant of the Senate when acting as a member of the finance committee.
Hospital to follow new waste disposal policies
By a Kansan reporter
Officials at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, 325 Maine St., said that they hoped new precautions would keep hospital waste products out of the reach of children.
The boys are being tested for hepatitis.
The Kansas Department of Health and Environment recommended new waste disposal procedures to the hospital after two small boys, ages 6 and 7, were found playing with used syringes in a dumpster at the hospital on Sept. 6.
Bob Ohlens, hospital executive director, said that most of the changes would take place at the Jefferson-Douglas County Landfill, Route 3, but that there would be changes at the hospital, too.
"Our hazardous waste will be held in the building until the truck arrives," Ohlen said.
be covered immediately.
He said that the waste, which included trash from the yard, would go directly to the landfill where it would be disposed.
Ohlen said that the hospital, along with the city of Lawrence, decided on the new procedures Monday. The health department suggested the procedures last week after the incident.
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4
Wednesdav. September 16, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KU's fraternities and sororities should open their houses and welcome changes recommended and requested by the Lawrence Fire Department.
Fired
Some houses must upgrade their fire prevention mechanisms to comply with the city's new, stricter interpretation of the fire code, which is part of a program that officials started after an April 26 fire destroyed part of the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity.
They have been warned.
Although the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity house has been rejuvenated recently, memories of that blaze should still burn brightly in the minds of those who live in fraternity and sorority houses. The fire department inspected all the Greek houses over the summer and isolated areas of improvement for many of them. The fire department has done its job. Now the houses must comply, regardless of the cost.
The University of Kansas could assist in making the greek houses fireproof. For example, KU officials could offer the house members advice on the best and most efficient way to correct fire code violations.
The fire department would not inspect houses, make recommendations and then follow up with inspections if the program was not important for safety.
All residents should take precautions before a fire strikes. Buy a smoke detector. Install it.
Crusty roles
In the past 20 years, the roles of men and women have changed dramatically, but the world of politics has shown us once again how far we are from abolishing these limiting roles.
Elizabeth Dole announced Monday she would resign as transportation secretary to join her husband, Sen. Bob Dole, on his presidential campaign. Her resignation comes after much urging from the senator's supporters.
The Doles have been the epitome of the two-career couple. As a Cabinet member, Secretary Dole has been both influential and effective. Working in a time of many difficult transportation issues, Dole saw the airlines through deregulation, called for more consumer information on airlines and issued stricter airline safety laws. Her job is as demanding and as important as the senator's.
By resigning, Dole is rebuilding the gender barriers she helped to break as the only woman on Reagan's Cabinet. Elizabeth Dole herself said she thought it "curious" that candidates' wives were expected to give up their government positions but that the candidates themselves were not. Why doesn't the senator give up his position? After all, it's his campaign.
Elizabeth Dole is a strong, able woman. Her work has been essential to our country's well-being. It is a shame to see her reinforcing outdated gender roles.
Double parked
At the University of Kansas, students, faculty and even visitors are used to paying for parking. But paying twice? For the same space?
Parking Services has come up with a plan to provide parking for campus visitors while saving the expense of parking booth monitors' salaries. Meters will be installed in lot 91 between the Kansas Union and Memorial Stadium. About half of the lot, which is currently yellow-zone student parking, will have meters at 25 cents an hour. Visitors should be very happy.
With parking as tight as it is, students will undoubtedly need to park in the metered spaces when the non-metered spaces are filled. The metered visitor spaces will be open to students, provided they pay the 25-cent an hour fee — even if they already paid for a yellow parking sticker.
A $40 yellow-zone sticker is no small expense. If a student with a yellow sticker parked in the metered area for just 20 eight-hour days, he would have paid for his $40 parking sticker twice
There is a need for visitor parking space. Lot 91 may be a good location for visitors. However, lot 91 is one of the largest parking lots available to drivers with yellow stickers. The lot could be, and in the past has been, made available to visitors without making the students pay twice. Parking booth monitors at the entrance to lot 91 could admit visitors as they pay and students who have already paid.
Parking Services will only save the cost of the parking booth monitors' salaries at the paying students' expenses.
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
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I STAYED UP
AND WATCHED
GARY HART
ON KOPPEL...
...AND?
I WISH HE'D RUN... I'D VOTE FOR THE GUY IN A MINUTE!
HE'S BRILLIANT, WITTY,
INSIGHTFUL...THE PERFECT CANDIDATE.
JIM BERGMAN
CINCINNATI CENTER FOR EDUCATION
I DIDN'T KNOW YOU WERE A GARY HART FAN...
HART SHMART. I'M TALKING ABOUT KOPPEL.
Gaffes litter '88 campaign trail
By DONALD M. ROTHBERG
Associated Press
Bob Dole's trip to Managua, Bruce Babbitt's media buy, Pat Robertson's libel suit and Joe Biden's quick opposition to the appointment of Robert H. Bork to the Supreme Court — were they good ideas or bad?
Or how about the Southern primary?
Campaigns often are best remembered by the ideas that turn sour. It's 14 months until Election Day 1988, and the candidates have already produced a bumper crop of questionable deei-
Dole might benefit eventually from his impromptu confrontation with Necaraguan Presi-
tory.
After the session between Ortega and a congressional delegation that included the Kansas Republican and four other legislators, Dole commenting that he had used the visit for a "proposanda rally."
Maybe Dole's mini-debate with Ortega will play well with U.S. voters. But it also might give his rivals an opportunity to ask whether he really expected to have a serious discussion with Ortega.
Later, the four Republican senators and one House Democrat issued a statement saying the meeting "was not a serious discussion; it was a staged media circus."
Analysis
Babbitt decided last spring to spend $250,000 on a massive media buy in Iowa in order to boost his name recognition in the state that holds the first caucuses of the 1988 campaign.
The former Democratic governor of Arizona certainly needed a way to get lowans to pay more attention to him.
But he might have spent too much early. Not even the politically acute folks in Iowa were paying that much attention that early. So the police had to be an an and Babbitt must have also ran in the polls.
Robertson was outraged when former Rep. Pete McCloskey of California, a fellow Marine officer during the Korean War, said that the television evangelist had avoided combat by having his father, a U.S. senator, intercede for him.
Not only did Robertson denounce the accusation, but he also sued McCloskey, a step that guaranteed that the question of his military service would remain alive throughout the campaign.
As chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, Biden was assured a central role in the debate over Reagan's nomination of Bork to
succeed Justice Lewis Powell.
Bork's conservative views make him anathema to many civil rights and feminist groups.
Long before the first testimony for or against the nominee, Biden declared his opposition, a step that some thought was taken in unseemly haste. He would preside over the confirmation hearings
It also played to a major criticism of the Delaware senator — a sense that he is impetuous.
But when it comes to ideas that have unintended consequences, none may match the Southern primary, the brainchild of Democratic politicians determined to give the region a stronger voice in determining their party's next presidential nominee.
Foremost in their minds was the belief that if nearly all Southern states voted on the same day, March 8, they would support someone from the conservative wing of the party.
The trouble with that strategy was that the conservatives who looked best to the Southernners, Sen. Sam Nunn of Georgia and former Gov. Charles Robb of Virginia, aren't running.
That leaves the Rev. Jesse Jackson, the least conservative contender, as the candidate best positioned to win the most delegates in a Southern primary.
Flabby thighs weigh on women worried about choosy men
Donald M. Rothberg is the chief political writer of the Associated Press.
Dear KU freshmen women:
Beware not the infamous Freshmen 15. If it so happens that you gain some extra pounds during your first year here, so be it. It men as well as women have more weight during these college transitory years.
Jennifer
Forker
Staff Columnist
MARIA MAYER
If you remain at your present post-high-school weight, congratulations! You're certainly in the minority.
But please, oh please, don't dwell on your weight. I hate to hear women worrying about their weight. And I especially hate to hear those Twiggy types. You know them: They were born without thighs or hips but have legs that reach to their navels and say things such as, "Oh, I feel so fat. I can't eat dessert for the next 20 years."
Hey, ladies, life is just too short for this self-deprecating, nit-picky talk. We shouldn't spend so much precious time worrying about those extra circumstances not dwell on our positive characteristics instead?
Rarely, though, do I hear people say, "Gawd, I have the greatest smile." Or, "You know what I like about myself? I'm an optimistic person who looks for the good in others. I'm proud of that."
I have this motto about dieting, which I call the "Hot Fudge Sundae Theory." It goes something like this: Forget it; it eat that hot fudge sundae today, while you can. Who knows what will happen to you tomorrow? You could hit by a truck and in your last, dying breath, exclaim, "I
should have eaten that hot fudge sundae last night."
Truly, this is how I justify the numerous chocolate sundaes that I consume. And I eat ice cream without guilt.
cream without glitter.
We women are too critical about our bodies and too anxious about our weight. I think men, not all, but many, have influenced these perceptions. I have witnessed countless young men point out a woman who has a slightly enlarged rear. The same men then exclaim, "Check out the skillet butt." Or, "Hey, hippo hips!"
It disgusts me because, while they're quick to point out robust female buttocks, they fail to notice their own bells, which creep over their shins. A giant gain weight while in college, isn't that amazing?
But God was unfair. While women tend to gain weight in noticeable areas, such as the buttocks, hips and thighs, men seem to gain extra pounds in their midsections: in the easily hidden stomach.
Men can camouflage beer-induced cellulite with baggie shirts. Their rears never seem to be
wretched, at least in the early weight-gain stage.
We women can't hide the dimpies in our thighs unless we forego short-shorts and creeping miniskirts. And wouldn't that be a shame?
I have another motto. It goes something like, "Live for yourself and forget what other people think about you." That's not to imply that I have a hateful or thankless attitude toward people.
Too often, though, we allow others to decide how we will regard ourselves.
Me. That's a personal topic, and one that I think I am qualified to evaluate, thank you very much.
planned to evaluate, thank you very much.
Women, don't allow these cruel, opinionated men to tell you to shed some pounds. Lose weight for them or try to lose pounds to appease some loud mouth.
Critical men like that are merely demonstrating their insecurities. Who wants to be a spring
To anyone who craves to devour a hot fudge sundae, please don't pass it up. You might not have another chance tomorrow.
BLOOM COUNTY
MEANWHILE, SOMEWHERE
EAST OF VEGAS. OUR HERO'S
STORY TAKES A DRAMATIC
AND DANGEROUS TURN !
THPT!
bv Berke Breathed
OO U GIVE LOVE
A BAD NAME... HMM
WUBBA WUBBA...
OOMP-THPT! OOMP-
THPT!
SNORT
SMORT
Doug
NOBODY
GAVE ME
A SCRIPT.
SCRATCH
PICK IT UP ON
THURSDAY
---
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, September 16, 1987
5
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1983 Universal Press Syndicate
Early microbiologists
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Campus/Area
City will fund 5 key areas with sales tax dividends
By VALOREE ARMSTRONG Staff writer
and numerous Dan Watkins, speaking for several human service agencies including the Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center, 336 Missouri St., said that many needy groups had suffered cutbacks in money without a decreased need for services.
The Lawrence City Commission agreed last night on five areas that it will finance with its share of a 1-cent sales tax proposed by the county.
Public safety improvements will be funded by 10 percent of the revenue. The city plans to enlarge both the police and fire departments.
"We could spend that money and really make a difference in the community," Watkins said.
The commissioners voted to allocate 10 percent of the money for arts, humanities and historic preservation and 20 percent for social services.
During the 90-minute public hearing, 10 Lawrence citizens spoke, praising the city's support of the arts and human service programs.
An additional 30 percent of the money from the tax is designated for
street maintenance and improvement projects, and 30 percent will be spent on drainage projects.
If passed by Lawrence voters, the plan will be reviewed by the commission in five years.
Commissioner Sandra Praeger said the city needed a balanced program to present to voters that the city would need for increased property taxes.
Jeanne Ellermeier, 2529 Arkansas St., lives near the complex. She said that Colony Woods officials had been informed of the need for a permit before they added the parking spaces, but had continued with their plans anyway.
"We've got to sell this to the community," Praeger said.
In other action, the commission tabled action on a revised site plan for Colony Woods apartments, 1301 W. 24th St., because of concern about possible landscaping and flood plain problems.
"I think that we little property owners have as much right not to be inconvenienced as anybody else." If she wouldn't be able to break the laws, "we
Because of parking problems at the apartments, which occurred during the first week of classes at the University of Kansas, Colony Woods officials added 94 parking spaces without prior approval from the city. Colony Woods is home to almost 900 KU students.
Ed Callister, representative for Colony Woods, said he had tried to work with the city to finish the
"I find it hard to believe that a man who owns and develops property didn't know he had to have a permit Commissioner Bob Schumm said."
landscaping but had received no response. "Whatever you want, we'll do." Callister said.
The commission will reconsider parking and landscaping at Colony Woods next week.
When Praeger asked why Colony Woods' works, Randall Davis, had put in the parking without amending the site plan beforehand, Callister said that he hadn't known of Davis' plans.
Sorority houses run out of room; women go to Jayhawker Towers
By BEN JOHNSTON
Staff writer
About 140 women from seven KU sororites are living in Jayhawker Towers apartments this semester because large pledge classes last year have left the sorority houses without enough space.
Marilyn Schroeder, manager of Jayhawk Towers, 1603 W. 15th St., said that in past years only a handful of fraternity and sorority members had lived at Jayhawk Towers.
a taste of sorority life."
"This is the first year we have had that quantity." Schroeder said.
"I think it's good for their organizations," Kaiser said. "It helps keep their group together and gives them
Danny Kaiser, coordinator for greek programs at KU, said having sorority members live at Jayhawker would be good way to absorb the largeplee classes.
But one fraternity that had members living at Jayhawker Towers last year added space to its house for this year.
"Pi Kappa Alpha built an addition that roughly doubled their capacity," Kaiser said. "There is a possibility that some houses may build an addition. I have not heard that there are any groups that have announced official plans, but Delta Chi, a fraternity, may be doing something next year. As far as I know, no sororites have plans to make changes."
Schroeder said that the 37 apartments in Jayhawker Towers where the sorority members were living had recently been remodeled.
Marcy Neal, Junction City sophomore, said that her sorority, Alpha Chi Omega, 1500 Sigma Nu Place, had 21 women living in about seven apartments in Jayhawk Tower.
in."
"They did a lot with Tower B," Schroeder said. "There has been quite a bit of interior improvement. For one thing, new lighting was put
"Personally, I like it because I like being with members of my sorority." Neal said. "I don't feel that I am as comfortable with own and distant from the house."
Neal said that she did not pay housing fees to the sorority, but did pay $205 rent for her apartment. She said she paid other fees to the sorority, such as $15 a week to eat at the sorority house every Monday night.
"The fees are different for each person," Neal said. "There are extra fees if you are newly initiated."
Film series will feature rare movies
By BRIAN PARESCH Staff writer
The Spencer Museum of Art's new Documentary Film Series will bring interesting and unusual films to campus that would not otherwise be available through Student Union Activities or local video rentals, said the series' creator.
Tom Southell, curator of photography at the museum, said he had the idea for the series when he saw a film produced by Robert Frank, "Me and My Brother," in Houston last summer.
"I said, 'This is crazy that Lawrence doesn't get to see these films.'" he said.
The free series starts tomorrow with "Spanish Earth," a 1937 appeal in behalf of the loyalists during the Spanish Civil War, which is narrated by Ernest Hemingway and "Living at Risk," a 1965 film directed by Alfred Guzzetti, Richard Rogers and Susan Meiselas.
Meiselsa' photographs from Latin America were on display at the museum last spring, and she also spoke there during the showing.
"Spanish Earth" and "Living at Risk" will be shown at 3 p.m. tomorrow and Sunday in Spencer's auditorium.
The one thing that the films in the series have in common, Southall said, is that they are all unusual or rare documentaries.
Southall was at first planning to include "Me and My Brother" in the series, but the River City Reunion showed it and other Frank films last week. Instead, Frank's autobiographical "Life Dances On" will be shown, November 5 and 8, along with Werner Herzog's "God's Angry Man," which is about TV evangelist Gene Scott.
On October 1 and 4, the series will feature "Grey Gardens," a 1975 look at some of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis' relatives who were living in a littered, decaying Long Island house; and "In the Street," a short look at urban Manhattan kids who play, fight and perform in the street.
October 15 and 18, "Package Tour," from Hungary, and "Night and Fog," from France, both dealing with the Holocaust, will be shown.
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6
Wednesday, September 16, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Petition
Continued from p.1
Book Store, said that he was not aware of the petition and that no instructors had called him indicating how many books needed to be ordered.
Muggy said that the store had reordered twice and had taken special orders to try to keep up with demand, but communication between departments and the store had been poor.
He said the store had sold out of their second order of French 230
books Sunday. But the store has never been out of French 110 books. The store received a shipment of 25 French 230 books Monday afternoon.
Donald Watkins, chairman of Germanic languages and literatures, said that in the past the department had trouble ordering books, but that the problem was solved when a faculty member was assigned to be a liaison between the department and the bookstore.
"As far as I know all of our
textbooks have been available," Watkins said.
Robert Spires, chairman of Spanish and Portuguese, said the department had problems getting enough books for beginning Spanish classes.
books
He said that in some cases the bookstores had told the departments the books were out of print, or didn't tell the department the books were out of stock until after classes had begun.
New minority hiring policy is planned at Kansas State
The Associated Press
MANHATTAN — Kansas State University, under pressure similar to that faced by other universities who have been urged to hire more black faculty members, will draft a new policy on minority hiring.
Timothy Sullivan, a Manhattan official with the National Association for the Advancement of Colored Peoples, sponsored an aggressive policy for hiring blacks.
Charles Reagan, assistant to university president Jon Wefald, agreed with Sullivan's assessment. But he said not all the blame should be placed on the university.
"Many people, not just blacks, are shying away from academic careers," Reagan said. "The word is
out — faculty members make crummy salaries."
Reagan added that almost every other university in the United States is under pressure to increase its number of black faculty members.
Some aspects of the new policy include: increasing salary offers to minority faculty candidates if an initial offer is rejected for being too low; helping find employment for spouses of high school graduates observing Martin Luther King's birthday by closing classes that day.
In addition to the low number of black faculty members, Sullivan said the NAACP also had confronted the university about on-campus displays of racism and illegal, discriminate
threats of violence against blacks.
The NAACP filed a complaint last month with the U.S. Department of Education to have her enrolled two Confederate flags displayed on university property.
"The flags and the low number of black faculty members together show a broad pattern of neglect by the university," Sullivan said. "Though the two may not be linked legally, the two are politically connected."
The education department notified Wefald in a letter dated Sept. 2, that he had jurisdiction to investigate discrimination complaints only in programs and activities that receive federal money.
Enrollment falls at The Way College
The Associated Press
EMPORIA — Enrollment has fallen sharply this year at The Way College of Emporia because of leadership changes and dissension among followers of the ministry of the numerous organization that runs the school.
The college, operated by The Way International, dropped from about 250 students last year to 90 students this semester, Thomas Jenkinson, college administrator, said. The school reported enrollments of about 500 in the 1970s.
Jenkinson said in an interview with The Emporia Gazette that there were no thoughts of closing the school.
The school awards certificates in biblical studies to students who complete 50 semester hours at The Way College after completing 80 hours at
a secular school.
The school's 90 students include 27 enrolled in the college program and 63 in the Way Corps leadership training program.
The college had been the main training center for The Way Corps, the non-denominational religious organization's leadership group, since the Emporia school was established in 1974.
"For the last 13 years, we have had the emphasis here. Now, that has flip-flopped. Jenkinson said. "The major training center,"
The college shifted some of its students to the headquarters in New Knoxville, Ohio, to make room for a remodeling of one of the dormitories in Emporia, he said. The Ohio campus has expanded and has a new
dormitory to house more students. The Way was founded by Victor
Dissension among followers is another reason that enrollment is down at the college, Jenkinson said.
The Way was founded by Victo Paul Wierwille, who died in 1885.
"That happens whenever you have a turnover of leadership after having a dynamic leader like Dr. Wierwile," he said. "You have internal questioning and people examining their needs."
The Emporia Gazette reported yesterday that John Lynn, former administrator of the Emporia school, was fired recently from his position as Way coordinator in the Washington, D.C., area.
The Gazette said Lynn confirmed in a telephone interview that he had been fired but declined to discuss the reason.
From the KU Weather Service
WEATHER
Lawrence Forecast
TODAY
Showers
HIGH: 80°
LOW: 60°
Today will be mostly cloudy with a chance this morning changing to thunder-
ns by afternoon. The high will reach and the low will drop to 60°.
5-DAY
THU
Partly cloudy
79/58
HIGH
LOW
FRI
Partly cloudy
82/60
SAT
Thunderstorms
81/60
SUN
Partly cloudy
80/59
MON
Fair
80/57
Showers
HIGH: 80°
LOW: 60°
Today will be mostly cloudy with a chance of rain this morning changing to thunderstorms by afternoon. The high will reach 80° and the low will drop to 60°.
5-DAY
THU
Partly cloudy
79/58
HIGH LOW
FRI
Partly cloudy
82/60
SAT
Thunderstorms
81/60
SUN
Partly cloudy
80/59
MON
Fair
80/57
North Platte
76/53
Mostly cloudy
Omaha
75/60
Cloudy
L
Goodland
77/52
Mostly cloudy
Hays
80/60
Mostly cloudy
Salina
81/61
Mostly cloudy
Topeka
81/62
Cloudy
Kansas City
79/65
Cloudy
Columbia
82/64
Cloudy
St. Louis
83/69
Mostly cloudy
Dodge City
81/60
Mostly cloudy
Wichita
83/64
Cloudy
Chanute
84/65
Cloudy
Springfield
84/67
Mostly Cloudy
Forecast by Scott Dyeran.
Temperatures are today's high and tonight's overnight low.
Conditions are forecasted for this afternoon.
On Campus
Engineering and computer career fair is scheduled at 9 a.m. today at Allen Field House.
1204 Oread Ave.
Retirees Club coffee is scheduled at 10 a.m. today at the Adam Lounge in the Adams Alumni Center. Music at 11 a.m.
■ "Interviewing II." a University Center Program center, is scheduled at 3:30 p.m. today at 149 Burge Union.
- "Childhood Socialization and Teenage Sexuality," a University Forum by K. McCluskey-Fawcett, associate professor of psychology, is scheduled at 11:40 a.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries,
Le Cercle Francais is scheduled at 4 p.m. today at Parlors A and B in the Kansas Union.
Room in the Kansas Union.
KU Democrats meeting is scheduled at 7 p.m. today at Parlor C in the Kansas Union.
- Student recital with Brad Hake on violin is scheduled at 8 p.m. today at Swarthout Recital Hall.
Campus Christians meeting is scheduled at 6:30 p.m. today at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burgee building, scheduled at 7 p.m. today at the Kansas
"We The People': 1787 Revised
a lecture by Calder Pickett,
Clyde M. Reed distinguished professor of journalism, is scheduled at 8 p.m. today at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
On the Record
■ A black Kawasaki motorcycle valued at $3,899 was taken from a lot in front of Ellsworth Hall between 7 p.m. and 9:33 p.m. on Sept. 12, KU police reported.
A radar detector valued at $220 was taken from a car parked in a lot in front of Gertrude Sellars Pearson-Corbin Hall between 5:30 p.m. and 8:38 p.m. Sept. 11, KU police reported
A stereo valued at $300 was taken from a car parked in a lot behind McColm Hall between 10 p.m. Sept. 5 to 50 a.m. Sept. 10, KU police reported.
An AM-FM radio/casette player, flashlight and two music cassette tapes valued together at $428 were taken from a car parked in a lot northeast of Oliver Hall between 10:30 p.m. Sept. 9 and 10:45 a.m. Sept. 11 KU police reported.
Two lawnmowers valued together at $600 were taken from a business at Gateway Court between Sept. 4 and Sept. 9. Lawrence police reported.
■ An AM-FM radio/casette player, radar detector and two cassette tapes valued together at $346 were taken from a car parked in a lot west of Oliver Hall between 11 p.m. Sept. 10 and 12:48 p.m. Sept. 11, KU police reported.
Street between 1 a.m. and 4 a.m.
Sept. 13, Lawrence police reported
An AM-FM radio/casette player
An AM-FM radio was taken from a car parked in a lot at Oliver Hall in a lot at Oliver Hall 45 p.m. Sept. 12, KU police reported.
A 1980 Honda Express valued $600 was taken from the front of a residence in the 1200 block of Mississippi
A forged check valued at $213.62 was discovered at a business in the 1900 block of 23rd Street on Aug. 29, Lawrence police reported.
A 1972 Chevrolet Impala valued at $500 was taken in from the 800 block of Tennessee Street between mid-sept. 14, Lawrence police reported.
A VCR valued at $300 was taken from a residence in the 1100 block of Indiana Street between 9:30 a.m. and 1:20 p.m. on Sept. 14.
K.U. FACULTY/STAFF AND STUDENT QUARTERBACK CLUB
Coach Val will review the previous game, show game films and preview the next game.
Date - Mondays during football season
You are invited to join football coach Bob Valesente for Monday noon Quarterback Club meetings.
Place - Adams Center Summerfield Room
Time - 12:00 (Noon) · 1:00 p.m.
*Optional Lunch - $5.00 Soup and Sandwich Buffet
McNEIL CONSUMER PRODUCTS
UNITED TELECOMMUNICATIONS WALLACE COMPUTER SERVICES
PIZZA HUT
PEAT, MARWICK, MAIN & CO.
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS BEECHAM MARRIOTT UNISYS
NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL LIFE DUPLEX PRODUCTS LAVENTHOL & HORWATH
COMMERCE BANC SHARES NO NONSENSE FASHIONS, INC. BECKER CPA REVIEW
SECURITY BENEFIT GROUP OF COS. COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY
DILLARD'S DEPT. STORES MARION LABORATORIES
KOCH INDUSTRIES, INC. MUTUAL BENEFIT LIFE
MIZE HOUSER & CO.
UNION PACIFIC CORP. COLGATE-PALMOLIVE
DATA DOCUMENTS ERNST & WHINNEY
NESTLE FOODS QUAKER OATS
ik with company representatives learn about NCR CORP.
AT&T
JOHNSON WAX
HYATT REGENCY
FUNCTION JUNCTION
ARTHUR ANDERSEN & CO.
BAXTER HEALTH CARE CORP.
CAREE
DST SYSTEMS
RESIDENCE INN
GRANT THORNTON
JOHN H. HARLAND CO.
MERCK, SHARP & DOHME
BARTLETT AGRI ENTERPRISES DELOITTE, HASKINS & SEEKS
FEDERAL RESERVE OF KANSAS CITY IST NATIONAL BANK OF WICHITA
DELUXE CHECK PRINTERS PROCTER & GAMBLE MAYER HOFFMAN McCANN
HOLDEN FINANCIAL FARMERS INSURANCE GROUP OF COS. RALSTON PURINA
METROPOLITAN LIFE Students from all schools and levels TOUCHE ROSS & CO
GEORGE K. BAUM who are interested in business careers HALLMARK CARDS
K-MART APPAREL are welcomed and encouraged to attend. FORD MOTOR CO.
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1987
ALLEN FIELD HOUSE
9:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m.
FBI
IBM
IRS
GTE
BANK IV SYSTEM
FRITO-LAY, INC.
VOLUME SHOE CORP.
PATTERSON DENTAL
PRICE WATERHOUSE AUTOMATIC DATA PROCESSING ARTHUR YOUNG & CO.
BUTLER MANUFACTURING COOPERS & LYBRAND PAYLESS CASHWAYS, INC.
State/Local
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, September 16, 1987
7
A
Horsing around
Lauren Hooper, Sioux Falls, S.D., senior, feeds the horse Midnight after a horsemanship class. The class met yesterday at Triple J Arabian Stables west of Baldwin City.
Multi-state lottery to include Kansas, begin in February
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Five states, including Kansas, and the District of Columbia will sign an agreement today to band together and operate the nation's largest multi-state lottery.
Peter J. O'Connell, chairman of the Multi-Site Lottery Association, said yesterday that Rhode Island, West Virginia, Iowa, Kansas, Oregon and the District of Columbia have agreed to participate initially. Missouri may join shortly, but is awaiting approval of a special state legislative committee.
"We hope to start selling tickets around Feb. 1." said O'Connell.
Representatives of the states and the District of Columbia met yesterday for a final session to review the legislation before the formal signing ceremony.
"Everything is all set to go," said Larry Montgomery, executive director.
Officials in the multi-state organization hope that the lottery will offer average jackpots of $3 million to $5 million, with the possibility of higher prizes.
The exact design of the game, known as lotto, will not be finished until later. However, officials envision a game in which players try to choose the winning combination of several numbers. If a prize isn't won one week, it would be carried over to provide an ever-growing jackpot.
Participants have agreed that tickets will cost $15 and percent of the price will be paid to the prize.
first game. Each state retains the profit for ticket sales in their jurisdiction.
Montgomery estimated that Kansas could receive $30 million in revenue from the multi-state lottery during its first year of operation.
He said smaller states, in particular, are attracted to the multi-state game because it allows them to offer much larger jackpots than they could generate on their own. That feature should mean increased ticket sales and more revenue for the participating states.
O'Connell, who has directed the Rhode Island lottery since 1974, said New York and Illinois had expressed interest in joining the multi-state lottery. However, the New York Legislature failed to approve legislation authorizing the state to participate. The lawmakers are expected to consider the issue again when they reconvene in January. Without New York's participation, Illinois has decided not to join.
The multi-state association has given permission for both states as well as Missouri to join at any time. A special legislative committee in Missouri will consider the multi-state agreement between Missouri lottery officials have said they wanted the committee's approval before they would proceed.
The multi-state lotto will be the second such lottery in the United States. New Hampshire, Vermont and Maine have operated a joint game for two years.
Armed youth escapes custody near Hays
The Associated Press
HAYS — An Ohio teen-ager escaped from a deputy who was returning him to jail yesterday, and authorities said the youth was believed to have the deputy's handgun.
Hays police and the Ellis County sheriff's department said officers were searching the area around the northwest Kansas community yesterday afternoon for Gary Chastman, 17, of Barberton, Ohio.
should be considered armed and dangerous.
The Gove County sheriff's department at Gove said Deputy Ron Achilles was returning Chastman to the Trego County Jail at WaKeeney, where Gove
County jails its prisoners.
The circumstances of the noontime escape were not disclosed, but authorities said Chastman should be considered armed and dangerous.
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Chastman had appeared in Gove County District Court, where he faced charges of aggravated kidnapping, aggravated battery, aggravated robbery, aggravated burglary, felony theft and attempted rape for an Aug. 5 attack in Park, a small community near Interstate 70 in northwestern Kansas.
Introducing SIRUR. Just when you thought that there weren't any truly hot bicycle races under $600.00, along comes SIRUR. It's our way of welcoming in a new school year --- hot savings on this years hottest bike!
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O
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL presents its second annual BENEFIT CONCERT
- the
HOMESTEAD * RANDOM
GRAYS AZTECH
- DARRELL LEA
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17 8:00 p.m.
Good organizational skills and some dance experience is required. Pick up applications in the Student Organizations Office, Burge Union.
at
the Jazzhaus $4.00
9261/2 Mass.
--is looking for an
In Between Acts Director
- Deadline: 5 p.m. Monday
ROCK CHALK
REVUE
THE Palace
Cards
& Gifts
IN A BUNCH OR BY ITSELF—WE HAVE BALLOOBS FOR ANY OCCASION. Call or come in to place your order. Let us help you put together a creative arrangement using a container filled with candy or a cuddly stuffed animal.
WE DELIVER
WE DELIVER
8th and Massachusetts 843-1099
Mon.-Sat. 9:30-5:30 Thurs. 9:30-8:30 Sun. 1:00-5:00
WOLF
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50mm f3.5-5.6 DC Macro
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45 45 81 96 221
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Wednesday, September 16, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Republicans ignore educators' survey
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Democratic presidential candidates agreed with the National Education Association on most school issues, but most Republican hopefuls did not answer its political questionnaire, the union said yesterday.
Kenneth F. Melley, NEA's top political operative, said the Republicans might want to reconsider their standoffness in the wake of the Rev. Pat Robertson's victory Satur-
a straw poll of GOP activists in Iowa.
"I if were one of them, I'd seriously look at what happened in Iowa," said Melley. "I'd try to find a way in which I could get the support of some credible institution like the NEA that has organization on the ground."
Although the 1.85 million-member union has been closely identified with Democratic candidates in recent elections, Melley said the union had 600,000 Republican members looking for a candidate to support.
Although Rep. Jack Kemp, R.N.Y. declined to fill out the questionnaire, he has agreed to be interviewed Sept. 28. Melley said, and Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole might be interviewed on camera.
Dole was the only Republican contender who filled out any of the NEA's questionnaire, and he left blank 20 items asking whether he agreed or disagreed with the union's lobbying goals.
The union released a scorecard on the candidates' responses to its questions, as well as videotapes of interviews NEA President Mary Hatwood Futrelr conducted with seven Democrats.
Unlike Walter Mondale, who said during the 1984 primaries that he could not think of a single issue where he disagreed with the NEA, all of the 1988 crop of Democrats had at least one disagreement with the liberal union.
But they were mostly minor differences over tax or pension issues. The Democrats were solidly on the NEA's side on educational and social issues.
Possible candidate Patricia Schroeder, a congresswoman from Colorado, disagreed with the union's support for keeping the Education Department in the Cabinet, and Sen. John McCain, the sole Democrat to part company with the NEA on its call for a mutual, verifiable nuclear freeze.
The questionnaire, Melley said, in a sense forced the candidates to write their education platforms back in early August.
All the Democratic candidates sided with the NEA on boosting federal school aid, opposing programs that shift funds from public schools or burden public school administrators, resisting a constitutional amendment, and supporting the official language, supporting an Equal Rights Amendment and a civil rights restoration act and standing against tuition tax credits.
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State/Local
9
More arrests are expected in child pornography sting
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The government says more indictments are expected as if pursues child pornography collude. In a filing, they have netted more than 100 people.
Attorney General Edwin Meese III disclosed at a news conference Monday that dozens of U.S. Postal Inspection Service investigators and Customs agents had been operating undercover as suppliers of kiddie porn.
In operations launched after completion of a report a year ago by the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography, postal inspectors and customs service agents called mailing lists of child pornography collectors which had been confiscated in previous raids.
In the past few months, the investigations have resulted in more than 100 indictments against people who are accused of violating the Child Protection Act of 1984. Each faces up to 10 years in prison and $250,000 if
convicted.
Five Kansans were among those indicted in the sting operations, according to federal authorities. They included Harold D. Lamb, Mackville, who was charged with nine counts of sending or receiving confiscated notes or negatives showing minors involved in sexually explicit conduct.
The other Kansans were each charged with one count of sending or receiving pornographic materials involving minors, authorizes said. They are Barry A. Smith, 34, Lene R. Sullivan, 28, and Wichita postal clerk; Kenneth G. Slowinsky, 32, Overland Park; and Thomas A. Thompson, 40, Salina.
Sixteen of the indictments were returned in Virginia, 12 in Illinois, 11 in New Jersey and eight in California. More indictments were expected, officials from the Justice Department and Postal Service said.
In one operation, dubbed Project Looking Glass. postal inspectors sent
out letters advertising child pornography to prospective buyers.
The inspectors printed letters on stationery from a fictitious undercover mail order firm, Far Eastern Trading Co. Ltd, and sent catalogues of sexual material involving children to those who responded to the letter. Federal search warrants were issued following delivery of the materials so could be recovered. The pornographic materials consisted mostly of magazines, videotapes and movies seized in earlier raids on pornography traffickers.
In a parallel investigation called Operation Borderline, customs agents sent brochures that advertised photo sets and magazines, which were mailed from a dummy Canadian corporation.
Child pornography could never condoned by society, Meese said, nor could victimized children consent to it. He said child pornography affected everyone and that it victimized children.
Medicare rise may cost Kansas
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — An expected increase in federal Medicare insurance premiums of 38.5 percent for the next calendar year could cost Kansas $2 million, a state welfare official said yesterday.
yesterday.
Herman Haffenstein, finance director for the state Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services, said the cost would be incurred because the state pays the premiums of those who receive aid under its programs.
Federal Department of Health and Human Services officials said Monday the increase has not been approved formally by the agency, but they said they expected the figure to be close to the final proposal.
Federal officials blame the need for the increase on skyrocketing doctors's bills, and Haffenstein said
state officials anticipated that the premiums would increase.
"I think we expected an increase," Haffenstein said. "We didn't expect that large of an increase."
Part of the expense would be incurred during the current fiscal year, which began July 1, and part during Fiscal Year 1989. This meant SRS officials must go to the Legislature when it convenes in January to ask for some supplemental funds, Haffeinstein said.
Haffenstein said the $2 million was necessary to prevent the state from perhaps spending between $6 million and $8 million for additional medical services for welfare recipients. If the state did not pay the premium increases, some recipients will not be covered by the federal insurance, and medical expenses they have will have to be paid for by the state, he
said.
Michael O'Keefe, Gov. Mike Hayden's budget director, said he did not know whether Hayden would build part of the increase into his fiscal 1989 budget, noting the agency has not submitted its request yet. He said the agency also had the option of cutting other costs internally to come up with the money for the premiums.
The announcement also sparked concern among state lawmakers, said State Sen. Gus Bogina, R-Lenexa, chairman of the Senate Means Committee. Bogina said he agreed with SRS officials on the need to appropriate money and said the Legislature probably will take up the matter at the beginning of its next session.
"We'll have to have some kind of supplemental allocation," Bogina said.
'Kansas' crew revamps the Capitol
The Associated Press
Well, that happens when the Capitol goes Hollywood.
TOPEKA — The governor's desk is in the secretary of state's office. The Kansas Bureau of Investigation works out of a legislative committee
"We had a good dry run here," said Joe Ellis, the film's production manager. "This is just fabulous."
About 100 members of the cast and crew of the movie "Kansas" invaded the Capitol on Friday to film inside the building and on the Statehouse grounds, with plans of continuing shooting in Topeka until the end of next week. Trans-World Entertainment, the Los Angeles company making the film, has been shooting in northeast Kansas since late July.
Filming started on the south side of the Capitol in the morning. After a barbecue lunch on the first floor, the crew set up for some interior shots. However, crew members decided to shoot on location in Rossville, about 10 miles northwest of Topeka, to "take advantage of whatever sunshine we've got."
The movie tells the story of a drifter who travels through the Midwest, becomes a fugitive and gets involved with a farmer's daughter. It stars Matt Dillon and Andrew McCarthy.
Two other productions have been filmed in the area in the last five years, the television movie "The Day After" and the feature film "Nice Girls Don't Explode." Also, the television miniseries "Murder Ordained" was shot in and near Emporia.
Jerry Jones, film coordinator for the Kansas Film Commission, said the filming of "Kansas" is evidence of the film's improved stature in Hollywood.
Jones said that in fiscal 1986, companies spent $1 million on productions in Kansas, compared with $6 million for fiscal 1987, which ended June 30.
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NO
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
NATING
COLD OR ALLERGIES?
At this time of the year, congestion, cough, and a running nose are common complaints around campus. Many students attribute these symptoms to a cold or "flu," while in reality they may be symptoms caused by raggedye and other pollen in the air.
Over the counter antihistamine preparations can be used to alleviate these annoying symptoms, but if no relief is obtain
6d: a phytbi
cian should be
consulted.
SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED DUSEASES
DISEASES
STRESS MANAGEMENT
WORKSHOP
Call to make an appointment with the gynecology clinic.
The risk of acquiring sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), including AIDS, can be reduced by proper sexuality includes not only contraception, but also prevention of STDs. Condoms and spermicide with use are recommended (protection) from STDs. BOTH ARE NO AVAILABLE WITHOUT PRESCRIPTION If you believe you have been exposed to or have an STD, your health service offers the most current methods of diagnosis and treatment, helping the management of both partners.
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—(12)
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Heat can be applied to three or four days after the injury as long as the swelling is reduced. Heat also helps to alleviate the blood vessels around away swelling and old blood, and reduce pain and stiffness. If problems occur or patients call your physician or therapist at Watkins.
EMERGENCY PROCEDURE CLASS
Learn how to intervene quickly and effectively when an emergency strikes! An emergency procedure class is being offered on September 21, from 3:00-5:00 p.m. A CPR class will be offered on
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Campus Recruiting Dates Audit & Tax: September 21, 1987 Consulting: October 21-22, 1987
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10
Wednesday, September 16, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Report links Bork with alcohol
The Associated Press
CLEVELAND — A confidential FBI report raises questions about Supreme Court nominee Robert H. Bork's alcohol consumption, according to a published report in yesterday's editions of The Plain Dealer.
Senate Judiciary Committee hearings began yesterday to consider President Reagan's nominee to the nation's highest court.
The newspaper quoted unidentified committee sources who said the confidential report described two 1983 incidents two days apart in the same building, buried in the Once. The report said, he had alcohol in his bloodstream.
Such reports are routinely gathered on judicial nominees.
Bork's son, Charles, said late Monday that his father was asleep and therefore would not respond to questions on the report.
Judiciary Committee member Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., raised the issue with Bork privately after being told of the report, the newspaper said.
Bork's son, Charles, said late Mon-
Bork went to Sibley Memorial Hospital in Washington, D.C., on Dec. 21 and 23, 1983, the newspaper said.
During the second visit, the level of alcohol in Bork's blood was 0.09, a source said. The Plain Dealer did not say why the test was taken.
In the District of Columbia, if Bork had been driving, this blood alcohol level would have be high enough to define him as "under the influence of alcohol" but below the 0.10 level
defined as "intoxicated."
Bork said he broke his arm after he slipped on an ice walk, the newspaper said. Two days later, Bork said his broken arm was in a sling when he dropped it and was wounded during a Christmas party at his home and sprained his wrist.
"It happened during a week when Christmas parties are common, so maybe it isn't a big deal," the newspaper quoted a Judiciary Committee source as saying. "But we've got to explore this because it may be indicative of a drinking problem."
Several Bork associates and former clerks disputed any suggestion that Bork had a drinking problem, the newspaper said.
Hackers access NASA data files
The Associated Press
FRANKFURT, West Germany — Computer hackers broke into NASA's worldwide data network throughout the summer and gathered secret information on space shuttle projects and rocket failures, West German media said yesterday.
News reports said young West Germans gained regular access to at least 20 computers of the U.S. space agency to paralyze the entire network.
The ARD television network said a
flaw in the network's security system allowed the hackers to enter the network from May to September.
Hackers are computer enthusiasts who often try to break into private computer systems for the challenge or for criminal gain.
The NASA system connects more than 1,600 computers worldwide that share information on space research, nuclear physics and molecular biology, AND said in a report broadcast last night. The network includes U.S. atomic research facilities in Loe
Alamos, N.M.
In Washington, NASA said in a statement that the tapped network provides unclassified information to university and industry researchers.
"We know of no classified information which can be accessed through the network." the statement said.
The statement said NASA used a number of computer networks with varying degrees of security to provide "appropriate individuals" with access to data.
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FRESHMAN CLASS ELECTIONS (Board of Class Officers)
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Filing Deadline: Friday, September 18 at 5:00 p.m.
Informational Meeting Tuesday All candidates must attend- Tuesday, September 22
Sports
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, September 16, 1987
11
B
Outside bitter Shannon Ridgeway handles a Nebraska serve. The Jayhawks lost in three games last night at Allen Field House.
Cornhuskers spike KU in three games
By ROBERT WHITMAN
Staff writer
Nebraska's heavy hitting proved more than the Kansas volleyball team could handle last night as the Cornhuskers breezed by the Jayhawks 15-2, 15-6, 15-4 in Allen Field House.
The match was the first Big Eight Conference competition for both
Not only did Nebraska, 7-0 and
ranked seventh in the country, have effective spikes from starters Kathi DeBoer and Virginia Stahr, it had more hitting power on the bench.
"Their hitting was more balanced. Almost anyone they put in there can hit," KU coach Frankie Albitz said. "But we're easy to hit against because we're so short."
The Cornhuskers put many of their spikes cross-court and away from the
"I tried to move the block, but what I was saying wasn't sinking in as much." Albitz said.
Jayhawks' block.
But that might not have done any good because most of the Nebraska spikes, especially DeBoer's, went over the Jayhawk block.
Albitz agreed, saying, "They (KU players) said they were going over the block. When you go over the block, you can hit it anywhere."
In the first game, seven of Nebraska's 15 points came on spikes from DeBeer and Stahr. The Cornhuskers won by second and second game before pulling away.
"We'll take whatever they give us." Nebraska coach Terry Pettit said. "Kathi was probably just going over the top of everybody."
Nebraska led 4-2 in the third game
See VOLLEYBALL. p. 12. col. 1
By CRAIG ANDERSON
Play against Auburn forces lineup shifts
Staff writer
Valesente said the changes were not so much players being demoted to the second team, but players who were promoted to starting positions.
Changes in the Kansas football depth chart went into effect during last night's practice, coach Bob Valesente said.
"Terrell did a great job." Valesen said. "He deserves a chance to see you."
"People who perform well in backup roles should get chances to start," he said. "That just makes sense because they are competing (for playing time)."
Junior SMU transfer Darryl Terrell moved into the starting tailback spot in front of the starter for the Auburn game, junior Arnold Snell. Terrell rushed for 21 yards in six carries in the game. Snell had 12 yards in six carries against the Tigers.
Sophomore wide receiver Quintin Smith moved up to the first team on the strength of his five-catch, 40-yard performance against Auburn. He
replaced Junior Willie Vaughn, who did not catch a pass in the Jayhawks opening game.
opposite Smith.
Senior Mill Garner was moved back to cornerback from strong safety, replacing junior Johnny Granderson. Garner started 10 games at cornerback last year. Senior Marvin Mattox was moved into the starting strong safety position.
Smith missed last season because as a high school senior, he took his ACT test a day early, which made him ineligible under NCAA rules. Caldwell holds down the first-team wide receiver spot opposite Smith.
Granderson moved to the second
test but Valentele said he wasn't
doubtful.
Valezenga said he was pleased with the way the Jayhawks practiced yesterday. He said Kansas had revived their attitude after the opening 49-0 loss. The intensity would have to continue, he said, if the team were to recover for home owner Saturday against Kent State. The Golden Flashes opened their season last Saturday with a 27-23 victory over Akron.
Kansas men's golf team takes first in tournament
Staff writer
By DARRIN STINEMAN
Four members of the Kansas men's golf team were among the top six finishers of the Kansas Jayhawk Invitational Golf Tournament, leading the Jayhawks to a first-place finish in the two-day tournament that ended yesterday.
The seven-team field played 36 holes on Monday and 18 yesterday at the Alvamar Golf and Country Club. Each team has six players, but only best four scores per round for each team count in the team standings.
Junior Jon Bruneling the Jayhawks with a six-over-par 22, which tied for second place in the individual standings. Senior Brian McGreevy and sophomore Clay Devers both finished with 224 and tied for fourth as individuals. Junior John Erickson and freshman Len Johnson came in
with 228, and freshman Steve Shade shot 213. Junior Rudy Zupecet did not qualify for the team in the pre-tournament playoff, but tied for fourth at the finish with 224 in the individual standings.
"I thought we played pretty steady throughout the tournament," coach Ross Randall said. "Any one of four uuids could have won."
Randall said he was encouraged by the play of the two freshmen, Johnsen and Shade, both of whom were playing in their first college tour
Cincinnati massacres Braves 21-6
"It's important for the younger players to get it going now," Randall said.
Kansas finished with a team total of 889, followed by Wichita State (907), Nebraska (908), Iowa State (916), Oklahoma City (926), Kansas State (935), and Southwest Missouri State (975).
The Associated Press
ATLANTA — Dave Parker drove in a career-high eight runs with two singles, a double and two home runs and Terry McGriff hit a grand slam as the Cincinnati Reds unleashed a seven-homer, 19-hip attack in a 21-6 victory over the Atlanta Braves yesterday.
Cincinnati's run total was the third highest in the National League this season. The New York Mets scored 23 against the Chicago Cubs on Aug. 16, and the Cubs scored 22 against the Houston Astros on June 3.
The Reds, snapping a three-game losing streak, built a 13-2 lead with eight runs in the fourth inning when Parker had a three-run double and McGriff the first grand slam of his career, and his second homer of the year.
Parker collected his 16th game-
Parker hit a two-run homer in the third, his 23rd of the year, after a run scored by another and added another in the third on a singby Bell and a bell by Nick Easey.
winning RBI of the year when he singled in the first run of the game in the opening inning, scoring Jeff Treadway, who doubled. The Reds another run in the first on Buddy Bell's RBI inti1 grounder to second.
Parker got his fourth consecutive hit with a single in the fifth and scored on Bell's 14th homer, a three-run blow to left.
Barry Larkin ignited the eight-run fourth with a leadoff homer over the center-field fence, his 10th.
Parker hit his second homer of the game and 24th of the season in the seventh, a two-run blow over the center-field fence. The Reds' outfield previously had two six-RBI games this year.
Lloyd McClendon打 two-run homer for in the eighth and Leo Garcia hit a bases-empty homer in the ninth for the Reds' final runs.
The last Cincinnati player to knock
in eight runs in a game was Gus Bell on Sept. 21, 1954. Walker Cooper holds the club record for RBI in a game with 10 on July 6, 1949.
The offensive outburst enlisted Ron Robinson, 7-4, to lift his lifetime record against Atlanta to 5-0. He pitched in at home and struck out three in five innings.
Dale Murphy hit his 39th and 40th homers for the Braves.
Gerald Perry had a sacrifice fly in the third and the Braves added three hits, seventh on Rob Gant's RBI single and a two-run single by Ken Griffey.
Strong start no surprise to OSU coach
By CRAIG ANDERSON
Staff writer
The early season scoring outbursts by the Oklahoma State football team have not surprised Cowboy coach Pat Jones, he said yesterday.
Umana State defeated Tulsa 39-28 and Houston 35-0 in its first two games. Last season, the most points the Cowboys scored in a game were the 24 they got against Kansas. Jones said he expected higher scoring totals by the team this year, if it stayed healthy.
One of the most productive Cowboys so far has been senior tailback Thurman Thomas. Thomas had been expected to be in contention for the Heisman Trophy last season after he rushed for 1,533 yards and 15 touchdowns as a sophomore. But a knee injury limited the Missouri City, Tex. to only 741 yards last year.
"We've got some big-play-type players," he said. "If we can keep them on the field, we'll be productive."
This season, a healthy Thomas has already rushed for 275 yards and four touchdowns in his first two games. He also scored a yard pass during down run against Houston.
"When he's healthy, he makes a tremendous impact in a game," Jones said. "(His early success) wasn't unexpected to us."
Sophomore quarterback Mike Gundy also played well in the Cowboys' game against Tulsa and Houston. He completed 30 of 53 passes for 355 yards against Tulsa and Houston.
said his quarterback would have to continue to improve if he wanted to be successful against the tough competition the Cowboys will face
The early Cowboy successes, Jones said, were due in part to a carry-over effect from last season when Oklahoma State won four of its last five games and Cowboy record games Gundy has started at quarterback is now 7-3.
Oklahoma State has scored in almost every conceivable way in its first two games. Sophomore tailback Barry Sanders returned a kickoff 100 yards for a score and the Cowboy defense recorded a safety in the opener against the Golden Hurricanes. In the Houston game, Sanders scored three goals to keep down. In the same game against the Cougars, sophomore strong safety Rod Smith scored on a 41-yard interception return.
"He's got some leadership ability in him." Jones said of Gundy. "He's given us a little fire."
On the down side, the Oklahoma State defense gave up an average of 427 yards a game in its first two contests. The 35-0肘 out against Houston, though, made Jones feel about the potential of the defense.
"We've maintained a little momentum from last year, and I think it's helped us." he said. "I think we are an overall team overall from last season."
defensive backfield. The Cowbys ranked fifth in the nation last season in passing yards allowed, giving up only 121 yards a game. Jones said the ability of the Cowboy defensive backfield was there, but the experience was not.
Junior Melvin Gilliam is the only returner starter from last year's
The big victory over Houston, Jones said, would help the Cowboy recruiting in the state of Texas. The game was shown throughout Texas on the Southwest Conference television network. Oklahoma State has 48 players on its roster this season who hail from Texas.
"We lost a lot of talent back there, but if we continue to improve, we can be as good as last year." Jones said.
Many of the Cowboy freshman this season probably would be redshirted this year, Jones said. Only three true cowboys in action in the Cowbies first two games.
Jones said any immediate thoughts of the Cowboys going to a bowl game this year were premature. In 1983 Oklahoma State went to the Bluebonnet Bowl and beat Baylor 24-14. in 1984 they were victorious against South Carolina in the Gator Bowl. They returned again to the Gator Bowl in 1985, but lost to Florida State 34-23. Last year's 6-5 record ended the three-year Cowboy string of post-season appearances.
"Redshirting is an important part of our program," he said.
"We're only looking as far ahead as the Wyoming game this week," he said. "After that, things will take care of themselves."
Dave Niebergall/KANSAN
On guard
Scott Pelham, Lawrence sophomore, front, and Beth Christmas, Shawnee senior, practice fencing maneuvers. The fencing class, instructed by Shawn Chestnut, met yesterday afternoon in Robinson Center.
Angel rookie again whips the Royals
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Don't blame California pitcher Willie Fraser for getting excited over a trip to Royals Stadium.
On Tuesday, Fraser returned to the scene of his first major league shutout and held Kansas City scoreless in the third inning in a 7-1 Angels victory.
"I don't know what it is about the stadium here. I guess it's just that it's so big," the Angels rookie said after he scattered seven hits and completed his fifth game of the season.
"I just wanted to go five or six strong innings," Fraser said. "I was tired after the sixth inning, but I was able to get away from my breaking ball and go with my fastball. I still had some pop on my fastball and that got me through the last three innings."
Fraser, now 10-9 after 19 starts and 13 relief appearances this season, shut out the Royals 4-0 on June 14, giving up just two hits. He was then beaten 10-4 by Kansas City in Anaheim.
"Young guys show you that they are young guys every once in awhile," Angels manager Gene Mauch said. "The last time he pitched here, he was magnificent. He goes out and there it's a different story. He comes back here and he's magnificent again."
Kansas City starter Danny Jackson, 8-17, has experienced a season very different from Fraser's. Jackson has an 11.43 earned-rank average at home against California, and no in-game assists, must in nine innings at California.
Fraser got support from Tony Armas and Jack Howell, each of whom tripled in a four-run fifth inning that gave California a 5-1 lead.
Armas tripped to right-center for a 3-1 California lead. Johnny Ray followed with an RBI single.
Howell, pinch hitting for George Hendrick, greeted reliever Bob Stoddard with his triple and drove in Ray.
Bill Buckner singled home a run. Bob Boone, playing a major league record-ying 1,918 game as a catcher for the Cincinnati Reds in California a 7-1 lead in the seventh.
The Angels scored in the third inning when Jackson walked DeCinces with the bases loaded. George Brett's RBI single tied the game in the bottom of the third.
---
12
Wednesday, September 16, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Sports
Baseball team ready for second game
By a Kansan reporter
The Kansas baseball team continues its preparation for the spring season at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow when it plays Johnson County Community College at Quigley Field.
The teams will play a 15-inning game broken down into three five-inning segments as Kansas did Sunday with Kansas City Kansas Community College. The games are segmented in order to
allow the teams to pitch three starting pitches and use relief pitchers at the end of each mini-game as they would in a nine-inning game.
are also adjusting to the process of seeing who can do what," Bingham said. "We want to create a situation to find out how people react to
game situations."
they would in a nine-ming game.
The scrimage atmosphere of the fall games is indicative of Kansas coach Dave Bingham's evaluate-and-adjust ideology for the fall season.
Volleyball
The team had the day off Monday, and the rain that fell night and yesterday morning left the field too soft to practice yesterday and may prevent them from practicing today. Bingham said the laffoy would leave the team no time to adjust for the game if the field was still unplayable this afternoon.
Continued from p. 11
and 26 sideouts had been played before Stahr served four aces during a 5-0 run.
Kansas kept the score there, but Nebraska wouldn't budge as the teams played 15 straight sideouts. Kansas then scored on a dink by Shannon Ridgeway and a Cornhusker carry, making it 12-4.
After two more sideouts, Nebraska scored three more on a spike from Val Novak, a spike by DeBoer and an ace by Lori Endicott to make the score 12-2.
"I feel pretty good," Albitz said.
"He put his second team in. Then when he needed to close out the match, he put his starters back in. I think they had to play. The score didn't show it, but the rallies did."
Player's union submits new proposal
Kansas, 4-3 overall and 0-1 in the conference, plays host to Southwest Missouri State, Sam Houston and Michigan State in a four-tournament Friday and Saturday at Allen Field House.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The NFL Players Association, which last week rejected a club owners' proposal, yesterday presented a contract counterproposal that softened the union's bid for unrestricted free agency but still demanded guarantees for player representatives and second-year players.
"We feel this counterproposal shows significant movement and is a great step forward in the areas that we feel can bring collective bargaining process," NFLAP executive director Gene Upshaw said.
The counterproposal was presented one week before the union's Sept. 22 strike deadline. Jack Donlan, executive director of the Management Council, said he needed time to study the counterproposal. There was no indication when meetings would resume.
left," said John Jones, a Management Council spokesman.
Jack appeared very irate when he
In its five-page proposal the union withdrew its demand for unfettered free agency for players in their first four years in the league. Instead, the NFLAP suggested that a veteran free agent who had not completed his fourth year should be subject to first refusal rights of his old club.
"We feel that is a big, big move," Upshaw said. "We're talking about 50 percent of the players would be affected by that one move alone."
There would be no compensation to the club if the player jumped to another team. After his fourth year, a veteran not under contract would be free to go to another team, and that team would not have to compensate the player's old club.
sate the play.
Upshaw said he expected the union's new stand would help open up the negotiations.
"All we've heard is that if players move off their demand for unfettered
free agency, we can get things done," he said. "Now we'll find out if that's true."
In its proposal, the union also asked that player representatives who had been released or assigned since Jan. 1, 1987 be retroactively guaranteed their salaries for the seasons remaining in their contracts.
The union also proposed that player representatives not be traded or assigned without their consent and that if they were cut, the team would be fined an average salary, $230,000, which would be paid to the player.
The union, which previously demanded across the-board guaranteed contracts, asked for the guarantees to go into effect once a player made the active list in his second NFL season.
Donian would not immediately comment on the counterproposal, saying, "I'm not going to say anything, because anything I say will be the wrong thing."
Sports Briefs
Ex-KU basketball stars to play
All-star basketball team composed of former KU players will take on ex-Kansas State, Washburn and Wichita State stars Sunday in the first Kansas Alumni All-Star Basketball Classic at the Lone Dawn in Topeka.
The event, part of the city's Cider Days Fall Festival weekend, begins at 6 p.m.
The combined KSU, Wichita State and Washburn team features Mike Evans, Xavier McDaniel, Norris Coleman, Tom Meier, Cliff Levingston and Rolando Blackman.
Proceeds benefit the American Lung Association of Kansas.
The KU team includes player-coach JoO White, Calvin Thompson, Ron Kellogg, Cedric Hunter, Bud Stallworth, Dave Robiscott, Carl Henry, Greg Dreiling and Brian Martin.
Tickets are $10, $8, $6 and $4 and are available through the Topeka Sizzlers office, the Kansas Exocentre box office and all Topeka Walgreens stores. Visa and Mastercard orders are accepted at 357-8300.
Rovals plan for postseason ticket sales
KANSAS CITY. Mo. — The Kansas City Royals announced ticket plans yesterday for the American League Championship Series and the World Series if the Royals advance to the playoffs and Series.
The Royals said ticket requests or championship series games in Kansas City should be sent to Championship Baseball, P.O. Box 119970, Kansas City, Mo. 64141.
From staff and wire reports.
Scoreboard
Baseball
American League
New York 4, Milwaukee 3
Detroit 9, Boston 8
Toronto 6, Baltimore 2
Chicago 6, Minnesota 2
California 7, Kansas City 1
Oakland 6, Texas 5
Cleveland 4, Seattle 2
National League
New York 12, Chicago 4
St. Louis 4, Philadelphia 3
Pittsburgh 5, Montreal 1
Los Angeles 3, Houston 2
San Francisco 13, San Diego 3
Cincinnati 21, Atlanta 6
ESOUIRE
ESQUIRIE BARBER SERVICE
FOR MEN
AND WOMEN
FOR APPTS. CALL
842-3699
2323 RIDGE CT.
Home of Gladys Park 1987
Lawrence Book
Welcome to Lawrence!
University of Calgary Fall 1983
Lawrence Book
A Biography of Frederick Lawrence
Welcome to Lawrence!
JAYHAWK
Pawn & Jewelry
"Money To Loan"
Buy • Sell • Trade
Cameras • Typewriters
Stereo Equipment • Jewelry
Guitars • Amplifiers
1000 H St. 740 1091
1804 W. 6th 749-1919
[Image]
$1.50 $1.50
$1.50
$1.50 $1.50
ONE DOLLAR & FIFTY CENTS
FOR A DRAW AND
SCHNAPPS SHOT
WEDNESDAY AT
THE WHEEL
THE WHEEL
NEED A GREAT PAIR OF SUNGLASSES OR SKI GOGGLES AT 15% OFF RETAIL? bolle at K.U.
Featuring IREX 100. Sunglasses Prices Range from $15 to $115 CATALOGS AVAILABLE
For more info. call: Jon Hofer 842-3338 Sean Butler 749-2870 Kelly Milligan 841-7429
To the ladies of
To the ladies of Chi Omega
Thank you for a wonderful and fun Greek Week.
To the men of Sigma Nu congratulations on winning Greek Week and the Activities Cup.
The men of Alpha Epsilon Pi
Being a Marine Corps Officer can open the door to opportunities you may have thought beyond your reach. It helped Marine Officer Charles Bolden become a NASA astronaut. And if you're willing to make the commitment, it could help you also. You can get started while you're in college with our undergraduate
officer commissioning program. You could take advantage of getting:
■ $100 a month while in school
■ Freshman and Sophomores train during two six-week summer sessions each paying more than $1,100
- Juniors train in one ten-week summer session and earn more than $1,900
- Free civilian flying lessons
- A starting salary of more than $19,000
Immediately upon graduation you could become a Marine
We want you to go as far as you can.
Officer. It's your choice. Maybe you're the kind of man we're looking for.
e
Were looking for a few good men.
NASA
CHARLES BOLDEN
J.S.C. HOUSTON
Marines
Your Officer Selection Team representatives will be located on Wesco Beach from 10am - 3pm on September 16th and 17th, or call 841-1821.
SAVE
YOUR MONEY,
CLIP A COUPON!
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, September 16. 1987
13
W
and the Beatles
With special guests
PLAIN JANE SAT. SEPT. 19th
ONE Night ONLY
BOTTLENECK
737 New Hampshire 843-9723
Classified Ads
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Gay and Lesbian Services will meet at 7:20 p.m. Thursday September 12 in the Calcaterra Room in the Chapel of the Holy Cross Heading home for the holidays? FLY CHASE Call us now. Carpenters Travel, 843-5608 Just starting and you're already stressed! Learn how to get your Therapy Gift certificates available too! (Tell your roommate!) Student discount: Call Bruce and Members of Delta Sigma Phi on KU campus.
Members of Delta Sigma Phi on KU campus please contact Dave Broyles, 843-3895.
STUDY ABROAD
UP-COMING EVENTS
INFORMATIONAL MEETING
Thursday, Sept. 17th
Pioneer Room, Burge Union
7:00-9:00 p.m.
RECEPTION
Saturday, Sept. 19th
203 Lippincott
10:00-13:00 a.m.
FULBRIGHT/
DIRECT EXCHANGE Application Deadline
Application
Friday, Sept. 25th-NOON
ENTERTAINMENT
At your request is Lawrence's Best and Most Affordable D.J. Sound and Lighting for Any Occasion. 811-465
Have Disc- Will Travel Mobile Sound Service. Complete selection of dance music including Progressive, Soul and Top 40 dance music. Experienced D.J. JUSTICE Equipment, Affordable
ULTIMATE ENTERTAINMENT
Ultimate Mobile DJ System For All Occasions.
炉 462.3380
phil. at 462.3380
mobile sound
1 DJ Service in Lawrence
Experienced Club & Radio DJ's
Superior Sound & Lighting
Superior Sound & Lighting
-DJ Ray Velasquez - 8417083-
WANTED. LEAD SINGER for established rock
director and lead vocalist. Direct Direc-
tors Straub, and Call. Fulfill 841-9883.
FOR RENT
APPEL LANCE. APTS. Conduit studies available at Apple Land. On KU campus rout. Lawn facilities. Ample parking. Water and cash paid. $285.00 per call. Call 81-430 for appointments.
2 Bedroom apartment-bus route, $285. Call 749-4156. Call in the morning or evening.
Apartment for sublease October 1. 2 br, 2 bath.
Microwave, dishwasher, and on bus route.
749-5844.
Available immediately. 2 hr apt, convenient to
available directly. 1 hour apt, convenient to
nally painted. $60/month. 1-683-789-478
available immediately; bedroom very close to campus; $125/month and very low utilities
Available now Large furnished 1 bt. applet
3 blocks in campus 795-600
blocks in campus 795-600
BRAND NEW completely furnished 4 bedroom
apts available immediately. On the bus route and
in walking distance of KU. Call 749-4256 or
8 4 2 4 4 5 5
Must sublet one bedroom, entire third floor of house. Very quiet, 2 blocks from campus. $240/month. Available immediately. Call 842-3831 after 6 p.m.
HOUSE FOR RENT Share large 5 bdrm/2 bath house CLOSE TO CAMPUS with LAUNDRY IN BASEMENT and 8th bedroom, design students (gays) need 2-4 more people to share rent and bats at 14th and Kentucky. Contact Darryl at 703-964-7187 or 1217. N Wochia. Twitchell KS 67214
SUNRISE PLACE
Sunrise Apartment
Female roommate(s) wanted, furnished 2 bpt.
at Pointecrow. $162.50 plus 1/2 utilities.
Offering luxurious townhouses and apartment living.
Stop by to see our show unit at 9th and Michigan or call ...
841-1287 for an appointment.
on appointment. M-F
Not satisfied with where you’re living? Naimsith Hall has one female space available for immediate move to the best quality, excellent "A1-U.Can-Eat" meals, paid utilities, weekly maid service and a full housekeeping. We offer the best booking options at KU! For more info, call sr come by Naimsith Hall. 18 Naimsith Drive
SUNFLOWER HOUSE. Rooms available as members graduate in September. Low rates, great location. 749-0871, ask for Ann, Deb, or Tenn.
FOR SALE
130 WATT amplifier Peavey Special 130 Channel
present, a year old. £250, B42-6153
Honda motorcycle. Good condition.
Call John at (844) 722-9000.
1980 Chevette, good condition. $1000 Color TV
1980 Trans Am T-top. Very good condition $4250.
842-7234
1981 Honda Twinstar 200cc Motorcycle. Call
641-4130
1984 Honda Nighthawk S 3,000 miles, 2 helmets,
805 Honda Deluxe 155cc. Paid $730, asking
1929. condition perfection! "C"
1250 Perfect condition! Call 49-3855.
1261 Anaki and 233 "Free Spirit" 10-speed kits, $45
1271 Anaki and 233 "Free Spirit" 10-speed kits, $45
and $4.12^2$. Newtonian reflector telescope, excellent condition, BO; men's fur lined suede over coat. (50 cm)
7 pc furniture, $150. Call 841-4159
ADDS Viewpoint Data Terminals, excellent for computer bobbie, Assembling system. $150, 300 baud acoustic modem, $50, Odkaita M3 Printer, needs repair, $40, 891-961, leave message.
in Absolutely Awesome Array of Antiques, collectible and vintage, hardback and paperback books, luna paperbacks, look books, Playbies, Penthouse, etc. loads of anti-fraud jewelry, costume jewelry (giltter and silver), the right ring, a set of mismatched rings.
sion, antique toys, fine art glass, doll house furniture, miniatures, fiesta, and the best selection of antique furniture in the area. Quantiflora Rifle Market, 11 New Hampshire. Open Sal & Sun
Arkansas quartz crystals, wholesale prices. 749-4426.
AT&T wallphone $40 Mountain bike. $50 Lawn
atter, $25. Children's books. Call 814-4337
www.mountainbike.ca
BIC 250 WINDSURFER-$250 SPECIALIZED
BIC 300 WINDSURFER-$300 SPECIALIZED
CLENTION CONDITION, NEW TRETS, $300-1881
SUZUKI 490 GSL, RUF 710 MAKE OFFERS 790-1212
LEAVE MESSAGE IF NO ANSWER
Computer: Zedith 150, IBM Compatible, 20 MFC
Computer: Zedith 150, IBM Compatible, 20 MFC
$100 best offer. Call 814-9874 morning or after.
Drumset. LUIDWIG Diox, Boto-toms, Pasteur
electrolux. Caj Joe after 3 p.m. at 843-4234,
e.g., Call Joe at 3 p.m. at 843-4234.
Electric guitar for advanced beginner or intermediate musician. Electra X-280 guitar with hardshell case, amplifier, and acoustical pickup. Low mileage equipment, $350, $419, -868, leave room.
Fender Ribs, suitcase model, excellent condition,
$500. Call 1-722-0887.
FOR SALE: 1787 Mercury Cherry color television, 19" Great condition. Call Yang at 842-8909.
For Sale: 1865 Kawasaki Ninja. 800 R, clean. Must sell. Call 748-2564 anytime!
For sale a classical record collection *400 Lp's*
$2 each. Excellent to mint condition. Hob at
www.aurelcollection.com.
Korg Microprect synthesizer, M-500 $200. Call
1-913-728-9877
FULLY IBM PC/XT COMPATIBLE (fountain
mode) Model #796 - 941-123 by 7 p.m.
MODEM #796 - 941-123 by 7 p.m.
For Sale: Litton large capacity digital microwave $120; Smith Corona erasable electric typewriter $150; both in excellent condition. 052-6599.
- MOTHIBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE *
1312 E. 98 - 749-496.
1312 E. 98 - 749-496.
Migata 2¹ Grandour舞场, both racks, fully equip. New is $600; must sell at $300
$180.
examples. Programs include:
decimal to binary conversion, sensitive division
and more. Send $2.10 (cheek@m.o.m.) to:
Wim Dept. 1, P.O. Box 400, Rolla, MO 60401
*****New Cordless Bell Phones*
Overstocked and stocked only
Only at mall or store #78-7207
name is Luka. I live on the second floor. I'm selling carpet and much, much more. One year old carpet $50 fits dorm room. Dorm refrigerator $6. 3 component stereo $125. $414-437 for
H. P. PROGRAMS. Five easy to use programs for the Hewlett Packard 11C calculator. Clearly presented step-by-step key-in instructions with matrices of three 3 matrix data to linear conversion, conversion, and
Vacuums - Save big money. Incompaired with 3
guarantees purchased. Fears start at $14.90.
Lowe's Vacuum & Sewing Center, 916 Mass,
845-1207
Busch Butel 2 door, reliable, interior in excellent condition, AM/FM cassette, A/C/K miles, $700 or best offer. Call 644-2582 and ask for Dennis.
Motorhomes Depot
Motorhomes Depot
Virginia Beach OBO 814-0655
Motorcycle for sale. 127 Endure-make offer (no
motorcycle warranty)
Virginia Beach OBO 814-0655
Portable computer w/monitor, printer & modem,
toes of software. $400. Call 432-2215.
Recorde- Hale sale! One day only! Lawrence
records on this, thun Sunday, September 29.
Don't miss out!!
Save rent money—own your own mobile home
Two bedrooms. Comfortable and spacious
Twin matress, box springs, and frame. Like
pew. Asking $100.849. Call 6:30 p.m.
p. 27.
Nikkor PF350 shift lens 850, $5.12 Nikkor $175,
Nikon D500 lens 850, $4.99 Nikkor $175,
V/A-light high power flash, $85, 822-7768
Sherwood 57019-A receiver and Panasonic turn-
table $100. The pair FIRM 841-6234 after 5
hours.
Previously rented tuxes, will sell as 3 pieces ($36) or separately. #84-834 for more info. Dress for the event.
AUTO SALES
Details
Music pickup: Silver, 5-speed, A/C. Must
sell. Priced below book value, with new AM/FM
cassette stereo and near new Topper thrown in.
842-4268
sailboards. BIC 2005 Funboard with 3.7 foot
sailboat deck. BIC 2005 Funboard with 4.1
foot sailboat deck. Boom-board boom will
separate 1-4, 1-6, 1-8, 1-9, 1-12, 1-14,
1-16, 1-18, 1-20, 1-22, 1-24, 1-26, 1-28,
1-30, 1-32, 1-34, 1-36, 1-38, 1-40, 1-42,
1-44, 1-46, 1-48, 1-50, 1-52, 1-54, 1-56,
1-58, 1-60, 1-62, 1-64, 1-66, 1-68, 1-70,
1-72, 1-74, 1-76, 1-78, 1-80, 1-82, 1-84,
1-86, 1-88, 1-90, 1-92, 1-94, 1-96, 1-98,
2005.
1981 Chevy Citation: V-4, 6-speed, surcoat, hoodfire,
1400, 1400. Ford Tortor: 301; d-4 door, $400.
Both cars very reliable. Call 842-1071 after 6:30
m. or weekend.
rstest, or best offer. Carat 64-7520
1983 Leu Car, immaculate, sunroof, stereo; $1055.
Also, a 1980 Leu Car, rough; $495, 864-7530 or
864-2740.
1982 olds Fireenza 4 door, 40cm A/C, Cruc-
tilt-wheel, AM/FM stereo. $220.84-927.06
junable boom -40m + will japatease. 1-6x24z
Sale: afoe sleeper and 10-speed at 799
Sale: afoe sleeper and 10-speed at 799
Why rent? Buy my 1470 mobile home for only $8,200 & pay less while at kU. 12 bath, A/C, resell for ready cash on graduation! 814-4294 or 814-6046 evenings.
70 VW Beetle, excellent condition. No rust, heat
radio, white. NW Lawrence $750
$700
74 VW Dasher, $300, needs little work. New tires,
shocks & brakes. 842.3738.
76 VW Bug, silver, excellent condition, AM-FM cassette, $1950, call 841-4272.
newly repaired. Best offer. Call 842-4627.
Bertone X 19/-1084, leather interior, loaded. 31K.
good condition. 841-4698 or 311-4742.
10000 $100, can sell
78 Chevy van, air, cruise, AM/FM cassette
stereo C.B. radio, 35V, V6, low mileage, excellent
equipment, $450 or make offer. Call 842 1216
6 m
$$\begin{array}{l}
\text{10000 $100, can sell} \\
\text{78 Chevy van, air, cruise, AM/FM cassette}\\
\text{stereo C.B. radio, 35V, V6, low mileage, excellent}\\
\text{equipment, $450 or make offer. Call 842 1216}\\
\text{6 m}
\end{array}$$
79 Toyota Celica Manual standard features
air conditioning, stereo, etc. Good condition.
Celica 4875
ORDER NEW 1988 CARS--TRUCKS--
VANS-$256 $450 OVER COST, DELBERT D.
THOMAS 873.847.819
CAMARO - 1849 Berinda. Red, auto AM/FM/A/C power steering, power brakes, cruise, tilt overdrive V-6. Loaded, excellent condition and in good $800 maiden offer . Call 423-728-1280.
'UN SPORTS CAR-197 3R, great condition.
'100 Cali-894-6944 (Lenexa).
CABS SELL for $155 (average!) Also jeeps, etc. now available. 805-887-6000 Ext.
Tune up your import car. $35. Parts and labor in-
satisfaction guaranteed. Call Aarra.
841-6929
Is It Rare You Can Buy Jeep for $44 through the
phone call? 'call 1-800-722-6118 Ext. 3294
LOST-FOUND
Found-a watch on the 4th floor of Wesson, late
daughter of a daughter, "Gilliam" D2319.
'found a set of keys on Jayhawk ring. Found Blake Hail last on Thursday. Call 843-769-300
*found:* black checkbook near the Catholic
**center:** If you can identify, call Mona, 844-2085.
**zett:** library book "The Studies in the Acquisition of Annotators." Please call 844-6473.
Lost: long hairred black cat at 12th and Tennessee
Declawed. Accounts to Shadow. Reward.
Missing: Long hairred black cat at 12th and Tennessee
Declawed. Accounts to Shadow. Reward.
EWARD-D for information leading to the
dead of a red 1849 Kawasaki NINJA 900,
ten Wednesday 7% from 9/19 in front of 4323 Old
Oak Road in New York. A dill, did anyone
see anything? Call 843-1551
HELP WANTED
$60 weekly Weekly mail circulating cards! Rush self-
mailing $60 weekly Self-mailing cards! Rush self-
mailing Blvd. Bld. 258, Dept. Q, Beaver Hill, CA
91417
ATTENTION: STUDENTS! Nat'l firm preparing for Fall intern work. www.natlfc.edu. Students are awarded, intern ships are possible, & you may earn 2, 3, 4 credits or a semester. Must apply now.
Apartment Leasing Agent, part time position, of
the Office of the Registrar of Public
Records to 119奔 Finail Final Hait. Lawrence,
KS.
Checkers Pizza has an immediate opening for toi pizza delivery drivers. Drivers must be 18 yrs or older, have a valid driver's license and $3.50+hr plus commission & tips to start. $36.00 after 2 weeks. Apply in connection between 3:00-9:00 AM.
Bucky's drive in, a KU tradition for 28 years, has openings for the noon-hour shift, weekend shift, and night shift. Apply in person between to a m and b p.m. THANK YOU BUCY'S DRIVE IN.
Full or part-time work as NANNY. You set the
hours. Child Care Coordination Service. 824-9855.
GOVENMENT JOBS. $16,940-$19,290/jr. You
Hiring Call: 857-687-6000 R/urgent for current
D-BASE PROGRAMMER: 25% position to write and maintain student records programming using Zenith hard disk. Qualifications: experience programmer, computer science, graduate student, Salary $260/month for 10 weeks/week. Complete application at the Applied English Center, 204 Lippmann, 844-4606.
HELP WANTED in the landscaping department
at The Garden Center. Apply at Pence Garden
Center, New York.
Wanted: students who need a little extra cash
Come join the fun of working on the turnipke!
Hardie's now accepting applications for all shift
work. Please bring your own work clothes, allowance,
and a pleasant atmosphere can all be yours by applying today. You'll be glad you did!
Applications accepted anytime! 843-8203
Help wanted, part-time day shift hours. Apply in
any location. Hiring: Government jobs, your area.
HIRING: Government jobs, your area.
Need cooks for day shift. Apply in person 2-6 p.m.
at Laciere, 749 New Hampshire.
H A R D E E S
PART TIME JOBS Sports officials are needed at the next meeting. Attend the meeting Tuesday for experience. Attend the meeting Tuesday for experience.
$15.000-$40.000. Call (622) 838-8888. ENT 4055
Local advertising agency seeks account sales
Part-time legal secretary wanted. Experience desired, not required. Computer clerical, typing. Requires Bachelor's degree in Law.
PRODUCTION WORKEKS NEEDED. Temp-
erature at the building where the campa-
sion leads in attendingLawrence. Special
on camp recruitment to be held at 110 Burge
Union on Sept 16 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. KELLY
RESOURCE HOTELS, Cruisesmen, Airlines, Amusement Parks, NOW accepting applications or interested in pursuing an offer. For more information and an application, write National College Recreation Service: P.O. Box 1708.
Office of Information Systems. Half-time Student Applications Programmer I. Salary $14,000. Duties: Work 5 p.m. Outside includes participating in program coding, maintenance and other related tasks needed to produce reports and analyses. Completion of courses or the equivalent of programming courses from a college or university, high school, or college. Will be willing to work for at least 2 years. Resume to Penny Parker, Personnel. Computer Services Center, Glenwood Campus, Center for Law, Lawrence, KS 66043. EOA/Employer
Student Programmer (Using "Dbase IIplus, "Gentifer," and "Documenter") must love Dbase and accept design challenges. Work will involve maintenance of existing programs, new design efficiencies, and the development of packages and hardware enhancements. 20-30 hours/week, $4.00/hour, flexible work schedule. Make application. Room 205, Physical Plant Building, University of Texas at Austin, before 4:39 p.m. September 12, 1987
The Art & Design departments are hiring part-
time Student Gallery Monitors. These are work-
story positions: Gallery hours are between 8:30
and 12:30pm, Monday through Friday.
300 art Design Bldg., 844-4401
There are a few openings left for evening and weekend shifts at Naihshim Hall cafeteria. If you need some extra cash, hurry to Naihshim Hall to secure a position for a part-time position. FEOCMPHAAA
We have openings in carpentry, electrical and
building services. We can offer two directions and can work at least two shifts of either 8-12 p.m., M-F, we would like you apply.
Housing Maintenance, Shop, 2030 West, 15th
Street.
Want your own business? Now is the time to start a new job with representative. Call Jul at 843-904-9934 or email jul@davis.com
Vista Restaurant is now taking applications for patio dormant and grill heat. In apply in person at the office, call 415-328-7016.
JENNIFER. If I keep my commitments, you shall abide in my love, even if we have kept my Father's commandments, and abide in his love.
These things have I spoken unto you, that my joy might remain in you, and that your joy might be better for me. But as a friend of another, as I have loved you, Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends. Ye are my friends if ye do whatsoever I
MISCELLANEOUS
10-830-459 Weekly/pI. mailing circulars) No addressed envelope CM/NA-CDA PQ7 7138 addressed envelope CM/NA-CDA PQ7 7138
Hillel
חלה
EVENTS OF THE WEEK
Wednesday, Sept. 16 Wednesday Lunch
11:30-1:30 Kansas Union Sunset Room, Level 2
Thursday, Sept. 17
Planning Meeting 7:30 p.m. Hillel House
Sunday, Sept. 20 Parents Weekend
United Jewish Appeal
1988 Student Campaign
Planning Meeting
Open House/Bagel Lunch 12:30-2:30 Hillel House 940 Missioniini
For more information call 749-4242.
iki KEYSTONE for Thanksgiving. November
15th-27th. 9am-4pm. Call 843-506-9900,
transfer/ lift tickets Call 843-506-9900,
Small established foreign car repair shop for sale in Lawrence. Inquiries: 841-5496
We have a new store that you can get cash on almost anything of value. Also, good buys on cameras, jewelry, stereo equipment (auto & camera), phones, and electronics at Pawn & Jewelry. 1084 W. 6th, 78-1919
PERSONAL
Danielle, Happy Birthday!! Love, Jeff
Bam! Happy the day!
Dou-Wed me up!!! Happy two years!! Love you
Dong - We made it to happy two years - Love you
lots and lots and lots
Paco Bear: PURRRR!!! Who needs catnip?
Kip
S -B寝 you weed. September 11, 10:30 m. in lobby of Strong Hall. I wear white shirt, you do b敷
T.B -Phone number is impossible. Want to talk?
Name? nameplace, D.C., P.O. Box 107
BUS. PERSONAL
Kingston Printing
804 West 24th Street
Lawrence KS 66046 841-6320
Resumes - Cover Letters - Thesis -
Biological Sciences
Typesetting, & Copying Needs!
aserwriter - every copy an original!
Mastercard & Visa Accepted!
Resources
Stored on a disk for fast/easy changes or corrections! Printed on a Laserwriter - every copy an original!
North
23rd Street East
Kroger's
Land Nerfer
Ford
New Jersey
Angel City Drive
**Wike Workshops:** Our mechanic will teach you how to change flats, true wheels, maintain brakes and tire pressure. You can also donate $5 each. Saturday, 10 a.m., begins September 19. Sunflower, 604 Massachusetts.
BEFORE YOU BUY,
Check the KANSAN.
Our advertisers
might save you money.
ARE YOU CREATIVE
THE ETC SHOP is open from 11-4. New shipment cotton sweatshirts 732 Massachusetts
Decisive, Confident, know your related occupation field. Find out for sure by calling Write Write
GREENS
841-2277
HADMEACH, BACKACHE, ARM PAIN, LEG PAIN Student and most insurance accepted. For complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Mark Johnson 843-9379.
G
GREENS PARTY SUPPLY 808 W.23rd
The Coldest Beer Around
Weekly Beer Specials
Sept. 16-Sept. 22
Pregnant and need help? Call Birkhairt at 843-8421. Confidential help/free pregnancy
800 West 23rd
Michelob 6 p...
Coors Light 12 pk. .
Budweiser 12pk. $5..
Miller Lite 12 pk. $5.29
Old Style 12 pk. $3.69
Strohs 15pk. $3.99
Strohs Light 15pk. $3.99
Wiedemann 15pk. $3.19
Ski: Winter Park, $199. Thanksgiving trip leaves
Thursday night on sleeper bus. Stay in Snow
Blaze condominiums 2 nights. Also, 2 days伞
lift tickets and lift tickets. For information,
443-158.
SERVICES OFFERED
Capture that golden light with a border portrait from Photo Plus. Call Mika or Grace at 748-790-6255.
SKI FREE AT VAIL/BEAVER CREEK! 4 day package, from $199 person include luxury club and free skiing. Add extra nights, just $1.50 per person. Call 1-800-8235753 today!
"CRIMSON SUN PHOTO" is looking for young women interested in developing a modeling portfolio. 15% over cost. Call 841-8609
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
Sunflower Mt. Hike Workshop-Learn how to
adjust & repair your Mt. Hike-Tuesday evening,
6:4 p.m., begins September 17, $ 84, $ 84
Massachusetts, Lawrence, 834-5000.
GRAF/X. Scientific and statistical illustration maps, drawings, slides, editing and, also water acrylics/ calligraphy 841-256).
l&M FAVORS for all your party favor needs.
fats, shirts, paddles, glasses. If you have a uii
unique favor idea, call us and we'll find it for you.
489720
KI PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES : Ekachrome
processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W services.
PASSPORT $6.00. Art & Design Building.
Room 206. 864-4767
MATH TUTOR. Algebra through multivariable calculus. For $1 student for 2 students; $4 for 2 students for 1 student.
MATH TUOR since 1976, M.A., $/hr, 843-9032
(D.M.)
Now in Lawrence: inexpensive 4-track demos, DJ sound and light company, private guitar and bass lessons. Basic Productions. 831-4243
MUSIC⁺⁻⁻⁻⁻⁻⁻⁻⁻⁻⁻
PRIVATE OFFICE Obj-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park ... 913-491-6078
Prompt contraception and abortion services in I awrapne. 441-3716.
Gravstone Athletic Club
Special Student Membership $150 per semester
Racquetball, Tanning
Exercise Equipment
2500 W. 6th Street 841-7230
QUALITY Tutoring, Economics, and Math. All levels. Homework assistance, test preparation, and teaching experience. Call Dennis at 842-1055.
SEWING ALTERATIONS - love to sew for others, reasonable rates. Please call ujal at 842-4900.
SNUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon success in completion. Transportation provided: 842-2316.
- time savers-Affordable and professional cleaning
for those students who need to spend more time studying and less time cleaning. Call 749-3928.
* free estimates!¹
TYPING
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing.
Jury: 829-7495 or Lisa: 841-1915.
ing, etc. 13 years experience. Call Terry 482-4754 or 843-2671 weekends and evenings. 24 hour typing service. Professional word pro
1-Der woman word processing. Former editor will transform your scribits into accurately spelled and purituted, grammatically correct and quality-tiered good type. M48 2629 or evenings.
1 plus Typing; Letters, resumes, thesis, law typ-
ing, etc. 13 years experience. Call Terry 842-4754
or 842-2673 weeks and weekends.
24 hour typing service. Professional word
pressing on letter quality printer. 843-7641
2 Smart Word Processing. Spelling Corrected.
Very Reasonable. Call Foster 749-2740
ACT NOW: PAPERS: THESES-RESUMES
WRIITELINE LIFE 841-3469
A1-reliable professional typing. Tern papers, Theses, Resumes, etc. Reasonable IBM Electronic Typewriter. 842-3246.
Experienced editing. Theses-dissertations. Our specialty is foreign students. Call 841-3220.
WRITING LEVEL LEVEL 611-3960
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS
MOMMY'S TYPING is back from Australia !!
8423-3239 at p. 9 pm, please.
AAB Absolutely Fast Typing in Back! Dependable, Reasonable Rates. Late Night Trap Available Katy 814-2400 749-5264 eve.
ACT NOW: PAPERS - THESES - RESULTS
Quality Typing includes excellent spelling, punctuation, grammar, editing. F快 reliable service: Pickup/delivery available. 843-0247
KU SECRETARY Typing and word processing
Affordable, fast, accurate. Spelling corrected,
letter quality. Pickup on campus. Monica
841-824. Evenings-weekends.
For professional typing/writing processing, call
Mfc Pro 8190-6400. Fall special $29.99/pound,
double or triple.
Domina's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term papers, theses, dissertation letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter
quality printing, spelling corrected. 942.7247
quality typing or word processing for these,
dissertations, resumes, term papers, applications.
Professional editing, composition available. Have M.S. Degree.
TYING PLUS assistance with competition,
editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses,
dissertations, papers, letters, applications.
Resumes have M.S. Degree 841-6254
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing, manuscripts, resumes, theses, letter quality printing, etc. #84-5962
WRIGHT'S TYPING SERVICE: Term papers,
theses, miscellaneous, IBM Selectric. Spelling
corrected. 843-9554
WANTED
Band needs secure basement or garage in which to practice and store equipment. We practice on the second floor with rentals priced at $80.00 per month. Call Bill or Eric at 843-2762. BOSTON TICKETS WINNED (2) . Good seats.
Liberal roommate wanted for 2 br house close to campus. $150 plus 1/2 utilities. Call after 5, 41-4518.
Need money? Sell me your all sports ticket. Ask for Jenna at 694-997. Please call!
name or female grad student, or mature
underdrag to share a new 2 br apartment 2 blocks
from the Union. $180 plus 1/2 utilities. Call
414-4705.
FFICE M G N R G PURCHASEER
J F F I C E M G N R G P PURCHASEER
and purchasing for one of the areas largest compa-
tes teams. Supervisory and buying EXT. Must be
organized, creative and teamwork oriented.
Receive w.xep. Send resume by Sept 17 to SIGHTS INITIO,
New Hampshire, LAWRENCE, KG94, 6004E.
PROFESSIONAL TYPING 842-4868 before 10 p.m.
Roommate wanted: Female, $65 per month, includes utilities. Close to campus downtown (cal)
Homemate wanted for 2 bedroom house near
caucasus. Fully furnished except bedroom. Big
backyard, dog or cat okay. $160 month plus half of
utilities. Call 841-2550.
Tutors, All subjects, #4 individuals, #8 group
classes, tutoring times, Supportive Education
classes and tutoring times. Supportive Educa
- Policy
Wanted: ALL SPORTS TICKET - Make fast $$$,
call John at 749-4096.
Wanted! All Sports Ticket Will pay well for it!!
t in Bold Face count as 3 words
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Date ad begins ___ Make checks payable to:
Total days in paper ___ University Daily Kansas
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Credit card ___ Lawrence, KS 66045
14
Wednesday, September 16, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
K. U. STUDENTS & FACULTY Welcome To Rent One Video Get One Lawrence FREE!
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On the mild side
Sunny day
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday September 17,1987 Vol.98,No.19
Details page 6
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Med workers are more wary of infections
By AMBER STENGER Staff writer
Staff writer
More health care employees at the University of Kansas Medical Center are making an effort to protect themselves from contracting infectious diseases, especially AIDS, employees sav.
The Med Center has not changed its infection control policy because of AIDS, said Marcia G. Aillandine, infection control coordinator. It's just that more employees are complying with its recommendations.
“Our philosophy really hasn't changed in regards to precautions.” Gilland said. “We've always taught that all blood and body fluids can be potentially infectious. What has happened is that people because of AIDS are more careful. And so somebody who used to be very sick might have gotten a little blood on their hands, is using gloves more now.”
using gives more now
The AIDS virus can not be contracted through casual contact. The virus is transmitted through blood and body fluids.
The national Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta recommend that health care employees wear gloves whenever they may be in contact with a patient's blood or body fluids. When health care employees are in a situation where blood could splatter, such as treating a serious injury, they also are used to mask and goggles. Blood, body fluids, mucous membranes and unattached skin are potentially infections.
trous. Gillland avoid gloves were the most common protective.
RAL HISTORY
1931
Jim Mathes, left, of Baldwin City, and Bill Medlen, Lawrence resident, apply Bird/X to the ledge above the Natural History Museum's main entrance. The chemical, which creates a sticky surface, is designed to prevent pigeons from landing on building ledges.
KU tries
Students favor tougher policy for admissions
By NOEL GERDES
Staff writer
A student advisory committee today will recommend to the Board of Regents that Kansas high school students be required to complete certain courses to be guaranteed admission at the six state universities.
The recommendation would require freshmen, in addition to graduating, to have taken four years of English and three years each of science, social studies and math from an accredited Kansas high school.
The student advisory committee consists of the student body presidents of the Regents schools.
The Regents schools now have an open admissions policy, which means any Kansas resident who graduates from an accredited state high school is admitted automatically to any state university.
the Regents will meet at 9 a.m. today in Topeka to discuss tightening admissions requirements. Their own proposed requirements include a high school curriculum similar to the students' recommendation, but with two years of foreign language. The Regents proposal also includes an ACT score of 23 or better, and ranking in the top third of a class.
The advisory committee considered the Regents proposal before making its own. Jason Krakow, KU student body president, opposed part of the Regents proposal
"I think to say a student has to have a 23 on the ACT to be successful is ridiculous," he said.
one students' recommendation, to
be a university in fall 1991, freshmen
September 16, 1987
Volume 4, Issue 1
INSIDE:
The Best of KU
Miss Minnesota
The Open Admissions Question
school four years of English and
enc, social studies and math with
it average of 2.0 on a 4.0 scale; or
1 GPA in nine hours of prescribed
ge-level work before their first
positive director for Associated student lobbying group, said he didents' recommendation to be a policy
e in make-up courses (high school subjects in the Regents recemat were missed in high school. mendation also states that fresh- years of foreign language in high e attending the university.
make exceptions for special editions could total no more than 10 of entering freshmen. Admissions "Kansas residents 21 or older with, and admission requirements for could be left to each university.
courses that you can choose to take jons." Tallman said. "It's still a
were two schools of thought behind standards. The first is that the s needs to restrict admissions iy students and not enough money. some students who enter state reprepared for college, so something p them become more prepared. He needed a recommendation to more prepared.
nt body president at Kansas State concerned that the Regents are problems at KU."
ack, student body president at Fort y, said he was not opposed to different schools.
use devise a strategy to "stonew-" by defending the principle ofotive privilege.
g Bork
'I never advised the White House $w$ to meet, how to deal with the iterate special prosecution case.' Bork said. He said he did act orders from then-Attorney General Richardson to seek a compromiseween Cox and the White House or executive privilege.
'We never achieved an accommodation.' Bork testified.
Vatergate aside. Bork also sought reinforcement. Dennis DeConciani, Ariz., that he is not antagonistic to rights of women. "As solicitor zeral I argued positions for the section of women broader than Supreme Court would accept," rk said.
secontin, a key swing vote on the committee, also suggested Bork's itions on poll taxes, integration ofolic accommodations and otheraes over the years might causeeks some alarm.
ork responded. "If I were a black
ork but knew my record, I don't
ik'd I be concerned because it's a
civil rights record."
ill, Bork said he is troubled by the stitutional rationale for a reme Court ruling ordering the exoneration of five in the set of Columbia in 1954.
have not thought of a rationale the ruling, Bork said. But after a f recess, he said he wanted to e it clear he does not support segregation in the nation's tal and wouldn't "ever dream of ruling" the 1954 decision.
rk received kind words during hearing from Senate Republican Alan Simpson of Wyoming
seems to be the extremism has in the rhetoric of opponents of Bork," Simpson said.
On the mild side
THE MASTER
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details page 6
Thursday September 17,1987 Vol. 98,No.19
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Med workers are more wary of infections
By AMBER STENGER Staff writer
By AMBER Staff writer
More health care employees at the University of Kansas Medical Center are making an effort to protect themselves from contracting infectious diseases, especially AIDS, employees say.
The Med Center has not changed its infection control policy because of AIDS, said Marcia G. Aillandin, infection control coordinator. It's just that more employees are complying with its recommendations.
"Our philosophy really hasn't changed in regards to precautions." Gilliland said. "We've always taught that all blood and body fluids can be potentially infectious. What has happened is that people because of AIDS are more careful. And so somebody who used to be very virulent has turned a little blood on their hands, using slopes more now."
The AIDS virus can not be contracted through casual contact. The virus is transmitted through blood and body fluids.
The national Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta recommend that health care employees wear gloves whenever they may be in contact with a patient's blood or body fluids. When health care employees are in a situation where blood splatter, such as treating a serious injury, they also are urged to wear masks and goggles. Blood, body fluids, mucous membranes and unattached skin are potentially infectious.
RAL HISTOR
1831
Jim Mathes, left, of Baldwin City, and Bill Medien, Lawrence resident, apply Bird/X to the ledge above the Natural History Museum's main entrance. The chemical, which creates a sticky surface, is designed to prevent pigeons from landing on building ledges.
Students favor tougher policy for admissions
By NOEL GERDES
KU tries
Staff writer
A student advisory committee today will recommend to the Board of Regents that Kansas high school students be required to complete certain courses to be guaranteed admission at the six state universities.
The recommendation would require freshmen, in addition to graduating, to have taken four years of English and three years each of science, social studies and math from an accredited Kansas high school.
The student advisory committee consists of the student body presidents of the Regents schools.
The Regents schools now have an open admissions policy, which means any Kansas resident who graduates from an accredited state high school is admitted automatically to any state university.
The Regents will meet at 9 a.m. today in Topeka to discuss tightening admissions requirements. Their own proposed requirements include a high school curriculum similar to the students' recommendation, but with two years of foreign language. The Regents proposal also addresses the need of 23 or better, and ranking in the top third of a class.
- one students' recommendation, to be
a university in fall, 1901, freshmen
The advisory committee considered the Regents proposal before making its own. Jason Krakow, KU student body president, opposed part of the Regents proposal
"I think to say a student has to have a 23 on the ACT to be successful" is ridiculous," he said.
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2 KANSAN MAGAZINE September 16, 1987
Kick off Fall
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Grass
Onion
A COFFEEHOUSE
OPEN EARLY !!!
Fresh, warm, muffin
& mug of the
daily grind
96¢
all baked goods made from scratch daily
expires 9/30/87
Open 8 a.m. - Midnight
Sun. - Thurs.
8 a.m. - 1 a.m.
Fri. and Sat.
12th & Oread • 841-2310 • Above Yello Sub
FFEEHOUSE
OPEN EARLY !!!
Fresh, warm, muffin
& mug of the
daily grind
96¢
all baked goods made from scratch daily
expires 9/30/87
12th & Oread • 841-2310 • Above Yello Sub
ALEXANDRA AND JIM CATTERY
Campbell's Clothing Est.1964 Where Our Innovations Become Tomorrow's Traditions. Come See What's New For Fall!
OPEN:
MON.-SAT.
9:30-5:30
THURS. 'til 8:30
SUNDAY 1-5
Campbell's
841 Massachusetts - Downtown, Lawrence
school four years of English and ence, social studies and math with at average of 2.0 on a 4.0 scale; or 9 GPA in nine hours of prescribed ge-level work before their first
e in make-up courses (high school subjects in the Regents recamal were missed in high school. imendation also states that fresh- years of foreign language in high e attending the university.
islative director for Associated student lobbying group, said he didents' recommendation to be a policy.
ourses that you can choose to take ions." Tallman said. "It's still a
mld make exceptions for special options could total no more than 10 of entering freshmen. Admissions Kansas residents 21 or older with and admission requirements for could be left to each university
nt body president at Kansas State concerned that the Regents are problems at KU."
were two schools of thought behind standards. The first is that the s needs to restrict admissions y students and not enough money. some students who enter state repaired for college, so something pthem be more prepared. He needs a recommendation to more prepared.
ack, student body president at Fort y, said he was not opposed to different schools.
g
g Bork
use devise a strategy to "stonew"
"by defending the principle of
positive privilege
'I never advised the White House $n$ to meet, how to deal with the iterate special prosecution case." Bork said. He said he did act orders from then-Attorney Gen. Richardson to seek a compromiseween Cox and the White House executive privilege.
We never achieved an accommodation." Bork testified
Vatergate aside, Bork also sought reassure Sen. Dennis DeConciini,riz., that he is not antagonistic to rights of women." As solicitor erial I argued positions for the tecton of women broader than Supreme Court would accept,"k said.
theConcien, a key swing vote on the committee, also suggested Bork's tions on poll taxes, integration of lic accommodations and other over the years might causecks some alarm.
ork responded. "If I were a black
1 but knew my record, I don't
k I'd be concerned because it's a
civil rights record."
ill, Bork said he is troubled by the stituation, rationale for a sene Court ruling ordering the execution in the case of Columba in 1854.
have not thought of a rationale the ruling, Bork said. But after a recess, he said he wanted to e it clear he does not support of segregation in the nation'sream of ruling," the 1964 decision.
rk received kind words during earing from Senate Republican Alan Simpson of Wyoming
Aim Simpson or Wyoming seems to be the extremism in the rhetoric of opponents of Bork, "Simpson said.
On the mild side
A sunny day
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details page 6
Thursday September 17,1987 Vol.98,No.19
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Med workers are more wary of infections
By AMBER STENGER Staff writer
More health care employees at the University of Kansas Medical Center are making an effort to protect themselves from contracting infectious diseases, especially AIDS, employees say.
The Med Center has not changed its infection control policy because of AIDS, said Marcia G. Aillinland, infection control coordinator. It's just that more employees are complying with its recommendations.
“Our philosophy really hasn't changed in regards to precautions,” Gilliland said. “We've always taught that all blood and body fluids can be potentially infectious. What has happened is that people because of AIDS are more careful. And so somebody who used to be very lackadaisical when they got a little blood on their hands, is using gloves more now.”
using drugs more than once. The AIDS virus can not be contracted through casual contact. The virus is transmitted through blood and body fluids.
The national Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta recommend that health care employees wear gloves whenever they may be in contact with a patient's blood or body fluids. When health care employees are in a situation where blood could splatter, such as treating a serious injury, they also are urged to wear protective gowns, masks and goggles. Blood, body fluids, mucous membranes and unattached skin are potentially infectious.
RAL HISTOR
1931
Lisa Jones/KANSAN
Jim Mathes, left, of Baldwin City, and Bill Medlen, Lawrence resident, apply Bird/X to the ledge above the Natural History Museum's main entrance. The chemical, which creates a sticky surface, is designed to prevent pigeons from landing on building ledges.
Students favor tougher policy for admissions
By NOEL GERDES
Staff writer
KU tries
A student advisory committee today will recommend to the Board of Regents that Kansas high school students be required to complete certain courses to be guaranteed admission at the six state universities.
The recommendation would require freshmen, in addition to graduating, to have taken four years of English and three years each of science, social studies and math from an accredited Kansas high school.
The student advisory committee consists of the student body presidents of the Regents schools.
The Regents schools now have an open admissions policy, which means any Kansas resident who graduates from an accredited state high school is admitted automatically to any state university.
The Regents will meet at 9 a.m. today in Topeka to discuss tightening admissions requirements. Their own proposed requirements include a high school curriculum similar to the students' recommendation, but with two years of foreign language. The Regents proposal also includes the more of 23 or better, and ranking in the top third of a class.
The advisory committee considered the Regents proposal before making its own. Jason Krakow, KU student body president, opposed part of the Regents proposal.
the students' recommendation, to be university in fall 1991, freshman
"I think to say a student has to have a 23 on the ACT to be successful" its ridiculous". he said.
KANSAN
magazine
Volume 4, Issue 1
September 16, 1987 Volume 4, Issue 1
The Best of KU...11
There are a lot of things KU students like to do. And whether it be eating, sleeping, studying, or watching the stars, the campus crowd has found the best places to do them all.
Who needs wings to fly?...14
Gene Brown, a Topeka resident, and his Jayhawk balloon were a crowd pleaser this weekend at the Huff-n-Puff balloon regatta at Washburn University in Topeka.
100m
Should KU admit everyone?...18
Crowded classrooms and overworked faculty are just two of the problems KU has faced with recent enrollment increases. Selective requirements for instate students might be a solution, and it has become a controversial topic among KU administrators, the Board of Regents and state legislators.
---
DEPARTMENTS
Trends...5 Interview...21
Spotlight...7 Fiction...22
STAFF
EDITOR: Chris Gotsill
ASSOCIATE EDITOR: Diane Filipowski
CONTRIBUTING STAFF: Kirk Adams, Valore Armstrong, John Benner, Scott Carpenter, Chad DeShazo, Jeffrey Drake, Diane Dultemier, Dave Eames, Noel Gordes, Michael Horak, Jim Larson, Anne Luscombe, Jerri Niebaum, Tom Pajkos, Bill Skeet, Mark Tilford.
KANSAN MAGAZINE is a monthly supplement to the University Daily Kansan. Articles and photographs to be considered for publication should be sent to 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan., 66045.
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KANSAN MAGAZINE September 16, 1987
school four years of English and ence, social studies and math with at average of 2.0 on a 4.0 scale; or 1 GPA in nine hours of prescribed ge-level work before their first
e in make-up courses (high school subjects in the Regents recomat were missed in high school. amendation also states that fresh-years of foreign language in high le attending the university.
islative director for Associated student lobbying group, said he didents' recommendation to be a policy.
ourses that you can choose to take ions," Tallman said. "It's still a
mild make exceptions for special
eptions could total no more than 10
of entering freshmen. Admissions
Kansas residents 21 or older with
and admission requirements for
could be left to each university.
nt body president at Kansas State concerned that the Regents areblems at KU."
were two schools of thought behind standards. The first is that the needs to restrict admissions students and not enough money. some students who enter state repaired for college, so something them become more prepared. He then recommended to more prepared.
ack, student body president at Fort y, said he was not opposed to different schools.
g Bork
use devise a strategy to "stonew" by defending the principle of native privilege
"I never advised the White House $n$ to meet, how to deal with the (iterate special prosecution ce.) Bork said. He said he did act orders from then-Attorney Geneer-Richardson to seek a compromiseween Cox and the White House $n$ executive privilege.
We never achieved an accommodation." Bork testified.
vatergate aside. Bork also sought reassure Sen. Dennis DeConciini,riz, that he is not antagonistic to rights of women. "As solicitor eral I argued positions for the tecton of women broader than Supreme Court would accept,"k said.
eConcini, a key swing vote on the amittee, also suggested Bork'sitions on poll taxes, integration of lic accommodations and other over the years might cause ks some alarm.
ork respondd. "If I were a black
1 but knew my record, I don't
k'd I be concerned because it's a
civil rights record."
i. Bork said he is troubled by the ill. Bork argued rationale for a same Court ruling ordering the removal of an individual in the jail of Columba in 1964.
have not thought of a rationale the ruling, Bork said. But after a recess, he said he wanted to e it clear he does not support his claim in the nation's al and would "never dream of ruling" the 1954 decision.
ck received kind words during
earring from Senate Republican
Alen Simpson of Wyoming
seems to be the extremism has in the rhetoric of opponents of Bork, "Simpson said."
On the mild side
Sun
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details page 6
Thursday September 17,1987 Vol.98,No.19
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Med workers are more wary of infections
By AMBER STENGER Staff writer
More health care employees at the University of Kansas Medical Center are making an effort to protect themselves from contracting infectious diseases, especially AIDS, employees say.
The Med Center has not changed its infection control policy because of AIDS, said Marcia A. Gillain, infection control coordinator. It's just that more employees are complying with its recommendations.
"Our philosophy really hasn't changed in regards to precautions," Gilliland said. "We've always taught that all blood and body fluids can be potentially infectious. What has happened is that people because of AIDS are more careful. And so somebody who used to be very lackadaisical when they got a little blood on their hands, is using gloves more now."
is using gloves more now.
The AIDS virus can not be contracted through casual contact. The virus is transmitted through blood and body fluids.
The national Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta recommend that health care employees wear gloves whenever they may be in contact with a patient's blood or body fluids. When health care employees are in a situation where blood could splatter, such as treating a serious injury, they also are required to wear masks and goggles. Blood, body fluids, mucous membranes and unattached skin are potentially infectious.
RAL HISTORY
1891
1005. Gililand said gloves were the most common protective
Lisa Jones/KANSAN
Jim Mathes, left, of Baldwin City, and Bill Medlen, Lawrence resident, apply Bird/X to the ledge above the Natural History Museum's main entrance. The chemical, which creates a sticky surface, is designed to prevent pigeons from landing on building ledges.
Students favor tougher policy for admissions
By NOEL GERDES
Staff writer
KU tries
A student advisory committee today will recommend to the Board of Regents that Kansas high school students be required to complete certain courses to be guaranteed admission at the six state universities.
The recommendation would require freshmen, in addition to graduating, to have taken four years of English and three years each of science, social studies and math from an accredited Kansas high school.
The student advisory committee consists of the student body presidents of the Regents schools.
The Regents schools now have an open admissions policy, which means any Kansas resident who graduates from an accredited state high school is admitted automatically to any state university.
The Regents will meet at 9 a.m. today in Topeka to discuss tightening admissions requirements. Their own proposed requirements include a high school curriculum similar to the students' recommendation, but with two years of foreign language. The Regents proposal also includes an ACT score of 23 or better, and ranking in the top third of a class.
The advisory committee considered the Regents proposal before making its own. Jason Krakow, KU student body president, opposed part of the Regents proposal.
one students' recommendation, to be university in fall 1991, freshmen
"I think to say a student has to have a 23 on the ACT to be successful" is ridiculous," he said.
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KANSAN MAGAZINE September 16, 1987
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e in make-up courses (high school subjects in the Regents reco-
mmercialized in high school
school four years of English and
ence, social studies and math with
at average of 2.0 on a 4.0 scale; or
? GPA in nine hours of prescribed
age-level work before their first
at were missed in high school
mediation also states that fresh-
years of foreign language in high
learning the university.
make exceptions for special
options could total no more than 10
of entering freshmen. Admissions
Kansas residents 21 or older with
and admission requirements for
could be left to each university.
isgalive director for Associated student lobbying group, said he didents' recommendation to be a policy.
ourses that you can choose to take ions," Tallman said. "It's still a
were two schools of thought behind standards. The first is that the needs to restrict admissions students and not enough money. some students who enter state prepared for college, so some students were prepared. He made its recommendation to more prepared.
nt body president at Kansas State concerned that the Regents are problems at KU."
ek, student body president at Forty, said he was not opposed to different schools.
g Bork
use devise a strategy to "stonew" by defending the principle of voluntary privilege.
I never advised the White House v to meet, how to deal with the iterate special prosecution见 "Bork said. He said he did act orders from then-Attorney Generalsichardson to seek a compromiseween Cox and the White House r executive privilege.
we never achieved an accommoion." Bork testified.
latergate aside, Bork also sought reassure Sen. Dennis DeConciin, riz, that he is not antagonistic to rights of women. "As solicitor eral I argued positions for the tecton of women broader than Supreme Court would accept," k said.
eConciini, a key swing vote on the inititee, also suggested Bork's tions on poll taxes, integration of lic accommodations and other es over the years might cause its some alarm.
ork responded. "If I were a black
ork but knew my record, I don't
k'd I be concerned because it's a
civil rights record."
III. Bork said he is troubled by the situtional rationale for a same Court ruling ordering the gregation of public schools in the rict of Columbia in 1854.
have not thought of a rationale the ruling, Bork said. But after a recess, he said he wanted to e it clear he does not support segregation in the nation's al and wouldn't "ever dream of ruling" the 1954 decision.
rk received kind words during
earing from Senate Republican
Alan Simpson of Wooming
seems to be the extremism has in the rhetoric of opponents of Bork," Simpson said.
On the mild side
Sun
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details page 6
Thursday September 17,1987 Vol.98,No.19
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Med workers are more wary of infections
Staff writer
By AMBER STENGEP
Staff writer
More health care employees at the University of Kansas Medical Center are making an effort to protect themselves from contracting infectious diseases, especially AIDS, employees say.
The Med Center has not changed its infection control policy because of AIDS, said Marcia A. Gilliland, infection control coordinator. It's just that more employees are complying with its recommendations.
“Our philosophy really hasn't changed in regards to precautions.” Gilland said. “We've always taught that all blood and body fluids can be potentially infectious. What has happened is that people because of AIDS are more careful. And so somebody who used to be very careful, could have a little blood on their hands, is using gloves more now.”
The AIDS virus can not be contracted through casual contact. The virus is transmitted through blood and body fluids.
The national Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta recommend that health care employees wear gloves whenever they may be in contact with a patient's blood or body fluids. When health care employees are in a situation where blood could splatter, such as treating a serious injury, they also are urged to wear protective gowns, masks and goggles. Blood, body fluids, mucous can horrors and unattached skin are potentially infectious.
RAL HISTOR
1891
Gillian said glaves were the most common protective
Jim Mathes, left, of Baldwin City, and Bill Medlen, Lawrence resident, apply Bird/X to the ledge above the Natural History Museum's main entrance. The chemical, which creates a sticky surface, is designed to prevent pigeons from landing on building ledges.
KU tries
Students favor tougher policy for admissions
Bv NOEL GERDES
Staff writer
A student advisory committee today will recommend to the Board of Regents that Kansas high school students be required to complete certain courses to be guaranteed admission at the six state universities.
The recommendation would require freshmen, in addition to graduating, to have taken four years of English and three years each of science, social studies and math from an accredited Kansas high school.
The student advisory committee consists of the student body presidents of the Regents schools.
The Regents schools now have an open admissions policy, which means any Kansas resident who graduates from an accredited state high school is admitted automatically to any state university.
The Regents will meet at 9 a.m. today in Topeka to discuss tightening admissions requirements. Their own proposed requirements include a high school curriculum similar to the students' recommendation, but with two years of foreign language. The Regents proposal also includes an ACT score of 23 or better, and ranking in the top third of a class.
The advisory committee considered the Regents proposal before making its own. Jason Krakow, KU student body president, opposed part of the Regents proposal.
"I think to a student has to have a 23 on the ACT to be successful" or "ridiculous," he said.
- use students' recommendation, to be
university in fall 1991, freshmen
trends
By MARK TILFORD
Photos by Scott Carpenter and Jim Larson
SIGHTS
Whoever said it's hip to be square may be missing out. For any KU student who doesn't want to be left out in the cold, here's what's hot on the Hill.
100
A look at what's selling in the shoe department should tickle your fancy, and your feet. One style should get to the heart and sole of the matter, and that's the camp mock.
The brown leather lace-ups have taken over topsiders as the most popular casual shoe, according to Jeff Arensberg at Arensberg Shoes, 825 Massachusetts.
mousesets.
"We sold 60 pairs in a week," Arensberg said. "For one shoe, that's a lot."
that's a lot.
Arensberg said the shoes went
and win.
When it comes to athletic shoes, the shoes that sport the Union Jack on the side still wear the crown. Reebooks have long been the best seller at The Athlete's Foot, 942 Massachusetts, said Van Schafer, manager.
ter, manager. K-Swiss for men and Tretorn for women are a solid second.
with navy or green, cotton or wool socks pushed down to the ankle and were popular with men and women.
"They're not like Reeboks,but they sell real steadily."
REM NO
5
DOCUMENT
REM NO
5
DOCUMENT
DOCUMENT
INCLUDES 2 LENGTHS
LET ME BE SLEEPY
All Rights Reserved
1984-2007
M. G. WILSON
Produced by M. G. WILSON
Music by M. G. WILSON
Lyrics by M. G. WILSON
Artwork by M. G. WILSON
Copyright © 1984-2007
M. G. WILSON
Produced by M. G. WILSON
Music by M. G. WILSON
Lyrics by M. G. WILSON
Artwork by M. G. WILSON
Copyright © 1984-2007
M. G. WILSON
SOUND
R. E.M. and Rush.
The three R's minus one give the fundamentals of music listening for KU students right now. M. edd. Rubb
"K.E.M. is so hot, it's hotter than Michael right now," said Mieke Aangeenbrug at Penylane Records & Tapes, 844 Massachusetts.
The Athens, Ga., band's current album, "Document," is followed closely by Michael Jackson's "Bad."
But don't tell that to Steve Wilson of Kief's Discount Records & Stereo Supply, 25th and Iowa streets. He sold 90 copies of "Hold Your Fire" by Rush on the day it came out.
Wilson said he was nearly sold out, then, but more albums were on the way.
Wilson and Aangeenbrug mentioned the band New Order and the soundtrack from the motion
picture "La Bamba" as other student favorites.
And yes, following closely on the heels of tie-dye: The Grateful Dead.
"Last summer they were calling us to ask how Jerry Garcia was when he was sick," Aangenebrug said.
R.E.M. NO
5
DOCUMENT
TASTE
Brand new on the scene, and heating up while it stays cool, is Kahua and Cream ice cream at Baskin-Robbins, 925 Iowa. Peanut butter and chocolate is a close second.
A hip alternative to ice cream is yogurt, especially if it's from Flavor's Frozen Yogurt, W7. 91W. According to assistant manager Kris Loewen, the most popular dishes at the combination yogurt store and bakery are Cookie Wheels (yogurt between two cookies).
Loewen said old world chocolate yogurt between two chocolate chunk cookies was the most popular combination. Waffle cones and parfaits are selling well also.
BASKIN BOBBINS
KANSAN MAGAZINE September 16, 1987
school four years of English and ence, social studies and math with at average of 2.0 on a 4.0 scale; or ? GPA in nine hours of prescribed age-level work before their first
e in make-up courses (high school subjects in the Regents recomat were missed in high school.
immediation also states that fresh- years of foreign language in high- learning the university.
gislative director for Associated student lobbying group, said he did dents' recommendation to be a policy.
make exceptions for special
options could total no more than 10
of entering freshmen. Admissions
Kansas residents 21 or older with
and admission requirements for
could be left to each university.
ourses that you can choose to take ions." Tallman said. "It's still a
nt body president at Kansas State concerned that the Regents are problems at KU."
were two schools of thought behind standards. The first is that the needs to restrict admissions students and not enough money. some students who enter state prepared for college, so something else must be prepared. He made its recommendation to more prepared.
ck, student body president at Fort y, said he was not opposed to different schools.
g Bork
use devise a strategy to "stonew" by defending the principle of native privilege.
I never advised the White House v to meet, how to deal with the integrate special prosecution见" Bork said. He said he did act orders from then-Attorney General Richardson to seek a compromiseween Cox and the White House r executive privilege.
We never achieved an accommodation." Bork testified.
"altergate aside, Bork also sought reassure Sen. Dennis DeConciini,riz. that he is not antagonistic to rights of women." As solicitor erial I argued positions for the tion of women broader than Supreme Court would accept," k said.
eConcini, a key swing vote on the mittee, also suggested Bork's tions on poll taxes, integration of lie accommodations and other over the years might cause its some alarm.
ark responded. "If I were a black
but knew my record, I don't
k'd be concerned because it's a
legal rights record."
iii. Bork said he is troubled by the stitutional rationale for a cemet Court ruling ordering the gregation of public schools in the city of Toronto in 1956.
have not thought of a rationale the ruling, Bork said. But after a recess, he said he wanted to e it clear he does not support it and would not "ever dream of ruling" the 1954 decision.
received kind words during earring from Senate Republican Alan Simpson of Wyoming.
seems to be the extremism has in the rhetoric of opponents of "Bork," "Simpson said.
On the mild side
Sun
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details page 6
Thursday September 17,1987 Vol.98,No.19
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Med workers are more wary of infections
By AMBER STENGER Staff writer
Staff writer
More health care employees at the University of Kansas Medical Center are making an effort to protect themselves from contracting infectious diseases, especially AIDS, employees say.
The Med Center has not changed its infection control policy because of AIDS, said Marcia G. Aillandine, infection control coordinator. It's just that more employees are complying with its recommendations.
"Our philosophy really hasn't changed in regards to precautions," Gilliland said. "We've always taught that all blood and body fluids can be potentially infectious. What has happened is that people because of AIDS are more careful. And so somebody who used to be very lackadaisalien when they got a little blood on their hands, is using gloves more now."
The AIDS virus can not be contracted through casual contact. The virus is transmitted through blood and body
The national Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta recommend that health care employees wear gloves whenever they may be in contact with a patient's blood or body fluids. When health care employees are in a situation where blood could splatter, such as treating a serious injury, the patient must wear masks and goggles. Blood, body fluids, mucous membranes and unattached skin are potentially infections.
RAL HISTOR
1931
Jim Mathes, left, of Baldwin City, and Bill Medlen, Lawrence resident, apply Bird/X to the ledge above the Natural History Museum's main entrance. The chemical, which creates a sticky surface, is designed to prevent pigeons from landing on building ledges.
KU tries
Students favor tougher policy for admissions
By NOEL GERDES
Staff writer
The recommendation would require freshmen, in addition to graduating, to have taken four years of English and three years each of science, social studies and math from an accredited Kansas high school.
A student advisory committee today will recommend to the Board of Regents that Kansas high school students be required to complete certain courses to be guaranteed admission at the six state universities.
The student advisory committee consists of the student body presidents of the Regents schools.
The Regents schools now have an open admissions policy, which means any Kansas resident who graduates from an accredited state high school is admitted automatically to any state university.
The Regents will meet at 9 a.m. today in Topeka to discuss tightening admissions requirements. Their own proposed requirements include a high school curriculum similar to the students' recommendation, but with two years of foreign language. The Regents proposal also includes an ACT score of 23 or better, and ranking in the top third of a class.
The advisory committee considered the Regents proposal before making its own. Jason Krakow, KU student body president, opposed part of the Regents prosposal
the students' recommendation, to be university in fall 2019 freshmen
"I think to say a student has to have a 23 on the ACT to be good." "Individuates," he said.
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KANSAN MAGAZINE September 16, 1987
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Students Fly Free
with Kansan classified
Frisbee Freebie
While supplies last, you can get a free University Daily Kansan frisbee when you place a Kansan classified ad.
--Here's how it works:
Here's how I add that to my book.
You buy an ad that runs for at least 5 days (the minimum regular price would be $6.00).
You'll save an additional 10% (60%) with your KUID. So for the low price of $5.40, you'll get a Kansan classified ad that thousands of KU students will read AND you'll get a frisbee . . .
free!*
*Offer applies only to student-to-student private party advertising i.e. for sale, wanted, personalis, lost & found and subtle.
*Only one frisbee per KUID while supplies last.
Plus a 10% student discount
Your student discount may be used for any non-commercial student-to-student advertising in the following classifications:
Present your KU student L.D. whenever you place a Kansan classified ad--it's good for 10% off the cost of your ad.** That's an offer that's good for the entire fall semester.
Announcements For rent
For sale Auto sales
Lost & Found Miscellaneous
Personals Wanted
- "Ads must be paid in advance of publication and KUID submitted at the time the ad is placed.
* *Ads may be canceled at any time but payment is non-refundable.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
'Nobody else speaks your language.'
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school four years of English and nce, social studies and math with t.average of 2.0 on a 4.0 scale; or GPA in nine hours of prescribed ge-level work before their first
e in make-up courses (high school subjects in the Regents recompat were missed in high school.
mendation also states that fresh- years of foreign language in high- earring the university.
invasive director for Associated student lobbying group, said he didients' recommendation to be a helper.
and make exceptions for special
elections could total no more than 10
of entering freshmen. Admissions
Kansas residents 21 or older with
and admission requirements for
native university.
relative director for A&c.
courses that you can choose to take ions," Tallman said. "It's still a
were two schools of thought behind standards. The first is that the s needs to restrict admissions y students and not enough money. some students who enter state prepared for college, so something else was prepared. He made its recommended to more prepared.
nt body president at Kansas State concerned that the Regents are oblegs at KU."
ack, student body president at Fort y, said he was not opposed to different schools.
g
Bork
use devise a strategy to "stonew" by defending the principle of positive privilege.
'I never advised the White House w to meet, how to deal with the alterate special prosecution case." Bork said. He said he did act orders from then-Attorney Gen-Richardson to seek a compromise between Cox and the White House ar executive privilege.
'We never achieved an accommodation.' Bork testified.
Watergate aside, Bork also sought reassure Sen. Dennis DeConciari, Ariz., that he is not antagonistic to rights of women." As solicitorial I argued positions for the section of women broader than Supreme Court would accept," he said.
eConcini, a key swing vote on the unittree, also suggested Bork's tions on poll taxes, integration of lic accommodations and other es over the years might cause its some alarm.
ark responded. "If I were a black
ork but knew my record, I don't
k'd be concerned because it's a
civil rights record."
ill. Bork said he is troubled by the tittualised rationale for a eme court ruling ordering the release of an inmate in the set of Columbia in 1954.
have not thought of a rationale the ruling, Bork said. But after a recess, he said he wanted to it clean, does not support the rational and the rationalal and would never "tread of culking" the 1954 decision.
k received kind words during daring from Senate Republican Alan Simpson of Wyoming.
seems to be the extremism has
n the rhetoric of opponents of
Bork," Simpson said.
On the mild side
SUN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday September 17,1987 Vol. 98,No.19
Details page 6
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Med workers are more wary of infections
By AMBER STENGER Staff writer
Staff writer
More health care employees at the University of Kansas Medical Center are making an effort to protect themselves from contracting infectious diseases, especially AIDS. employees say.
The Med Center has not changed its infection control policy because of AIDS, said Marcia A. Gillain, infection control coordinator. It's just that more employees are complying with its recommendations.
"Our philosophy really hasn't changed in regards to precautions," Gilliland said. "We've always taught that all blood and body fluids can be potentially infectious. What has happened is that people because of AIDS are more careful. And so somebody who used to be very lackadaisalien when they got a little blood on their hands, is using gloves more now."
is using gives these new
The AIDS virus can not be contracted through casual contact. The virus is transmitted through blood and body fluids.
RAL HISTOR
1891
The national Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta recommend that health care employees wear gloves whenever they may be in contact with a patient's blood or body fluids. When health care employees are in a situation where blood could splatter, such as treating a serious injury, they also are urged to wear protective gowns, masks and goggles. Blood, body fluids, mucous membranes and unattached skin are potentially infectious.
Jim Mathes, left, of Baldwin City, and Bill Medlen, Lawrence resident, apply Bird/X to the ledge above the Natural History Museum's main entrance. The chemical, which creates a sticky surface, is designed to prevent pigeons from landing on building ledges.
KU tries
Students favor tougher policy for admissions
By NOEL GERDES
Staff writer
A student advisory committee today will recommend to the Board of Regents that Kansas high school students be required to complete certain courses to be guaranteed admission at the six state universities.
The recommendation would require freshmen, in addition to graduating, to have taken four years of English and three years each of science, social studies and math from an accredited Kansas high school.
The student advisory committee consists of the student body presidents of the Regents schools.
The Regents schools now have an open admissions policy, which means any Kansas resident who graduates from an accredited state high school is admitted automatically to any state university.
The Regents will meet at 9 a.m. today in Topeka to discuss tightening admissions requirements. Their own proposed requirements include a high school curriculum similar to the students' recommendation, but with two years of foreign language. The Regents proposal also includes an ACT score of 23 or better, and ranking in the top third of a class.
The advisory committee considered the Regents proposal before making its own. Jason Krakow, KU student body president, opposed part of the Regents promesa1
the courses in the student's recommendation to be
in attendance in fall 1981 freshmen
"I think to say a student has to have a 23 on the ACT to be ___ ridiculous" he said.
spotlight
THE QUEEN OF SWEDEN
MISS INNESOTA
Self-fulfillment, not glamour attracts KU student to pageant
By VALOREE ARMSTRONG
M
The University of Kansas has its own rising star. And she's brighter than most, Katherine Killen, a junior at KU, will shine as never before as she represents Minnesota in Saturday evening's Miss America contest in Atlantic City, N.J.
But the 50 young women attracted from every corner of the United States to this prestigious contest have more realistic concerns in mind. Some competitors are driven by the glamour. Some crave the chance to be on television. Still others are eager to launch a modeling or acting career.
ost every little girl watches the Miss America pageant in wide-eyed wonder and dreams of gliding down that brightly lit runway, one hand steadying a crown and waving, the other cradling dozens of roses.
Although the glamour and glitter don't much impress Killen, a native of Owatonna, Minn., the idea of performing to the best of her ability makes it all worthwhile.
Unlike many of the Miss America contestants, Killen hasn't spent her life training in pageants for September 19th's competition. Killen's first pageant was the Miss Owatonna competition last September, although she has enjoyed performing and singing since age seven. From winning that local, preliminary contest hands down, she moved on to the Miss Minnesota pageant in Austin, Minn., June 20, in which she again topped the hopefuls entered. This most recent crown put her among the elite group of women eligible for the Miss America contest the nation will be watching on Saturday.
As with other contestants, Killen's rise to success was expected. A local Owatona pageant committee has urged Killen for several years to
PARKER
KANSAN MAGAZINE September 16, 1987
school tour years of English and
ence, social studies and math with
a average of 2.0 on a 4.0 scale; or
GPA in nine hours of prescribed
ge-level work before their first
e in make-up courses (high school subjects in the Regents recom- itate were missed in high school.
did make exceptions for special editions could total no more than 10 of entering freshmen. Admissions Kansas residents 21 or older with and admission requirements for could be left to each university.
relative director for Associated student lobbying group, said he did fents' recommendation to be a alice.
if we must insist that fresh- mendment also states that fresh- years of foreign language in high- e attending the university
courses that you can choose to take
ons.” Tallman said. “It's still a
were two schools of thought behind standards. The first is that the needs to restrict admissions y students and not enough money. some students who enter state espared for college, so something more prepared. His made its recommendation to more prepared.
at body president at Kansas State concerned that the Regents are problems at KU."
eek, student body president at Fort y, said he was not opposed to different schools.
g Bork
use devise a strategy to "stoneew" by defending the principle of active privilege
I never advised the White House w to meet, how to deal with the intergate special prosecution见," Bock said. He said he did act orders from then-Attorney GenerRichardson to seek a compromise between Cox and the White House as executive privilege
'We never achieved an accommodation.' Bork testified.
Natergate aside, Bork also sought reassure Sen. Dennis DeConciani, ariz., that he is not antagonistic to rights of women. "As solicitorial I argued positions for the section of women broader than Supreme Court would accept," he said.
eConciere, a key swing vote on the umittee, also suggested Bork's tions on poll taxes, integration of lie accommodations and other es over the years might cause its some alarm.
I rk responded. "If I were a black
but knew my record, I don't
s'd be concerned because it's a
civil rights record."
II. Bork said he is troubled by the tittual rationale for a case Court ruling ordering the state to disband the court in the art of Columbia in 1954.
have not thought of a rationale the ruling, Bork said. But after a recess, he said he wanted to it clear he does not support his own dream of stalemand and would never "tweet dreams of uplining" the 1954 decision.
k received kind words during daring from Senate Republican Alan Simpson of Wyoming.
teems to be the extremism has in the rhetoric of opponents of Bork," Simpson said.
On the mild side
太阳
Details page 6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday September 17,1987 Vol.98,No.19
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Med workers are more wary of infections
By AMBER STENGER Staff writer
More health care employees at the University of Kansas Medical Center are making an effort to protect themselves from contracting infectious diseases, especially AIDS, employees say.
The Med Center has not changed its infection control policy because of AIDS, said Marcia G. Aillandi, infection control coordinator. It's just that more employees are complying with its recommendations.
"Our philosophy really hasn't changed in regards to precautions," Gilliland said. "We've always taught that all blood and body fluids can be potentially infectious. What has happened is that people because of AIDS are more careful. And so somebody who used to be very lackadaisical when they got a little blood on their hands, is using gloves more now."
The AIDS virus can not be contracted through casual contact. The virus is transmitted through blood and body fluids.
The national Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta recommend that health care employees wear gloves whenever they may be in contact with a patient's blood or body fluids. When health care employees are in a situation where blood could splatter, such as treating a serious injury, they also are urged to wear protective gowns, masks and goggles. Blood, body fluids, mucous membranes and unattached skin are potentially infectious.
RAL HISTORY
1930
Jim Mathes, left, of Baldwin City, and Bill Medlen. Lawrence resident, apply Bird/X to the ledge above the Natural History Museum's main entrance. The chemical, which creates a sticky surface, is designed to prevent pigeons from landing on building ledges.
Students favor tougher policy for admissions
By NOEL GERDES
Staff writer
Staff writer
A student advisory committee today will recommend to the Board of Regents that Kansas high school students be required to complete certain courses to be guaranteed admission at the six state universities.
The recommendation would require freshmen, in addition to graduating, to have taken four years of English and three years each of science, social studies and math from an accredited Kansas high school.
The student advisory committee consists of the student body presidents of the Regents schools.
The Regents schools now have an open admissions policy, which means any Kansas resident who graduates from an accredited state high school is admitted automatically to any state university.
The regents will meet at 9 a.m. today in Topeka to discuss tightening admissions requirements. Their own proposed requirements include a high school curriculum similar to the students' recommendation, but with two years of foreign language. The Regents proposal also includes an ACT score of 23 or better, and ranking in the top third of a class.
KU tries
The advisory committee considered the Regents proposal before making its own. Jason Krawak, KU student body president, opposed part of the Regents proposal.
the students' recommendation, to be university in fall 1991, freshmen
"I think to say a student has to have a 23 on the ACT to
" ridiculous." he said.
ridiculous" he said.
to be
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old make exceptions for specials
ceptions could total no more than 10
of entering freshmen. Admissions
Kansas residents 21 or older with
and admission requirements for
could be left to each university.
islative director for Associated student lobbying group, said he did lents' recommendation to be a policy
courses that you can choose to take ions," Tallman said. "It's still a
i were invited to imendation also states that fresh years of foreign language in high attending the university.
nt body president at Kansas State concerned that the Regents are blems at KU."
uck, student body president at Fort y, said he was not opposed to different schools.
g
were two schools of thought behind standards. The first is that the s needs to restrict admissions y students and not enough money. some students who enter state prepared for college, so something p them become more prepared. He ittee made its recommendation to more prepared.
use devise a strategy to "stonew-" by defending the principle of positive privilege.
g Bork
I never advised the White House v to meet, how to deal with the tergate special prosecution se." Bork said. He said he did act orders from then-Attorney Generichardson to seek a compromiseween Cox and the White House r executive privilege.
We never achieved an accommodation." Bork testified.
'altergate aside, Bork also sought sceen Sen. Dennis DeConciini, riz. that he is not antagonistic to rights of women. "As solicitor eral I argued positions for the action of women broader than Supreme Court would accept," k said.
concioni, a key swing vote on the mittee, also suggested Bork's tions on poll taxes, integration of ic accommodations and other over the years might cause ks some alarm.
ork responded. "If I were a black but knew my record, I don't 't I'd be concerned because it's a civil rights record."
II, Bork said he is troubled by the tittual rationale for ame Court ruling ordering the gregation of public schools in the jct of Columbia in 1954.
have not thought of a rationale the ruling, Bork said. But after a recess, he said he wanted to it clear he does not support it. Mr. Tom's old and would not "ever dream of ruling." the 1954 decision.
k received kind words during during from Senate Republican Alan Simpson of Wyoming.
seems to be the extremism has in the rhetoric of opponents of Bork," Simpson said.
On the mild side
SPORTS
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details page 6
Thursday September 17,1987 Vol.98,No.19
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Med workers are more wary of infections
Staff writer
By AMBER STENGER
More health care employees at the University of Kansas Medical Center are making an effort to protect themselves from contracting infectious diseases, especially AIDS, employees say.
The Med Center has not changed its infection control policy because of AIDS, said Marcia A. Gillandl, infection control coordinator. It's just that more employees are complying with its recommendations.
"Our philosophy really hasn't changed in regards to precautions," Gilliland said. "We've always taught that all blood and body fluids can be potentially infectious. What has happened is that people because of AIDS are more careful. And so somebody who used to be very lackadaisical when they got a little blood on their hands, is using gloves more now."
RAL HISTORY
1891
The AIDS virus can not be contracted through casual contact. The virus is transmitted through blood and body fluids.
Jim Mathes, left, of Baldwin City, and Bill Medlen, Lawrence resident, apply Bird/X to the ledge above the Natural History Museum's main entrance. The chemical, which creates a sticky surface, is designed to prevent pigeons from landing on building ledges.
The national Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta recommend that health care employees wear gloves whenever they may be in contact with a patient's blood or body fluids. When health care employees are in a situation where blood could splatter, such as treating a serious injury, they also are urged to wear protective gowns, masks and goggles. Blood, body fluids, mucous membranes and unattached skin are potentially infecti-
KU tries
Students favor tougher policy for admissions
By NOEL GERDES
A student advisory committee today will recommend to the Board of Regents that Kansas high school students be required to complete certain courses to be guaranteed admission at the six state universities.
Staff writer
The recommendation would require freshmen, in addition to graduating, to have taken four years of English and three years each of science, social studies and math from an accredited Kansas high school.
The student advisory committee consists of the student body presidents of the Regents schools.
The Regents schools now have an open admissions policy, which means any Kansas resident who graduates from an accredited state high school is admitted automatically to any state university.
The Regents will meet at 9 a.m. today in Topeka to discuss tightening admissions requirements. Their own proposed requirements include a high school curriculum similar to the students' recommendation, but with two years of foreign language. The Regents proposal also includes an ACT score of 23 or better, and ranking in the top third of a class.
The advisory committee considered the Regents proposal before making its own. Jason Krakow, KU student head president, opposed part of the Regents proposal
"I think to say a student has to have a 23 on the ACT to
spotlight
the students' recommendation to be an university in fall, 1991, freshmen
enter the competition. In the town of less than 20,000 people, Killen's congeniality and talent for performing were known.
John Neil, Killen's boyfriend of one year and Hays junior at KU, said that competing in and winning such contests weren't important to the talented 20-year-old, but the pressure to enter had won out.
"It just doesn't dominate her life. A lot of people put pressure on her to enter and a lot expect her to do really well," Neil said. "But it's just not that important to her. She's not doing it for the glamour."
gamification
Neil and close friend Julie Heaton, Topeka
junior, travelled to Austin in June to watch Killen
compete.
Heaton, who described her one-time college roommate as people-oriented, fun, talented and intelligent, said Killen was handling the competitions well.
"There's a lot of pressure but she's not the kind of person to let it go to her head." Heaton said. "She's such a strong person that she'll be the same Katherine we new before when she comes back."
Bait and how did a native of Minnesota end up such a loyal KU student? She followed her three brothers, Mark, Steve and John, who ran track for the University. Numerous visits to campus convinced her that KU was the logical choice for her home away from home.
But Killen is not an athlete. Singing is her game and she does it well, well enough to win the talent preliminary in the Austin contest singing "My Man" from Funny Girl. Since that is such a popular choice for the national competition, she's chosen to change her style a bit, doing an original arrangement called "Tonight" from Westside Story.
Although the contacts she's made through the pageants so far would be enough to get her started in show-biz — she was offered a modeling position and even a position teaching at a modeling school — movie stars are not the stars she's reaching for. Killen has set her sights on a career in international relations rather than a lifetime of signing autographs.
sighting I didn't want to be a professional model or actress, I definitely want to come back to school and then get into international relations. I've always been interested in any public relations job — working with people," said Killen, who has a double major in political science and history.
table major in political science and the University. Killen added that between the traveling she'd done in the last year and private trips to Western Europe she'd learned to love traveling and looked forward to working with people from different cultures."
The pageant has taken her a long way toward her career goal. She described the Miss America competition as unique in that any money award is in the form of a scholarship and winners must prove they had spent the winnings on their education. Killen, and every state winner, already has received $4000 in scholarships.
Her professed love for traveling could quickly be extinguished by the number of miles Killen has traveled in her own state and countless others during the last year. After the Miss Minnesota pageant, she was on the road for three solid weeks, performing in pageants, appearing in parades, even singing the Star Spangled Banner and throwing the opening pitch at a Minnesota Twins baseball game against Detroit. Since then, Labor Day has been her only weekend at home.
"You get tired of it (traveling) after awhile," she said. "It's difficult because I'm not with anyone my own age as long as I am in my job as 'Miss Minnesota.' I'm not like that... I just see myself as 'Katherine.'"
"And when I miss friends and family it botheres me. But it only takes a phone call or sitting down to write a letter to cheer me up."
And many of those friends are in Lawrence. Killen said a recent surprise visit to the KU chapter of the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority, of which she is a member, was almost a mistake because she realized how much she missed her friends.
"They've been trained since they were small and they're there to win," she said. "I've heard the competition there will be more cushtrout. I'm just going out to do the best that I can. This is a once-in-a-lifetime chance that not every girl gets to do. I need to feel happy about myself, and I hope I do well."
Win or lose in Atlantic City on Saturday night, the pageant experience has been a good one for Killen.
Neil and Heaton both said that so far the competitions haven't changed Killen at all and are confident that even becoming Miss America, and the 2004 Olympics will all over the country, would not change her.
Up until now the competitors have been nice, Killen said, but she doesn't expect that to remain the case.
"It makes you grow as a person because you have to rely on yourself," she said. "You find out all about yourself."
But mostly, whether this September or next,
she hopes to go back to being "just Katherine."
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March 26, 1987
ACA
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"It'll be so good to go back to being myself, and I hope people will let me."
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KANSAN MAGAZINE September 16, 1987
school four years of English and
social studies and math with 4
average of 2.0 on a 4 scale; or
GPA in nine hours of prescribed
ge-level work before their first
- in make-up courses (high school subjects in the Regents recom- it were missed in high school.
mendation also states that fresh- years of foreign language in high e attending the university.
idk make exceptions for special eptions could total no more than 10 of entering freshmen. Admissions Kansas residents 21 or older with a foreign equiv degree could be left to each university. isolative director for Associate.
hive director for Associated student lobbying group, said he didients' recommendation to be a offer
jurses that you can choose to take ons." Tallman said. "It's still a
were two schools of thought behind standards. The first is that the needs to restrict admissions y students and not enough money. some students who enter state prepared for college, so something more prepared. If three made its recommendation to more prepared.
at body president at Kansas State concerned that the Regents are blame at KU."
uck, student body president at Fort y, said he was not opposed to different schools.
g Bork
use devise a strategy to "stonew-" by defending the principle of active privilege
I never divorced the White House to meet, how to deal with the iterateg special prosecution case." Bork said. He said he did act orders from then-Attorney Gen. Richardson to seek a compromiseween Cox and the White House in executive privilege.
"We never achieved an accommodation." Bork testified.
watergate issue, book also sought reassure Sen. Dennis DeConciani,riz, that he is not antagonistic to rights of women. "As solicitor erial I argued positions for the tection of women broader than Supreme Court would accept,"k said.
eConciuni, a key swing vote on the umittee, also suggested Bork's tions on poll taxes, integration of lic accommodations and other es over the years might cause ks some alarm.
rk responded, "If I were a black but knew my record, I don't I'd be concerned because it's a civil rights record."
II. Bork said he is troubled by the tитual rationale for a case Court ruling ordering the president to appear in the act of Columbia in 1954.
have not thought of a rationale the ruling, Bork said. But after a recess, he said he wanted to it clear he does not support a segregation in the nation's team of ruling," the 1964 decision.
k received kind words during during from Senate Republican Alan Simpson of Womong.
beems to be the extremism has
n the rhetoric of opponents of
Bork, "Simpson said.
On the mild side
SUNSHINE
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details page 6
Thursday September 17,1987 Vol.98,No.19
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Med workers are more wary of infections
By AMBER STENGER Staff writer
Staff writer
More health care employees at the University of Kansas Medical Center are making an effort to protect themselves from contracting infectious diseases, especially AIDS, employees say.
The Med Center has not changed its infection control policy because of AIDS, said Marcia A. Gillianl, infection control coordinator. It's just that more employees are complying with its recommendations.
"Our philosophy really hasn't changed in regards to precautions," Gilliland said. "We've always taught that all blood and body fluids can be potentially infectious. What has happened is that people because of AIDS are more careful. And so somebody who used to be very dangerous might have given a little blood on their hands, is using gloves more now."
using gloves more now. The AIDS virus can not be contracted through casual contact. The virus is transmitted through blood and body fluids.
The national Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta recommend that health care employees wear gloves whenever they may be in contact with a patient's blood or body fluids. When health care employees are in a situation where blood could splatter, such as treating a serious injury, they also are urged to wear protective gowns, masks and goggles. Blood, body fluids, mucous membranes and unprotected skin are potentially infective.
RAL HISTOR
1891
Lisa Jones/KANSAN
Jim Mathes, left, of Baldwin City, and Bill Medlen. Lawrence resident, apply Bird/X to the ledge above the Natural History Museum's main entrance. The chemical, which creates a sticky surface, is designed to prevent pigeons from landing on building ledges.
Students favor tougher policy for admissions
By NOEL GERDES
Staff writer
A student advisory committee today will recommend to the Board of Regents that Kansas high school students be required to complete certain courses to be guaranteed admission at the six state universities.
The recommendation would require freshmen, in addition to graduating, to have taken four years of English and three years each of science, social studies and math from an accredited Kansas high school.
The student advisory committee consists of the student body presidents of the Regents schools.
The Regents schools now have an open admissions policy, which means any Kansas resident who graduates from an accredited state high school is admitted automatically to any state university.
The Regents will meet at 9 a.m. today in Topeka to discuss tightening admissions requirements. Their own proposed requirements include a high school curriculum similar to the students' recommendation, but with two years of foreign language. The Regents proposal also includes an ACT score of 23 or better, and ranking in the top third of a class.
The advisory committee considered the Regents proposal before making its own. Jason Krakow, KU student body president, opposed part of the Regents proposal.
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KANSAN MAGAZINE September 16, 1987
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school four years of English and ence, social studies and math with at average of 2.0 on a 4.0 scale; or 0 GPA in nine hours of prescribed age-level work before their first r
'e in make up courses (high school subjects in the Regents recomma were missed in high school, that states that' o years of foreign
mendation also states that fresh- years of foreign language in high- attending the university.
uld make exceptions for special eptions could total no more than 10 of entering freshmen. Admissions Kansas residents 21 or older with, and admission requirements for oal be left to each university.
native director for Associated student lobbying group, said he didients' recommendation to be a solic
ourses that you can choose to take ons," Tallman said. "It's still a
were two schools of thought behind standards. The first is that the needs to restrict admissions students and not enough money. some students who enter state prepared for college, so something them become more prepared. He tithe made its recommendation to more prepared.
ck, student body president at Fort , said he was not opposed to different schools.
it body president at Kansas State concerned that the Regents are blems at KU."
g Bork
use devise a strategy to "stonew"
'by defending the principle of
active privilege
I never advised the White House to meet, how to deal with the tergate special prosecution见," Bork said. He said he did act orders from then-Attorney General Richardson to seek a compromise between Cox and the White House executive privilege.
We never achieved an accomoon." Bork testified.
"atergate aside, Bork also sought assault Sen. Dennis DeConci尼, riz. that he is not antagonistic to rights of women." As solicitor erial I argued positions for the action of women broader than Supreme Court would accept," k said.
econciu, a key swing vote on the mittee, also suggested Bork's tions on poll taxes, integration of lie accommodations and other es over the years might cause ks some alarm.
rk responded. "If I were a black but knew my record, I don't i'd be concerned because it's a civil rights record."
II. Bork said he is troubled by the tittual rationale for aame Court ruling ordering the regregation of public schools in the act of Columbia in 1954.
he were not thought of a rationale he ruling, Bork said. But after a recess, he said he wanted to it clear he does not support the notion of his son's ill and would "not dream of almond" the 1954 decision.
k received kind words during aring from Senate Republican Alan Simpson of Wyoming.
neems to be the extremism has
n the rhetoric of opponents of
Bork," Simpson said.
On the mild side
SUNSHINE
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday September 17,1987 Vol.98.No.19
Details page 6
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Med workers are more wary of infections
By AMBER STENGER Staff writer
Staff writer
More health care employees at the University of Kansas Medical Center are making an effort to protect themselves from contracting infectious diseases, especially AIDS. employees say.
The Med Center has not changed its infection control policy because of AIDS, said Marcia G. Aillandi, infection control coordinator. It's just that more employees are complying with its recommendations.
"Our philosophy really hasn't changed in regards to precautions." Gilliland said. "We've always taught that all blood and body fluids can be potentially infectious. What has happened is that people because of AIDS are more careful. And so somebody who used to be very lackadaisal when they got a little blood on their hands, is using gloves more now."
is using gives us how The AIDS virus can not be contracted through casual contact. The virus is transmitted through blood and body fluids.
RAL HISTOR
1931
The national Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta recommend that health care employees wear gloves whenever they may be in contact with a patient's blood or body fluids. When health care employees are in a situation where blood could splatter, such as treating a serious injury, they also are urged to wear protective gowns, masks and goggles. Blood, body fluids, mucous membranes, and unprotected skin.
Jim Mathes, left, of Baldwin City, and Bill Medlen, Lawrence resident, apply Bird/X to the ledge above the Natural History Museum's main entrance. The chemical, which creates a sticky surface, is designed to prevent pigeons from landing on building ledges.
The BEST Of KU
Students favor tougher policy for admissions
Photos by CHAD DESHAZO By JERRI NIEBAUM Columnist
Bv NOEL GERDES
Staff writer
For many students, the best part of college is graduating. But before making that final hike down the Hill, you will enjoy other, less obvious bests that will make getting up in the morning worthwhile.
After living in Lawrence for three years as a high school student and for three years as a KU student, I have some ideas about the bests at KU and in Lawrence. Some bests I have heard about from others. Judge for yourself. Freshmen, you may want to take notes.
Places to play
A student advisory committee today will recommend to the Board of Regents that Kansas high school students be required to complete certain courses to be guaranteed admission at the six state universities.
The most obvious best of KU is the campus. Shady hills and a flowery landscape make beautiful outdoor study halls in fair weather. The best place to play hacksack on campus is in front of Strong Hall. The best place to play frisbee is on the northeast side of the football stadium, and the best place to juggle, preach, dance or otherwise show off is in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall. This is also the best place to hang out if you want to get your picture in the Kansan.
KU's hilly campus is a playground of snowy wonders in winter. The best place for sledding, tubing or sliding downhill on a cafeteria tray is the hill
But campus isn't the only place for outdoor fun in Lawrence. The best hiking in town is beside the Kansas River, also called the Kaw, along a wooded trail between Burcham and Constant parks. The best place to row a boat is on the river, where KU's crew team practices.
The best place to regress to your childhood is on the train in Central Park. The best place to play soccer, football or fly a kite is at the soccer field off Clinton Street, just west of Iowa Street.
The recommendation would require freshmen, in addition to graduating, to have taken four years of English and three years each of science, social studies and math from an accredited Kansas high school.
The Regents schools now have an open admissions policy, which means any Kansas resident who graduates from an accredited state high school is admitted automatically to any state university.
The student advisory committee consists of the student body presidents of the Regents schools.
KANSAN MAGAZINE September 16, 1987 11
The Regents will meet at 9 a.m. today in Topeka to discuss tightening admissions requirements. Their own proposed requirements include a high school curriculum similar to the students' recommendation, with but two years of foreign language. The Regents proposal also includes an ACT score of 23 or better, and ranking in the top third of a class.
The advisory committee considered the Regents proposal before making its own. Jason Krakow, KU student body president, opposed part of the Regents proposal
a student has to have a 23 on the ACT to "teulous." he said.
students' recommendation, to be university in fall, 1991, freshmen
e in make-up courses (high school subjects in the Regents recom- atme was missed in high school. updation also states that fresh-
school four years of English and
ence, social studies and math with
at average of 2.0 on a 4.0 scale; or
0 GPA in nine hours of prescribed
ge-level work before their first
amendment also states that fresh- years of foreign language in high- attending the university.
uld make exceptions for special
ceptions could total no more than 10
of entering freshmen. Admissions
"Kansas residents 21 or older with
and admission requirements for
could be left to each university.
islative director for Associated student lobbying group, said he did dents' recommendation to be a policy.
ourses that you can choose to take ions," Tallman said. "It's still a
nt body president at Kansas State concerned that the Regents areblems at KU."
were two schools of thought behind standards. The first is that the s needs to restrict admissions y students and not enough money. some students who enter state reprepared for college, so something p them become more prepared. He added a recommendation to more prepared.
ack, student body president at Fort y, said he was not opposed to different schools.
g
g Bork
use devise a strategy to "stonew" by defending the principle of positive privilege.
euctive privilege.
"I never advised the White House w to meet, how to deal with the special prosecution B." Bark said. He said he did act orders from then-Attorney Gen Richardson to seek a compromise between Cox and the White House executive privilege.
"We never achieved an accommodation." Bork testified.
Watigate aside. Bork also sought reassure Sen. Dennis DeConciin,riz., that he is not antagonistic to rights of women." As solicitor erial I argued positions for the tection of women broader than Supreme Court would accept,"k said.
eConcini, a key swing vote on the unittee, also suggested Bork's tions on poll taxes, integration of lie accommodations and other over the years might cause ks some alarm.
rk responded, "If I were a black but knew my record, I don't. I'd be concerned because it's a civil rights record."
ll. Bork said he is troubled by the tittual rationale for a time Court ruling ordering the negation of public schools in the
have not thought of a rationale he ruling, Bork said. But after a recess, he said he wanted to it clear he does not support I segregation in the nation's ul and wouldn't "ever dream of litter" the 1964 decision.
received kind words during arising from Senate Republican Alan Simpson of Wyoming.
seems to be the extremism has
n the rhetoric of opponents of
Bork," Simpson said.
On the mild side
---
SUN
Details page 6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday September 17,1987 Vol.98,No.19
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Med workers are more wary of infections
By AMBER STENGER
More health care employees at the University of Kansas Medical Center are making an effort to protect themselves from contracting infectious diseases, especially AIDS, employees say.
The Med Center has not changed its infection control policy because of AIDS, said Marcia G. Ailligan, infection control coordinator. It's just that more employees are complying with its recommendations.
RAL HISTOR
1831
"Our philosophy really hasn't changed in regards to precautions," Gilliland said. "We've always taught that all blood and body fluids can be potentially infectious. What has happened is that people because of AIDS are more careful. And so somebody who used to be very lackadaisical when they got a little blood on their hands, is using gloves more now."
is using gives more now. The AIDS virus can not be contracted through casual contact. The virus is transmitted through blood and body fluids.
The national Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta recommend that health care employees wear gloves whenever they may be in contact with a patient's blood or body fluids. When health care employees are in a situation where blood could splatter, such as treating a serious injury, they also are urged to wear protective gowns, masks and goggles. Blood, body fluids, mucous membranes and unattached skin are potentially infe-
Jim Mathes, left, of Baldwin City, and Bill Medlen, Lawrence resident, apply Bird/X to the ledge above the Natural History Museum's main entrance. The chemical, which creates a sticky surface, is designed to prevent pigeons from landing on building ledges.
Students favor tougher policy for admissions
KU tries
Bv NOEL GERDES
Staff writer
The recommendation would require freshmen, in addition to graduating, to have taken four years of English and three years each of science, social studies and math from an accredited Kansas high school.
A student advisory committee today will recommend to the Board of Regents that Kansas high school students be required to complete certain courses to be guaranteed admission at the six state universities.
The student advisory committee consists of the student body presidents of the Regents schools.
The Regents schools now have an open admissions policy, which means any Kansas resident who graduates from an accredited state high school is admitted automatically to any state university.
The Regents will meet at 9 a.m. today in Topeka to discuss tightening admissions requirements. Their own proposed requirements include a high school curriculum similar to the students' recommendation, but with two years of foreign language. The Regents proposal also includes an ACT score of 23 or better, and ranking in the top third of a class.
The advisory committee considered the Regents proposal before making its own Jason Krakow, KU student body president, opposed part of the Regents proposal.
y a student has to have a 23 on the ACT to ridiculous," he said.
behind the Joseph R. Pearson residence hall. Hockey and figure skating are best on Potter Lake, and the best place to make snow angels is in the field between the Computer Services Facility and the Robinson Health and Physical Education Center
Under the stars
The best place to look at the stars is from the roof of Lindley Hall. There, every clear Friday at 9 p.m., the Astronomy Associates of Lawrence set up telescopes so the public can watch the stars.
A more private star show lights up the hills around Potter Lake every night, also the best place for a romantic night. On a clear night, the campanile and JRP shine a luminescent mirror image into the lake.
image into the dcad place to look at the stars is from the 50-yard line on the football field at Memorial Stadium, also the best place to, well, fall in love.
students' recommendation, to be university in fall 1991, freshmen
FILM
RADI
Top left, Terry Kennedy, Wichita sophomore, finds the stacks at grade. Center, Lonny Levin, Chicago sophomore, spins to see a Snyder, Topeka freshman will fall in first a Twister game in from Lawrence graduate student, peers toward the stars through the Bottom left, Craig Voorhees, Lawrence resident, waits for his lau mattress. Right bottom, late night doughnuts at Joe's Bakery a
place another favorite place to play on campus at night is in the fountain across from the Chi Omega campus, 1345 W. Campus Road. But if you really want to swim at night, you'll have to leave campus. The best place to go is Clinton Lake, especially near the dock on the north side. Some of you may remember the infamous couple who took their car for a swim near there about three years ago. Their parking brake was apparently kicked off.
The beach is also the best place to run into people you know, although you can't remember their names or why you know them. A simple, "How's it going?" is the best way to greet these people.
中華民國70年代
People-watching
The best way to see what and who is in fashion is by sitting on the steps at Wescoe Hall. On the "beach" people-watching is an art. The best way to begin people-watching is with a group of friends. Ask a friend what he's doing that night. Then, as he begins to answer, start looking around and over his head at other people. Everyone will think you're listening to your friend, so they won't notice as you analyze their clothes, note the attractiveness of their friends and compare their stylishness with your own. In this way, stone-washed jeans, dyed-tied shoes, tight den skirts and suspenders made their KU fashion debuts.
Making the grade
[Image of a person sitting at a desk, writing or reading.]
Making the best way to raise your grade average at KU is to take health, physical education or recreation (HPER) class or a psychology class. Health and Human Sexuality and the Psychology of Satisfaction are popular choices.
popular choices. The best way to maintain a high GPA is to major in Communication Studies. The major requires a minimal amount of math and science and a maximum amount of common sense.
enough amount of common sense.
Of course, another great way
to maintain a high GPA is to
study. The best place to study
you like lots of books is on the
bookstore of Watson Library.
This is another good place to run
into people whose names you
don't remember.
don't believe.
The best place to study if you like solitude is in the stacks on $1\frac{1}{2}$ East in Watson. The best place to study and write papers that you put off until the last minute is at the Computer Services Facility, open 24 hours a day except Christmas and New Year's Day. This is also the best
place to lose your vision by looking too long at a video display terminal.
Making mistakes.
For students on a tight budget,
the best place to work out is
Robinson Gymnasium. Swimming,
weightlifting, raquetball,
tennis and many other sports are
accessible to students. The best
place to stretch out is in the
karate room adjacent to the
weight room. Sometimes it's
closed, so the second-best
place to stretch is in the fencing
room, across the hall from the
locker rooms.
Making the bod
If you can afford it, the best place to lift weights is Junkyard Jym and Nautilus Center, 535 Gateway Dr. The best place to jog and ride bikes is along Clinton Parkway.
A campus tradition is the Jayhawk Cafe, which opened in
alongcome If you prefer to work out with other people, KU intramural basketball is the best way to get some exercise along with a little competition.
Eats and drinks
If you don't like to work out, the best place to make the bod is at Joe's Bakery, 616 W. Ninth St. Joe's is the best place to pig out, especially after 8 p.m. when they
serve hot, greasy, glazed doughnuts. The neon "Hot Doughnuts Now" sign attracts students in droves. Joe's is also the best place to get an inexpensive deli sandwich.
The best place to get a burger and a beer is Johnny's Tavern, 401 N. Second St. The best place for chips and salsa is Dos Hombres, 815 New Hampshire St., referred to by many students as just "Dos." The best place to get a slice of pizza is Pyramid Pizza, 507 W. 14th St., next to the Wagon Wheel Cafe.
e in make-up courses (high school subjects in the Regents recomma were missed in high school.
school four years of English and encol, social studies and math with at average of 2.0 on a 4.0 scale; or 0 GPA in nine hours of prescribed age-level work before their first
immedation also states that fresho years of foreign language in highle attending the university.
isilative director for Associated student lobbying group, said he didents' recommendation to be a ally.
make exceptions for special
sections could total no more than 10
of entering freshmen. Admissions
Kansas residents 21 or older with
and admission requirements for
could be left to each university.
ourses that you can choose to take ions," Tallman said. "It's still a
ack, student body president at Fort y, said he was not opposed to different schools.
nt body president at Kansas State concerned that the Regents are problems at KU."
were two schools of thought behind standards. The first is that the s needs to restrict admissions y students and not enough money. some students who enter state repaired for college, so something p them become more prepared. He should provide a recommendation to more prepaRED.
g Bork
use devise a strategy to "stonew" by defending the principle of negative privilege.
'I never advised the White House w to meet, how to deal with the altergate special prosecution ve." Bock said. He said he did act orders from then-Attorney Gener Richardson to seek a compromise between Cox and the White House ar executive privilege.
deregulate aside, Bork also sough reassure Sennis. Dennis DeConciini, that he is not antagonistic to rights of women. "As solicitorier I argued positions for the section of women broader than Supreme Court would accept," he said.
eConciini, a key swing vote on the mittee, also suggested Bork's tions on poll taxes, integration of lic accommodations and other es over the years might cause ks some alarm.
'We never achieved an accommodation.' Bork testified.
rk responded, "If I were a black but knew my record, I don't I'd be concerned because it's a civil rights record."
II, Bork said he is troubled by the titutional rationale for a same Court ruling ordering the regregation of public schools in the act of Columbia in 1954.
have not thought of a rationale the ruling, Bork said. But after a recess, he said he wanted to it clear he does not support l segregation in the nation's ul and wouldn't "ever dream of" the 1954 decision.
k received kind words during aring from Senate Republican Alan Simpson of Wyoming.
comes to be the extremism has
the rhetoric of opponents of
Bork," Simpson said.
MAGAZINE September 16, 1987
On the mild side
sun
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details page 6
Thursday September 17,1987 Vol.98,No.19
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Med workers are more wary of infections
Staff writer
By AMBER STENGER
More health care employees at the University of Kansas Medical Center are making an effort to protect themselves from contracting infectious diseases, especially AIDS, employees say.
The Med Center has not changed its infection control policy because of AIDS, said Marcia A. Gillainl, infection control coordinator. It's just that more employees are complying with its recommendations.
"Our philosophy really hasn't changed in regards to precautions," Gilliland said. "We've always taught that all blood and body fluids can be potentially infectious. What has happened is that people because of AIDS are more careful. And so somebody who used to be very lackadaisical when they got a little blood on their hands, is using gloves more now."
RAL HISTOR
1931
is using glove technique.
The AIDS virus can not be contracted through casual contact. The virus is transmitted through blood and body fluids.
The national Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta recommend that health care employees wear gloves whenever they may be in contact with a patient's blood or body fluids. When health care employees are in a situation where blood could splatter, such as treating a serious injury, they also are urged to wear protective gowns, masks and goggles. Blood, body fluids, mucous membranes and unattached skin are potentially infec-
Jim Mathes, left, of Baldwin City, and Bill Medlen, Lawrence resident, apply Bird/X to the ledge above the Natural History Museum's main entrance. The chemical, which creates a sticky surface, is designed to prevent pigeons from landing on building ledges.
KU tries
Students favor tougher policy for admissions
By NOEL GERDES
Staff writer
The student advisory committee consists of the student body presidents of the Regents schools.
A student advisory committee today will recommend to the Board of Regents that Kansas high school students be required to complete certain courses to be guaranteed admission at the six state universities.
The Regents schools now have an open admissions policy, which means any Kansas resident who graduates from an accredited state high school is admitted automatically to any state university.
The Regents will meet at 9 a.m. today in Topeka to discuss tightening admissions requirements. Their own proposed requirements include a high school curriculum similar to the students' recommendation, but with two years of foreign language. The Regents proposal also includes an ACT score of 23 or better, and ranking in the top third of a class.
the Advisory committee considered the Regents proposal before making its own, Jason Krakow, KU student body president, opposed part of the Regents proposal.
y a student has to have a 23 on the ACT to ridiculous," he said.
Watson Library the best place to make the i Dan Pennington, Liberal junior, or Tiffany i of Stauffer-Finn hall. Top right, Jeff Ward, a 24-inch telescope on top of Linden Hall. dry to dry, picking the stadium as his e a campus tradition for study breaks.
Handic
LOVE LUCK
1973
THE TRIANGLES OF THE MEDITERRANEAN SEA
BY RICHARD SCHNEIDER
1920 "The Hawk," 1340 Ohio St. be the best place to drink with people you know — or at least recognize.
The best place to get a sandwich is at the Yello Sub just off campus at 624 W. 12th St. Upstairs is the Glass Onion, the best place for coffee and bagels.
Gotta have it
The best place to buy magazines and candy on campus is at the information counter on the fourth floor of the Kansas Union. The banking center next door is the best place to cash a check, and the television room
across the hall is the best place to watch soap operas.
The best place to rent bizarre movies is at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St. But if you still prefer large screens to video, the best way to see a movie for less is through the Student Union Association film series.
Park it
The best place to park a bicycle is along Jayhawk Boulevard. The best place to park a car is in the yellow lot by Potter Lake, west of the stadium. It's not the closest lot, but it never fills up,
the best place to park your body between classes if you want to get some sun is on the east side of Wesco Hall. For more serious sun lovers, the field by Oliver Hall is the best place to lay out.
and the walk up the hill is scenic.
If the weather is nice, the best place to take a nap is on the hill by Potter Lake. If the weather is crummy, the best place for a nap is in the Union in the lobby lounge chairs or in the restrooms.
Study aside
The best way to spend a sunny fall Saturday is watching the Jayhawks play football. Having cup fights, waving the wheat and singing the school song are the best ways to enjoy this event.
The best excuse for not studying is "There's a KU basketball game tonight." If you don't have tickets, the best place to watch the game is at the Wheel, 507 W. 14th St.
The best way to kill time on campus is to visit the Museum of Natural History in Dyche Hall, next to the Union. Just inside the front doors is a beautiful panorama of animals from polar bears to parrots.
The best way to feel cultured in your spare time is to visit the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art. If Greek statues from the fourth century B.C. bore you, visit the modern art and photography displays upstairs.
All of these daily bests are leading to the best of bests, which I think will be walking down the Hill on the KU campus knowing that my diploma is on its way to my mailbox.
Students speak out about KU bests
We asked several KU students what they thought was the "best of KU." Here's what some of them said:
Justin Teenor, Lenexa sophomore, said a beautiful campus and a high-quality education were the best parts of KU.
"I think I'm getting as good education as I could get anywhere for the price," he said.
DARREN
"It makes my day," she said. "I like to sit here and watch people."
Michelle Buckley, Wichita senior, said going to the midnight movies at the Kansas Union was a favorite KU activity for her.
Curt Flowers, DuBois, Pa., senior, said climbing the fire escape at Bailey Hall was the best of KU for him. He said he liked watching the people walk by below him.
students' recommendation, to be university in fall 1991, freshmen
Madina Salaty, Lawrence sophomore, said sitting on Wescoe Beach was her favorite part of going to KU.
Brad jordan, Ulysses senior, said that he appreciated the good things in life.
"The toilets," he said. "Without them, where would we be? Probably outside behind a tree."
A. C. BOWMAN
10
KANSAN MAGAZINE September 16, 1987
school four years of English and ence, social studies and math with ot average of 2.0 on a 4.0 scale; or ot GPA in nine hours of prescribed age-level work before their first
'e in make-up courses (high school subjects in the Regents recom- were missed in high school.
were interested in imendation also states that fresh 9 years of foreign language in high leavening the university.
mild make exceptions for special
situations could total no more than 10
of entering freshmen. Admissions
*Kansas residents* 21 or older with
and admission requirements for
or be left to each university.
relative director for Associated student lobbying group, said he did dents' recommendation to be a policy.
ourses that you can choose to take ions," Tallman said. "It's still a
were two schools of thought behind standards. The first is that the s needs to restrict admissions y students and not enough money. some students who enter state repaired for college, so something p them more prepared. He should have a recommendation to more prepared.
nt body president at Kansas State concerned that the Regents are problems at KU."
ack, student body president at Fort y, said he was not opposed to different schools.
use devise a strategy to "stoneew" by defending the principle of positive privilege.
g
Bork
"I never advised the White House to wmeet, how to deal with the special prosecution case," Bork said. He said he did act orders from then-Attorney Gen. Richardson to seek a compromise between Cox and the White House or executive privilege.
13
"We never achieved an accommodation." Bork testified.
Watergate aside, Bork also sought reassure Senn. Dennis DeConciin,riz, that he is not antagonistic to rights of women. "As solicitorial I argued positions for the section of women broader than Supreme Court would accept,"k said
eConcini, a key swing vote on the unittie, also suggested Bork's tions on poll taxes, integration of lic accommodations and other es over the years might cause ks some alarm.
irk responded, "If I were a black but knew my record, I don't I'd be concerned because it's a civil rights record."
II. Bork said he is troubled by the tittual rationale for a nine court ruling ordering the deportation of a student in the list of Columbia in 1954.
have not thought of a rationale he ruling, Bork said. But after a recess, he said he wanted to it clear he does not support l segregation in the nation's and wouldn't dream of making 164 decision
k received kind words during arising from Senate Republican Alan Simpson of Wyoming.
eems to be the extremism has
the rhetoric of opponents of
Bork," Simpson said.
On the mild side
BULL
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday September 17,1987 Vol.98,No.19
Details page 6
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Med workers are more wary of infections
Staff writer
By AMBER STENGEP
More health care employees at the University of Kansas Medical Center are making an effort to protect themselves from contracting infectious diseases, especially AIDS, employees say.
The Med Center has not changed its infection control policy because of AIDS, said Marcia G. Aillandi, infection control coordinator. It's just that more employees are complying with its recommendations.
"Our philosophy really isn't changed in regards to precautions," Gilliland said. "We've always taught that all blood and body fluids can be potentially infectious. What has happened is that people because of AIDS are more careful. And so somebody who used to be very lackadaisical when they got a little blood on their hands, is using gloves more now."
RAL HISTORY
1901
The AIDS virus can not be contracted through casual contact. The virus is transmitted through blood and body
The national Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta recommend that health care employees wear gloves whenever they may be in contact with a patient's blood or body fluids. When health care employees are in a situation where blood could splatter, such as treating a serious injury, they also are urged to wear protective gowns, masks and goggles. Blood, body fluids, mucous membranes and unattached skin are potentially infectious.
Jim Mathes, left, of Baldwin City, and Bill Meden, Lawrence resident, apply Bird/X to the ledge above the Natural History Museum's main entrance. The chemical, which creates a sticky surface, is designed to prevent pigeons from landing on building ledges.
KU tries
Students favor tougher policy for admissions
By NOEL GERDES
Staff writer
A student advisory committee today will recommend to the Board of Regents that Kansas high school students be required to complete certain courses to be guaranteed admission at the six state universities.
The recommendation would require freshmen, in addition to graduating, to have taken four years of English and three years each of science, social studies and math from an accredited Kansas high school.
The student advisory committee consists of the student body, presidents of the Regents schools.
The Regents will meet at 9 a.m. today in Topeka to discuss tightening admissions requirements. Their own proposed requirements include a high school curriculum similar to the students' recommendation, with two years of foreign language. The Regents proposal also includes an ACT score of 23 or better, and ranking in the top third of a class.
top third of a class
The advisory committee considered the Regents proposal before making its own. Jason Krakow, KU student body president, opposed part of the Regents proposal.
"I think to say a student has to have a 23 on the ACT to be successful is ridiculous," he said. "I will try to make it as simple as possible, to be
students' recommendation, to be university in fall 1991, freshmen
1000
With propane, the Jayhawk flies
It has been said that if man were meant to fly he would have been born with wings.
Well, we may not have wings, but what about a large fan, a propane fuel burner, a basket big enough to stand up in and a large nylon balloon?
Several wingless persons flew their hot-air balloons this weekend at Washburn University in Topeka, for the Great Plains Balloon Club's Huff-n-Puff balloon rally. Proceeds from the regatta are going to Friends of the Topeka Zoo, the Topeka Zoological society.
One flyer without wings was Gene Brown, a Topeka resident. There were three jayhawks on Brown's balloon. The mythical mascot of the University of Kansas can't fly - not without Brown's help.
Brown said he and his family were big fans of the University and they loved the KU mascot. He said ballooning was a hobby for him, and he liked to share the experience with his family and friends.
Brown has been flying balloons for 13 years. His balloon, the Firehawk, was custom-made for him six years ago by a friend. It bears the KU colors, royal blue, and red with golden beaks.
The Firehawk was one of the first balloons in the air for the Saturday morning and evening race. Brown won second place in the Saturday morning competition.
The regatta consisted of three
"hare and hound" balloon events, that are modeled after the English fox hunt. The "hare," the lead balloon, leaves the starting field 5 to 15 minutes before the other balloons, the "hounds," are launched. As soon as the lead balloon lifts into the air, balloonists race to fill their balloons so that they can try to catch the same air currents the hare has found.
The lead balloonist flies for about a half hour and then lands.
Friday night a balloon illumination was scheduled, but high winds kept balloonists from being able to get their airships inflated. In an illumination, balloonists fill their crafts after dark and turn their heating flames up high, to produce a beautiful multicolored lightbulb display. About 5,000 people saw balloonists fight the winds to try to please the crowd.
Balloon Meister Norton Douglas center, positions the propane burner for his balloon, Calypso.
He then places a large "x" on the ground, which serves as the target for other balloonists, who try to throw a six-ounce marked bag as close to the center of the "x" as possible.
3
Mike Burham, the rally coordinator, said that Saturday and Sunday morning 2,000 to 3,000 people gathered for the events, and Saturday evening there were about 4,000 people in attendance. He estimated that from 12,000 to 14,000 witnessed the three-day event.
The "hare and hound" events were at 7 a.m. and 5 p.m. Saturday and 7 a.m. Sunday.
It's the free spirit of it all You just go where Mother Nature tries to take you, and see if you can sometimes fool her and go the other way.'
"I
Steve Libel Bonner Springs balloonist
"You get up high. This morning we could see lake Perry, Clinton Lake, Pamona and Melvern all at the same time."
Jerry Goodnow, a Topa resident who recently bought his own balloon, said he liked ballooning for several reasons.
"You see different things on each flight. It's nice and peaceful up there and if you are low enough, you can talk to the people on the ground and they talk back to you." Goodnow said.
Dan Moulden, a Leavenworth balloonist, said that navigating a balloon could be tricky. He said pilots can make the balloon go up or down, but the direction the balloon goes is always the same as the direction of the wind currents, so pilots must search for the wind they want.
Steve Libel, Bonner Springs,
who owns his own balloon, said
he liked ballooning for several
reasons.
"It's the free spirit of it all. You just go where Mother Nature tries to take you, and see if you can sometimes fool her and go the other way. It's a challenge to see if you can conquer the winds, find which direction to go, figure different elevations to go one way or the other. It's just free and easy. It's just beautiful up there."
Balloonists often take a person who represents his sponsor up in their balloon for a ride. The sponsor for the Firehawk, the jayhawk balloon, was Friends of
Brown, the girl. Brown said, "We had to drag her out here to get her in the balloon."
"Oh yeah," Harrison said with the same sarcasm.
Cathy Harrison, Topeka resident, who works in the zoo's ape house, was given a ride by Brown, the Firehawk's pilot.
the Topeka Zoo.
After Harrison flew, she said,
"I really got luck. It's the only way to fly. I loved it. It was the best time I ever had."
Brown poured Harrison a cup of champagne and set it on the ground. He said to Harrison that since she had flown in a balloon for her first time, she had to drink the champagne with no hands, using her teeth to pick up the cup. Harrison knelt down and picked up the cup with her teeth. Slowly, she bent her head back to taste the libation. Before she could finish the drink, Brown squirted her head from behind with champagne.
balloonists treat first-time flyers extra special. They are doused with champagne after they land.
Harrison yelled, "Aaahhh," and pulled her hair away from her eyes.
"I wasn't expecting that," she said. She laughed and finished her drink.
After they finished, the crew loaded the Firehawk into their pick-up and waved good-by-carting their craft back so that the mythical bird might one day fly again.
ide in make-up courses (high school r subjects in the Regents recom- that were missed in high school.
h school four years of English and science, social studies and math with int average of 2.0 on a 4.0 scale; or 1.0 GPA in nine hours of prescribed lege-level work before their first or
mmendation also states that freshwo years of foreign language in highile attending the university.
agistrative director for Associated student lobbying group, said he did students' recommendation to be a policy
could make exceptions for special
ceptions could total no more than 10
of entering freshmen. Admissions
r Kansas residents 21 or older with
a, and admission requirements for
would be left to each university.
courses that you can choose to take sions," Tallman said. "It's still a
ent body president at Kansas State concerned that the Regents are rebelens at KU."
nack, student body president at Forty, said he was not opposed to or different schools.
were two schools of thought behind is standards. The first is that the as needs to restrict admissions any students and not enough money. some students who enter state prepared for college, so something else is needed are prepared. He mitte made its preparation to be more prepared.
ing Bork
KANSAN MAGAZINE September 16, 1987
ouse devise a strategy to "stonew"l by defending the principle of executive privilege.
Watergate aside, Bark also sought reassure Sen. Dennis DeConcini, Ariz., that he is not antagonistic to e rights of women. "As solicitor general I argued positions for the protection of women broader than e Supreme Court would accept,"ork said.
"I never advised the White House sw to meet, how to deal with the 'atergate special prosecution arce.' Bork said. He said he did act orders from then-Attorney Genener Richardson to seek a compromise between Cox and the White House executive privilege
Concini, a key swing vote on the committee, also suggested Bork's sitions on poll taxes, integration of blic accommodations and other sues over the years might cause acks some alarm.
"We never achieved an accommodation." Bork testified.
still. Bork said he is troubled by the institutional rationale for a preme Court ruling ordering the segregation of public schools in the strict of Columbia in 1954.
Bork responded, "If I were a black an but knew my record, I don't ink I'd be concerned because it's a ad civil rights record."
14
I have not thought of a rationale "the ruling, Bork said. But after a reef access, he said he wanted to take it clear he does not support the notion of nationalism's pital and wouldn't 'ever dream of绒线" the 1964 decision
bringing the book to the classroom
Bork received kind words during
hearing from Senate Republican
iban Alan Simpson of Wyoming.
"It seems to be the extremism has an in the rhetoric of opponents of old Bork." Simpson said.
---
On the mild side
Sunny Day
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday September 17,1987 Vol.98,No.19
Details page 6
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Med workers are more wary of infections
By AMBER STENGER Staff writer
Staff writer
More health care employee at the University of Kansas Medical Center are making an effort to protect themselves from contracting infectious diseases, especially AIDS, employees say.
The Med Center has not changed its infection control policy because of AIDS, said Marcia A. Gillain, infection control coordinator. It's just that more employees are complying with its recommendations.
"Our philosophy really hasn't changed in regards to precautions," Gilliland said. "We've always taught that all blood and body fluids can be potentially infectious. What has happened is that people because of AIDS are more careful. And so somebody who used to be very lackadaisical when they got a little blood on their hands, is using gloves more now."
RAL HISTOR
1831
The AIDS virus can not be contracted through casual contact. The virus is transmitted through blood and body
The national Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta recommend that health care employees wear gloves whenever they may be in contact with a patient's blood or body fluids. When health care employees are in a situation where blood could splatter, such as treating a serious injury, they also are urged to wear protective gowns, masks and goggles. Blood, body fluids, mucous canes and unattached skin are potentially infections.
Jim Mathes, left, of Baldwin City, and Bill Medlen, Lawrence resident, apply Bird/X to the ledge above the Natural History Museum's main entrance. The chemical, which creates a sticky surface, is designed to prevent pigeons from landing on building ledges.
1005. Calligraphy =
KU tries
Students favor tougher policy for admissions
By NOEL GERDES
The recommendation would require freshmen, in addition to graduating, to have taken four years of English and three years each of science, social studies and math from an accredited Kansas high school.
The student advisory committee consists of the student body presidents of the Regents schools.
A student advisory committee today will recommend to the Board of Regents that Kansas high school students be required to complete certain courses to be guaranteed admission at the six state universities.
Staff writer
The Regents schools now have an open admissions policy, which means any Kansas resident who graduates from an accredited state high school is admitted automatically to any state university.
The Regents will meet at 9 a.m. today in Topeka to discuss tightening admissions requirements. Their own proposed requirements include a high school curriculum similar to the students' recommendation, but with two years of foreign language. The Regents proposal also includes an ACT score of 23 or better, and ranking in the top third of a class.
The advisory committee considered the Regents proposal before making its own, Jason Krakow, KU student body president, opposed part of the Regents proposal.
"I think to say a student has to have a 23 on the ACT to be successful is ridiculous." he said.
NASA
Left, MCI pilot Doug Callowa follows the lakw in Sunday morning's competition. Below, four members of a chase crew ride in a trailer on the way to their balloon's landing site. Gene Brown and crew, below middle, pack up the Firehawk.
PETER'S FAN
JACK PITT
TOM SCHULTZ AND BEN JOHNSON IN A HUNTING GROUND.
be students, recommendation, to be te university in fall 1991, freshmen
Topaz
Left, Douglas and crew struggle with high winds during Friday evening's attempted illumination ceremony. Above, in spite of lingering storm clouds, several hundred spectators came to see the balloons Friday evening.
Story By KIRK ADAMS
Photos by DIANE DULTMEIER
KANSAN MAGAZINE September 16, 1987 15
grade in make-up courses (high school or subjects in the Regents recom- that were missed in high school.
gh school four years of English and
science, social studies and math with
joint oweage of 2.0 on a 4.0 scale; or
2.0 GPA in nine hours of prescribed
college-level work before their first
first.
ommation also states that fresh-
two years of foreign language in high
school are required.
could make exceptions for special exceptions could total no more than 10 per entering freshmen. Admissions for Kansas residents 21 or older with ma, and admission requirements for s would be left to each university
legislative director for Associated a student lobbying group, said he did students' recommendation to be a s.policy.
g courses that you can choose to take issions," Tallman said. "It's still a
e were two schools of thought behind ms standards. The first is that the usas needs to restrict admissions young students and not enough money. it some students who enter state prepared for college, so something more prepared. He muttered his more recommendation to me more prepared.
dent body president at Kansas State 'm concerned that the Regents are problems at KU.'
mack, student body president at Fort sity, said he was not opposed to for different schools.
ng Bork
House devise a strategy to "stonewave" the principle of executive privilege.
"I never advised the White Houseow to meet, to deal with theVatergate special prosecutionorce." Bork said. He said he did actn orders from then-AttorneyGeneralRichardson to seek a compromisebetween Cox and the White Housever executive privilege.
"We never achieved an accomoation." Bork testified.
Watergate aside, Bark also sought) reassure Sen. Demis DeConcini, *B-Ariz*, that he is not antagonistic to te rights of women." As solicitor general I argued positions for the protection of women broader than we Supreme Court would accept," Ark said.
Concini, a key swing vote on the demittee, also suggested Bork's sitions on poll taxes, integration ofblic accommodations and other ues over the years might cause aeks some alarm.
Bork responded, "If I were a black an but knew my record, I don't ink I'd be concerned because it's a贴 civil rights record."
Still, Bork said he is troubled by the institutional rationale for a preme Court ruling ordering the segregation of public schools in the strict of Columbia in 1954.
"I have not thought of a rationale" the ruling, Bork said. But after a reef access, he said he wanted to ake it clear he does not support hog segregation in the nation's pital system in the dream of houg" the 1954 decision.
Bork received kind words during hearing from Senate Republican in Alan Simpson of Wyoming.
It also implies that of fighting
it seems to be the extremism has
en in the rhetoric of opponents of
disease Bork." Simpson said.
15
On the mild side
Sunny Day
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details page 6
Thursday September 17,1987 Vol.98,No.19
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Med workers are more wary of infections
By AMBER STENGER Staff writer
More health care employees at the University of Kansas Medical Center are making an effort to protect themselves from contracting infectious diseases, especially AIDS, employees say.
The Med Center has not changed its infection control policy because of AIDS, said Marcia G. Aillandil, infection control coordinator. It's just that more employees are complying with its recommendations.
"Our philosophy really hasn't changed in regards to precautions," Gilliland said. "We've always taught that all blood and body fluids can be potentially infectious. What has happened is that people because of AIDS are more careful. And so somebody who used to be very lackadaisical when they got a little blood on their hands, is using gloves more now."
The AIDS virus can not be contracted through casual contact. The virus is transmitted through blood and body fluids.
The national Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta recommend that health care employees wear gloves whenever they may be in contact with a patient's blood or body fluids. When health care employees are in a situation where blood could splatter, such as treating a serious injury, they also are urged to wear protective gowns, masks and goggles. Blood, body fluids, mucous canes and unattached skin are potentially infectious.
RAL HISTOR
1891
Jim Mathes, left, of Baldwin City, and Bill Meden, Lawrence resident, apply Bird/X to the ledge above the Natural History Museum's main entrance. The chemical, which creates a sticky surface, is designed to prevent pigeons from landing on building ledges.
Students favor tougher policy for admissions
By NOEL GERDES
Staff member
The recommendation would require freshmen, in addition to graduating, to have taken four years of English and three years each of science, social studies and math from an accredited Kansas high school.
A student advisory committee today will recommend to the Board of Regents that Kansas high school students be required to complete certain courses to be guaranteed admission at the six state universities.
The student advisory committee consists of the student body presidents of the Regents schools.
Staff writer
The Regents schools now have an open admissions policy, which means any Kansas resident who graduates from an accredited state high school is admitted automatically to any state university.
KU tries
The Regents will meet at 9 a.m. today in Topeka to discuss tightening admissions requirements. Their own proposed requirements include a high school curriculum similar to the students' recommendation, with two years of foreign language. The Regents proposal also includes an ACT score of 23 or better, and ranking in the top third of a class.
The advisory committee considered the Regents proposal before making its own. Jason Krawkow, KU student and a former staff member at UNC.
"I think to say a student has to have a 23 on the ACT to be successful is ridiculous," he said. "You can't succeed on the ACT to be successful."
he students' recommendation, to be 'e' university in fall 1991, freshmen
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First Day Morning - Thurs., Sept. 24 - 9:30 a.m.
Evening - Thurs., Sept. 24 - 7:30 p.m.
Second Day Morning - Friday, Sep. 25 - 9:30 a.m.
Evening - Friday, Sep. 25 - 7:30 p.m.
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Broadway - Oct. 3 9:30 a.m.
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KANSAN MAGAZINE September 16, 1987
gh school four years of English and science, social studies and math with point average of 2.0 on a 4.0 scale; or 2.0 GPA in nine hours of prescribed college-level work before their first or
ade in make-up courses (high school or subjects in the Regents recom-m that were missed in high school. commendation also states that fresh-two years of foreign language in high bile attending the university.
nack, student body president at Fort ity, said he was not opposed to or different schools.
could make exceptions for special exceptions could total no more than 10 or entering freshmen. Admissions for Kansas residents 21 or older with na, and admission requirements for would be left to each university.
legislative director for Associated a student lobbying group, said he did students' recommendation to be a politic.
lent body president at Kansas State "m concerned that the Regents are problems at KU."
courses that you can choose to take ssions," Tallman said. "It's still a
s were two schools of thought behind ns standards. The first is that the sas needs to restrict admissions any students and not enough money. t some students who enter state prepared for college, so something they have not prepared to mitte made its recommendation to be more prepared.
louse devise a strategy to "stonew-ll" by defending the principle of executive privilege.
"I never advised the White House how to, meet to deal with the Watergate special prosecution once." Bork said. He said he did act n orders from then-Attorney General Richardson to seek a compromise between Cox and the White House ver executive privilege.
Watergate aside, Birk also sought to reassure Sen. Dennis DeConciñ, b'Ariz, that he is not antagonistic to the rights of women." As solicitor general I argued positions for the protection of women broader than we Supreme Court would accept," b'Rak said.
"We never achieved an accommoation." Bork testified.
ing Bork
DeConcin, a key swing vote on the Decommittee, also suggested Bork's ositions on poll taxes, integration of public accommodations and other sues over the years might cause lacks some alarm.
Bork responded, "If I were a black anbut but knew my record, I don't ink'd be concerned because it's a sod civil rights record."
stall, Bork said he is troubled by the institutional rationale for a agreement Court ruling ordering the district judge to move the district of Columbia in 1954.
16
"I have not thought of a rationale r" the ruling, Bork said. But after a recess, he said he wanted to ake it clear he does not support segregation in the nation's dream of iteration." The 1994 decision.
ork received kind words during e hearing from Senate Republican hip Alan Simpson of Wyoming. "It seems to be the extremism has an in the rhetoric of opponents of bourd Bork." Simpson said.
On the mild side
阳光
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details page 6
Thursday September 17, 1987 Vol.98,No.19
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Med workers are more wary of infections
Staff writer
By AMBER STENGER Staff writer
More health care employees at the University of Kansas Medical Center are making an effort to protect themselves from contracting infectious diseases, especially AIDS, employees say.
The Med Center has not changed its infection control policy because of AIDS, said Marcia G. Aillandin, infection control coordinator. It's just that more employees are complying with its recommendations.
"Our philosophy really hasn't changed in regards to precautions," Gilland said. "We've always taught that all blood and body fluids can be potentially infectious. What has happened is that people because of AIDS are more careful. And so somebody who used to be very lackadaisical when they got a little blood on their hands, is using gloves more now."
is using blood to fight infection. The AIDS virus can not be contracted through casual contact. The virus is transmitted through blood and body fluids.
The national Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta recommend that health care employees wear gloves whenever they may be in contact with a patient's blood or body fluids. When health care employees are in a situation where blood could splatter, such as treating a serious injury, they also are urged to wear protective gowns, masks and goggles. Blood, body fluids, mucous membranes and unattached skin are potentially infectious.
RAL HISTOR
1891
Jim Mathes, left, of Baldwin City, and Bill Medlen, Lawrence resident, apply Bird/X to the ledge above the Natural History Museum's main entrance. The chemical, which creates a sticky surface, is designed to prevent pigeons from landing on building ledges.
Lisa Jones/KANSAN
Students favor tougher policy for admissions
By NOEL GERDES
Staff writer
A student advisory committee today will recommend to the Board of Regents that Kansas high school students be required to complete certain courses to be guaranteed admission at the six state universities.
KU tries
The recommendation would require freshmen, in addition to graduating, to have taken four years of English and three years each of science, social studies and math from an accredited Kansas high school.
The student advisory committee consists of the student body presidents of the Regents schools.
The Regents schools now have an open admissions policy, which means any Kansas resident who graduates from an accredited state high school is admitted automatically to any state university.
natureally to any state unit at a t. a.m. The Regents will meet at 9 a.m. today in Topeka to discuss tightening admissions requirements. Their own proposed requirements include a high school curriculum similar to the students' recommendation, but with two years of foreign language. The Regents proposal also includes an ACT score of 23 or better, and ranking in the top third of a class.
The advisory committee considered the Regents proposal before making its own, Jason Krakow, KU student body president, opposed part of the Regents proposal.
to be students recommendation, to be te university in fall 1991, freshmen
"I think to say a student has a 25 on the AC1 to be said," he said.
According to the students' recommendation, "I
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rade in make-up courses (high school or subjects in the Regents recom- that were missed in high school. commendation also states that fresh- two years of foreign language in high school including the university.
hig school four years of English and science, social studies and math with point average of 2.0 on a 4.0 scale; or a 2.0 GPA in nine hours of prescribed college-level work before their first or
could make exceptions for special exceptions could total no more than 10 ber of entering freshmen. Admissions for Kansas residents 21 or older with ma, and admission requirements for s would be left to each university.
legislative director for Associated a student lobbying group, said he did students' recommendation to be a as policy.
courses that you can choose to take jssions!" Tallman said. "It's still a
dent body president at Kansas State 'I'm concerned that the Regents are problems at KU.'
we were two schools of thought behind us standards. The first is that the us needs to restrict admissions many students and not enough money. it some students who enter state prepared for college, so something help them become more prepared. He amitte made its recommendation to me more prepared.
mack, student body president at Fort sity, said he was not opposed to for different schools.
ing Bork
House devise a strategy to "stonewall" by defending the principle of executive privilege.
"I never advised the White House to meet, how to deal with the Watergate special prosecution once," Bork said. He had act in orders from then-Attorney General Richardson to seek a compromise between Cox and the White House over executive privilege.
"We never achieved an accommodation." Bork testified.
Watergate aside, Bork also sought a reassure Sen. Dennis Concini, J-Ariz., that he is not antagonistic to the rights of women." As solicitor general I argued positions for the protection of women broader than he Supreme Court would accept," Jark said.
DeConcini, a key swing vote on the committee, also suggested Bork's sitions on poll taxes, integration of public accommodations and other sues over the years might cause lacks some alarm.
Bork responded, "If I were a black man but knew my record, I don't ink I'd be concerned because it's a civil rights record."
Still, Bork said he is troubled by the institutional rationale for a supreme Court ruling ordering the removal of the three judges in the district of Columbia in 1954.
Burke or Colmanham:
"I have not thought of a rationale r" the ruling. Bork said. But after a 'reec recess, he said he wanted to take it clear he does not support hoolgregation in the nation's spirit and wouldn't "ever dream of terruling" the 1954 decision.
Bork received kind words during a hearing from Senate Republican him also Senator of Wyoming.
"It seems to be the extremism has en in the rhetoric of opponents of edge Bork." Simpson said.
/
On the mild side
HOLY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details page 6
Thursday September 17,1987 Vol.98,No.19
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Med workers are more wary of infections
By AMBER STENGER Staff writer
More health care employees at the University of Kansas Medical Center are making an effort to protect themselves from contracting infectious diseases, especially AIDS, employees say.
The Med Center has not changed its infection control policy because of AIDS, said Marcia A. Gillain, infection control coordinator. It's just that more employees are complying with its recommendations.
"Our philosophy really hasn't changed in regards to precautions." Gilliland said. "We've always taught that all blood and body fluids can be potentially infectious. What has happened is that people because of AIDS are more careful. And so somebody who used to be very lackadaisical when they got a little blood on their hands, is using gloves now more."
The AIDS virus can not be contracted through casual contact. The virus is transmitted through blood and body fluids.
The national Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta recommend that health care employees wear gloves whenever they may be in contact with a patient's blood or body fluids. When health care employees are in a situation where blood could splatter, such as treating a serious injury, they also are urged to wear protective gowns, masks and goggles. Blood, body fluids, mucous membranes and unattached skin are potentially infectious.
RAL HISTORY
1830
Jim Mathes, left, of Baldwin City, and Bill Medlen, Lawrence resident, apply Bird/X to the ledge above the Natural History Museum's main entrance. The chemical, which creates a sticky surface, is designed to prevent pigeons from landing on building ledges.
Students favor tougher policy for admissions
KU tries
By NOEL GERDES
Staff writer
A student advisory committee today will recommend to the Board of Regents that Kansas high school students be required to complete certain courses to be guaranteed admission at the six state universities.
The student advisory committee consists of the student body presidents of the Regents schools.
The recommendation would require freshmen, in addition to graduating, to have taken four years of English and three years each of science, social studies and math from an accredited Kansas high school.
The Regents will meet at 9 a.m. today in Topeka to discuss tightening admissions requirements. Their own proposed requirements include a high school curriculum similar to the students' recommendation, with two years of foreign language. The Regents proposal also includes an ACT score of 23 or better, and ranking in the top third of a class.
The advisory committee considered the Regents proposal before making its own. Jason Krakow, KU student body president, opposed part of the Regents proposal
e students' recommendation, to be e university in fall 1991, freshmen
"I think to say a student has 16 have on the AC 1 to be successful is ridiculous." he said.
The Open Admissions Question
"The system of open admissions has served the state of Kansas well over the years. It must be continued." Chancellor Gene A: Budig
High school diploma: Yes
Minimum test score: None
Class rank: No
High School GPA: No
Chancellor Gene A. Budig
High School Courses:
None required
The University of Kansas
"We are the most prestigious university in the state and I think students work harder to get into our school." Millard Storey, director of admissions
High School Courses:
4 English, 3 Math, 3 Science,
3 Social Science, 3 Foreign Language
High school diploma: Yes
Min. score: 23 ACT/1000 SAT
Class rank: Top 30%
High School GPA: No
The University of Colorado
B y
N O E L
S tephen Tonkin admits he was a marginal student in high school.
G E R D E S
Classes were difficult, especially math and English. Tonklin, Roeland Park freshman, said he made it through high school without reading a whole book.
Tomorrow, the Regents will meet in Topeka to discuss raising admissions standards at KU and other Regents schools. Stanleykopil, executive director of the board, said last week that he would recommend stricter instate requirements for some schools.
Since 1975, KU's enrollment has increased steadily. Last
Legislators, Regents, and some KU administrators and faculty members say the situation warrants a look at stricter requirements for admitting Kansas students. But KU, following the strong stand taken by Chancellor Gene A. Budig, is steadfastly against restricting admission of in-state students.
He graduated from high school in May, but said he was academically unprepared to come to KU. The University had to accept him anyway.
Since 1915, any graduate of an accredited Kansas high school, regardless of academic competency, is entitled to attend any state college or university and be enrolled in education philosophy has been to give Kansans the opportunity to go to the college of their choice.
But more people are beginning to question that philosophy.
Next week, KU's University Council, a faculty governance group, will hold a special meeting to discuss the effects of selective admissions.
Increasing enrollment, crowded classrooms, overworked faculty and little financing fat to trim have heightened the debate.
It's a problem of balance. Administrators, legislators, faculty and students are asking, "Can KU balance opportunity and excellence, and still offer open admissions?"
year's growth was the largest in
the Big Eight. The fall 1986
enrollment jump of 1,048
students at the Lawrence campus was three times the growth of
the second-fastest growing Big Eight school. First-day enrollment figures for fall 1987 show the Lawrence campus has grown by 882 students. That figure is likely to increase when the University releases 20th day enrollment figures later this month.
Meanwhile, state financing has not kept pace with growth. The results, some faculty members complain, are larger classes and less time for individual student attention.
"By limiting the number of students that can get into KU, you are dealing with the symptom, not the problem," said David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs. "Funding is the problem."
The Regents plan, called Margin of Excellence, is a three-year proposal that will bring budgets of Regents schools to within 95 percent of their peers. KU's peer schools are the University of Colorado-Boulder, University of
Ambler and other administration officials are optimistic about better fiscal times. The Board of Regents recently unveiled a plan to increase the money Kansas spends on education to a level comparable to peer institutions.
"It cannot, over the long run, but erode the education of for every student that is here," he said.
"Faculty members are running faster to stay in the same place," said Robert Lineberry, dean of liberal arts and sciences.
Some faculty say the situation warrants a look at selective admissions, but top KU administrators prefer to look toward the state to match financing with growth.
Iowa, University of Oregon,
University of Oklahoma and
University of North Carolina —
Chapel Hill. KU's budget is at
86.5 percent of peer average.
Lineberry and other faculty members worry that without additional state money to make up for student increases, the quality of education will decline.
H O R A K
Even though administrators are optimistic about budget increases, they reluctantly say that, without a budget increase that parallels student growth, limiting enrollment becomes an option.
In an attempt to slow enrollment growth, KU already has raised admission standards for out-of-state freshmen, effective next spring. Under the new requirements, out-of-state students must have a 3.0 grade point average after six semesters in high school, or at least a 2.0 GPA with an ACT composite of 23, or at least a 2.0 GPA with completion of the Regents high school curriculum. Out-of-state students with a GPA under 2.0 are automatically denied entry. Those who have at least a 2.0 GPA but don't meet other requirements are admitted on a limited basis.
KU set admission application deadlines for all students for the first time last spring in an effort to control and predict enrollment growth. But if current efforts don't slow growth and the budget doesn't keep pace, in-state enrollment limits may be another option.
M I C H A E L
In KU were to go to selective admissions for in-state students, it would be following a national trend. Forty-seven out of 50 states have some type of selective admission policy for in-state students. KU is the only one of its peer schools with open admission for in-state freshmen.
"We will simply work harder and say, 'with a finite level of resources there is a finite number of students we can enroll and ensure the same quality of education,'" Ambler said.
Del Shankel, former acting executive vice chancellor and professor of microbiology, said, "You can only add so much water to the soup before it becomes less nutritious."
For example, the University of Colorado requires all prospective freshmen, regardless of residency, to have taken four years of English; three years each of math, science social science and foreign language; and have an ACT composite score of at least 23 and ranking in the top 30 percent of a high school class.
KU's other peer institutions have less stringent admission standards, but at minimum, each requires completion of certain high school courses. Four of the five require minimum ACT or SAT composite scores.
Vancrum and supporters of a required high school curriculum say such a policy would ensure that KU freshmen would have basic competency in core classes. That would mean, they say, fewer freshman would flunk out.
State Rep. Robert Vancrum, R-Overland Park, said the Regents schools should raise admission requirements.
"The university for many students is not a competitive experience . . . it's too available to some of them." Vancrum said. "I've got real doubts whether some of those kids belong in the undergraduate curriculum at KU."
During the last legislative session, Vancram introduced a bill that would have allowed the Regents to require their recommended high school curriculum. The recommended high school curriculum is: four years of English, three years each of science, math and social studies, and two years of foreign language.
Small high school officials, mostly in western and southeast Kansas, say their students would have a hard time completing two years of foreign language. About 70 out of the state's 580 public high schools don't offer foreign
Vancrum's bill didn't pass. The key stumbling block, Vancrum said, was foreign language. He said legislators felt that small high schools could not meet that curriculum requirement.
language. The costs of bringing in a foreign language teacher are too great, they say.
One high school that might find it difficult to comply is Syracuse High School in Syracuse, a small western Kansas school with a graduating class last year of 45.
Ron Ewy, the school counselor,
said the school employed only one half-time Spanish teacher.
Requiring two years of foreign language would mean the school would have to hire additional help, which would cost the district additional money.
KU officials say foreign language, like all of the other Regents curriculum guidelines, should remain a recommendation, and not become a requirement.
Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, said that the object of the Regents high school curriculum is to make sure students are prepared for college — not to limit their opportunity to study. She said she fears that if high school classes are required, many good students will be denied entry to KU.
instead, KU wants to emphasize the importance of taking the recommended classes when it sends recruiters to high schools.
"We are telling students that if they really want to go to KU, they should be properly prepared," Ramaley said.
She also opposes screening Kansas residents on the basis of standardized tests, class rankings and GPAs because they don't measure motivation and willingness to work.
"How do you tell the quality of a person and how they will develop within the institution?" she asked. "There is no test for that."
Still, some state legislators weigh the question and find open admissions wanting.
"I'm not for open admissions," said State Rep. James Lowther, R-Emporia. "All the testimony I've listened to is that open enrollment is a historic tradition and must be maintained at all
h school four years of English and science, social studies and math with aint average of 2.0 on a 4.0 scale; or 2.0 GPA in nine hours of prescribed college-level work before their first or
made in make-up courses high school or subjects in the Regents reco-
m that were missed in high school.
ommendation also states that fresh- two years of foreign language in high hile attending the university.
could make exceptions for special exceptions could total no more than 10 or entering freshmen. Admissions for Kansas residents 21 or older with na, and admission requirements for i would be left to each university.
elegant director for Associated a student lobbying group, said he did students' recommendation to be a policy.
p courses that you can choose to take sessions." Tallman said. "It's still a
dent body president at Kansas State 'm concerned that the Regents are problems at KU.'
e were two schools of thought behind us standards. The first is that the sas needs to restrict admissions any students and not enough money. t some students who enter state prepared for college, so something elp them become more prepared. He immitte made its recommendation to me more prepared.
mack, student body president at Fort sity, said he was not opposed to for different schools.
House devise a strategy to "stonewall" by defending the principle of executive privilege.
1g Bork
"I never advised the White House how to meet, how to deal with the Watergate special prosecution force." Bork said. He said he did act in orders from then-Attorney General Richardson to seek a compromise between Cox and the White House over executive privilege.
"We never achieved an accommodation." Bork testified.
Watergate aside, Bork also sought o reassure Sen. Dennis Concini,-) Ariz., that he is not antagonistic to the rights of women." As solicitor general I argued positions for the protection of women broader than he Supreme Court would accept," lark said.
Concini, a key swing vote on the committee, also suggested Bork's ositions on poll taxes, integration of public accommodations and other sues over the years might cause lacks some alarm.
Bork responded, "If I were a black man but knew my record, I don't ink I'd be concerned because it's a civil rights record."
Still, Bork said he is troubled by the institutional rationale for a preamble Court ruling ordering the release of former President Donald Trump in the district of Columbia in 1954.
"I have not thought of a rationale r" the ruling, Bork said. But after a jief recess, he said he wanted to prevent it, and he hoped school segregation in the nation's palit and wouldn't "ever dream of zerruling" the 1984 decision.
18
Bork received kind words during hearing from Senate Republican bin Alan Simpson of Wyoming.
"It seems to be the extremist nomen in the rhetoric of opponents of idge Bork," Simpson said.
KANSAN MAGAZINE September 16, 1987
On the mild side
SUN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details page 6
Thursday September 17,1987 Vol.98,No.19
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Med workers are more wary of infections
By AMBER STENGER
Staff writer
More health care employees at the University of Kansas Medical Center are making an effort to protect themselves from contracting infectious diseases, especially AIDS, employees say.
The Med Center has not changed its infection control policy because of AIDS, said Marcia G. Aillandi, infection control coordinator. It's just that more employees are complying with its recommendations.
"Our philosophy really hasn't changed in regards to precautions," Gilland said. "We've always taught that all blood and body fluids can be potentially infectious. What has happened is that people because of AIDS are more careful. And so somebody who used to be very lackadaisical when they got a little blood on their hands, is using gloves more now."
is using gloves now more. The AIDS virus can not be contracted through casual contact. The virus is transmitted through blood and body fluids.
The national Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta recommend that health care employees wear gloves whenever they may be in contact with a patient's blood or body fluids. When health care employees are in a situation where blood could splatter, such as treating a serious injury, they also are urged to wear protective gowns, masks and goggles. Blood, body fluids, mucous membranes and unattached skin are potentially infect-
RAL HISTOR
1831
Jim Mathes, left, of Baldwin City, and Bill Medlen, Lawrence resident, apply Bird/X to the ledge above the Natural History Museum's main entrance. The chemical, which creates a sticky surface, is designed to prevent pigeons from landing on building ledges.
KU tries
Students favor tougher policy for admissions
Bv NOEL GERDES
Staff writer
A student advisory committee today will recommend to the Board of Regents that Kansas high school students be required to complete certain courses to be guaranteed admission at the six state universities.
The recommendation would require freshmen, in addition to graduating, to have taken four years of English and three years each of science, social studies and math from an accredited Kansas high school.
The student advisory committee consists of the student body presidents of the Regents schools.
The Regents schools now have an open admissions policy, which means any Kansas resident who graduates from an accredited state high school is admitted automatically to any state university.
the Regents will meet at 9 a.m. today in Topeka to discuss tightening admissions requirements. Their own proposed requirements include a high school curriculum similar to the students' recommendation, but with two years of foreign language. The Regents proposal also includes an ACT score of 23 or better, and ranking in the top third of a class.
The advisory committee considered the Regents proposal before making its own. Jason Krakow, KU student and a former assistant dean of the college, said:
"I think to say a student has to have a 23 on the ACT to be successful is ridiculous," he said. "It should not be to believe that the
be students, recommendation, to be de university in fall 1991, freshmen
"I don't think a university can appeal to a Rhodes Scholar and at the same time appeal to students who barely make it through high school." Michael Barron, director of admissions
High school diploma: Yes
Min. score: 25 ACT/980 SAT
Class rank: Top 50%
High School GPA: No
The University of Iowa
High School Courses:
(Beginning 1990)
4 English, 3 math, 3 Natural Sciences,
3 Social Sciences,
2 Foreign Language
costs. Those costs are increasing all the time and I don't think that we can afford it."
KU administrators write off enrollment - caps as far from feasible and say they've been given only passing consideration.
Lowther advocates a serious look at enrollment caps for state universities. He said the Regents should look at a school's budget and classroom space to determine optimum enrollment. Once a school reaches its optimum level, students will be denied entry from that school but can attend other state schools.
"If you are better able to manage where students go, you wouldn't have the uneven distribution of students and it would make budgets easier to set." he said.
Ramaley linked an enron ment cap to a hydraulic press.
ment up. "If you stop up some place, something else will blow," she said. "You can't predict it."
special interests. While Regents, administrators and legislators will control the open admissions debate, the future of potential KU students hangs in the balance.
support in schools. The Regents will meet tomorrow to Topeka to discuss raising admission standards at KU and other Regents schools. The University Council will meet next week and will discuss the effects of selective admissions in a special meeting.
Educational excellence and opportunity can best be balanced, the administration contends, by taking steps to predict enrollment increases and taking the steps to accommodate growth.
It is students like Stephen Tonkin, who, under a selective admissions policy, might be excluded from KU.
included from HR.
Tonkin says that would be
wrong.
"I we deny admissions to a
person, we are saying they can't go
here...but you can go to another
state school."
Barbara Polk, director of admissions
High school diploma: Yes
Min. score: 800 SAT
Class rank: Special
High School GPA: No
"I know I messed around in high school, but I came up here to get a new start," he said. "KU is giving me a second chance. I will try my best to succeed here. If I make it, I make it. If I don't, at least I was given the chance to try."
mrgn School Courses:
4 English, 3 Math, 1 Science, 2
Social Science, 2 Foreign
Language
The University of North Carolina
"People really want schools with good reputations. When you raise admission requirements, you raise your prestige."
Marc Borish, director of admissions
High school diploma. Yes
Min. score: 18 ACT/760 SAT
Class rank: Top 50% or 3.1
High School GPA. No
High School Courses:
(Beginning 1988) 4 English,
3 Math, 2 Science, 2 Social
Science
The University of Oklahoma
"In Oregon, it makes sense to have a tiered system with various degrees of admittance requirements. We don't have the space to expand." James Buch, director of admissions
High school diploma: Yes
Min. score: If GPA is low
Class rank: No
High School GPA: 3.0
High School Courses:
4 English, 3 Math, 3 Science,
Social Science, 2 other college
prep courses
The University of Oregon
H.S. COURSES
CLASS RANK
S GRADES
S DIPLOMA
ACT SCORE
Illustration by TOM PAJKOS
KANSAN MAGAZINE September 16, 1987 10
trade in make-up courses (high school for subjects in the Regents recommen-
that were missed in high school. commendation also states that fresh- two years of foreign language in high school during the university.
igh school four years of English and
science, social studies and math with
point average of 2.0 on a 4.0 scale; or
a 2.0 GPA in nine hours of prescribed
college-level work before their first
c or
legislative director for Associated a student lobbying group, said he did students' recommendation to be a policy
g courses that you can choose to take issuations." Tallman said. "It's still a
could make exceptions for special exceptions could total no more than 10 ber of entering freshmen. Admissions for Kansas residents 21 or older with ma, and admission requirements for s would be left to each university.
we were two schools of thought behind our standards. The first is that the usas needs to restrict admissions many students and not enough money, it some students who enter state prepared for college, so something else was prepared. He committee made its recommendation to me more prepared.
dent body president at Kansas State
'm concerned that the Regents are
not meeting the requirements.
mack, student body president at Fortity, said he was not opposed to for different schools.
House devise a strategy to "stonewall" by defending the principle of executive privilege.
ng Bork
"I never advised the White House how to meet, how to deal with the Watergate special prosecution force," Bork said. He did act in orders from then-Attorney General Richardson to seek a compromise between Cox and the White House over executive privilege.
"We never achieved an accommodation." Bork testified.
Watergate aside, Bork also sought o recharge Sen. Dennis DeConcini-. -Ariz., that he is not antagonistic to he rights of women." As solicitor eneral I argued positions for the protection of women broader than he Supreme Court would accept," lark said.
CondeCinci, a key swing vote on the committee, also suggested Bork's ositions on poll taxes, integration of public accommodations and other auses over the years might cause 'aacks some alarm.
Bork responded, "If I were a black man but knew my record, I don't ink'd be concerned because it's a civil rights record."
Still, Bork said he is troubled by the institutional rationale for a supreme Court ruling ordering the segregation of public schools in the district of Columbia in 1954.
"I have not thought of a rationale r" the ruling, Bork said. But after a ief recess, he said he wanted to it clear he does not support hool segregation in the nation's courts, according toream of retelling" the 1964 decision.
Bork received kind words during a hearing from Senate Republican Alan Simpson of Wyoming.
19
imp pass on the prize.
"It it seems to be the extremism has en in the rhetoric of opponents of edge Bork." Simpson said.
-
On the mild side
A
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details page 6
Thursday September 17,1987 Vol.98,No.19
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Med workers are more wary of infections
Staff writer
By AMBER STENGER
Staff writer
More health care employees at the University of Kansas Medical Center are making an effort to protect themselves from contracting infectious diseases, especially AIDS, employees say.
The Med Center has not changed its infection control policy because of AIDS, said Marcia G. Aillandin, infection control coordinator. It's just that more employees are complying with its recommendations.
“Our philosophy really hasn't changed in regards to precautions,” Gilliland said. “We've always taught that all blood and body fluids can be potentially infectious. What has happened is that people because of AIDS are likely to have a new anybody who used to be hardy lackadassaulted when they got a little blood on their hands, is using gloves more now.”
The AIDS virus can not be contracted through casual contact. The virus is transmitted through blood and body
The national Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta recommend that health care employees wear gloves whenever they may be in contact with a patient's blood or body fluids. When health care employees are in a situation where blood could splatter, such as treating a serious injury, they also are urged to wear protective gowns, masks and goggles. Blood, body fluids, mucous membranes and unattached skin are potentially infec-
RAL HISTOR
1831
Lisa Jones/KANSAN
Jim Mathes, left, of Baldwin City, and Bill Medlen, Lawrence resident, apply Bird/X to the ledge above the Natural History Museum's main entrance. The chemical, which creates a sticky surface, is designed to prevent pigeons from landing on building ledges.
Students favor tougher policy for admissions
KUtries
By NOEL GERDES
A student advisory committee today will recommend to the Board of Regents that Kansas high school students be required to complete certain courses to be guaranteed admission at the six state universities.
The recommendation would require freshmen, in addition to graduating, to have taken four years of English and three years each of science, social studies and math from an accredited Kansas high school.
Staff writer
The student advisory committee consists of the student body, presidents of the Regents schools.
The Regents schools now have an open admissions policy, which means any Kansas resident who graduates from an accredited state high school is admitted automatically to any state university.
The Regents will meet at 9 a.m. today in Topeka to discuss tightening admissions requirements. Their own proposed requirements include a high school curriculum similar to the students' recommendation, but with two years of foreign language. The Regents proposal also includes an ACT score of 23 or better, and ranking in the top third of a class.
The advisory committee considered the Regents proposal before making its own. Jason Krakow, KU student body president, opposed part of the Regents proposal.
"I think to say a student has to have a 23 on the AC1 to be successful is ridiculous," he said.
students' recommendation, to be university in fall 1991, freshmen
When workers aren't there business doesn't work
AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY
Share Your Good Health
GIVE BLOOD!
American Red Cross
PEOPLE WHO SHOULDN'T CLIP COUPONS: PEOPLE WHO NEVER SPEND MONEY
SAVE WITH
KANSAN COUPONS
20 KANSAN MAGAZINE September 16, 1987
If KU were to make admissions requirements more stringent than those of other state schools, some people question whether the benefits of increased prestige would outweigh the harm of re-enforcing an image of KU as "Snob Hill."
"Students really want schools with good reputations," said Marc Borish, director of admissions at the University of Oklahoma in Norman. "When you raise admission requirements, you raise your prestige."
Several university admissions experts and high school counselors are unsure what effect such an "elitist image" might have.
Borish said education quality was important, but that many high school students focused on a
Experts say added prestige may keep 'Snob Hill' image
Almost all admissions directors at KU's peer institutions say that raising admissions standards increases a university's prestige, which makes it easier to recruit the state's top high school students.
school's perceived quality.
Stanley Koplik, executive director of the Kansas Board of Regents, agrees that prestige perception plays a role in college selection.
Koplik said his niece was an example of this. His niece was a graduate of an East Coast high school, and she averaged average and high SAT score.
"When I saw her, I asked about the schools she was thinking about attending," he said. "She rattled off a number of private and public schools, and KU wasn't on the list. I asked her why it wasn't, and she said, 'I can't go there, it's not selective.'"
But there are many who feel elitism would hurt KU.
One Chicago area high school counselor predicted that more of his school's top students would attend KU if requirements were higher because of a positive perception of elitist status.
Chancellor Gene A. Budig has said that an elitist perception caused by selective admissions
requirements, especially enrollment caps, would be bad for KU. He said it would create a first and second class of students.
By setting KU and its students up as the best in the state, KU could alienate both alumni and legislators, administrators worry.
"Kansans would not support such a system of perceived inequality with their tax dollars," he said.
High school counselors in small Kansas communities have said that elitism might scare their students away from KU.
Mary Ann Hill, a counselor from Clearwater High School in Clearwater, said that most of the school's seniors had already chosen to go to K-State, in part because of KU's Snob Hill perception.
"The message is out here in these small schools." Hill said. "Additional uneven admissions requirements would make the problem worse."
-M.H., N.G.
Unprepared students set for failure, officials say
People make a wrong assumption when they talk about open admissions, says Marc Borish, director of admissions at the University of Oklahoma in Norman.
Information from the KU office of institutional research and planning indicates that about 7 percent of freshmen who entered the University of Kansas in fall 1984 had dropped out after their first semester. After two semesters, the figure grew to
Borish and other Big Eight admissions officials say that one danger of open admissions is that students who aren't academically ready for college are set up for failure. Under open admissions in this state, any graduate of an accredited Kansas high school may enter any Regents school, whether he is academically prepared or not.
"They think that anyone who walks through that door is equally prepared for college." Borish said. "That is not true."
"The worst thing you can do to a person is give that person the perfect opportunity to fail," Borish said.
about 20 percent.
Del Shankel, former acting executive vice chancellor and professor of microbiology, said, "It's true we sort of say, 'Sink or swim,' but we give them enough help so they can swim."
For example, the Student Assistance Center offers study skills workshops and refers students with academic problems to tutors. And last year the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences offered three remedial classes — English 050, Math 000 and Math 002. This fall, however, the college stopped offering English 050 and Math 000.
Robert Lineberry, dean of liberal arts and sciences, said the college discontinued those courses because it was unwise to devote time and money to high school education at a time when resources were scarce for college education.
That decision disappointed teachers like Theresa Pickel, lecturer in English. Pickel taught English 650 last fall and this fall teaches three English classes, including English 101.
"A semester of English 101
probably will not prepare students who need English 050 for the common final." Picket said. "I will either have to say 'too bad' about these students and let them fail, or I will have to spend three hours a week with every student that needs extra attention."
Bruce Lindvall, KU director of colleges, said he recommended that students put themselves at the state school where they would be the most successful. Besides the seven Regents schools, there are 19 community colleges in Kansas, he said.
Lindvall said the average high school student's grade point average dropped 4 to 5 points on a 4.0 scale during the student's freshman year at KU. For example, a student who earned a 2.0 GPA in high school could expect to earn a GPA of 1.6 or 1.5 at KU, he said.
“Remember, you can never be overprepared.” Lindvall said. “Can you be underprepared? Yes.”
-N.G., M.H.
a school four years of English and science, social studies and math with int average of 2.0 on a 4.0 scale; or 0 GPA in nine hours of prescribedlege-level work before their first or
de in make-up courses (high school subjects in the Regents recom- hat were missed in high school. mendation also states that fresh- two years of foreign language in high ile attending the university.
make exceptions for special
eceptions could total no more than 10
or entering freshmen. Admissions
r Kansas residents 21 or older with
a, and admission requirements for
would be left to each university
agistrative director for Associated student lobbying group, said he did students' recommendation to be a policy
courses that you can choose to take sions," Tallman said. "It's still a
were two schools of thought behind is standards. The first is that the as needs to restrict admissions my students and not enough money.
ny students and not enough money. some students who enter state prepared for college, so something lp them become more prepared. He nitee made its recommendation to je more prepared.
louse devise a strategy to "stonew-ll" by defending the principle of executive privilege.
that a president body president at Kansas State concerned that the Regents are problems at KU."
nack, student body president at Forti-
ity, said he was not opposed to
or different schools.
ig Bork
"I never advised the White House ow to meet, how to deal with the laterate special prosecution rce." Bork said. He said he did act n orders from then-Attorney General Richardson to seek a compromise etween Cox and the White House ver executive privilege.
"We never achieved an accommodation." Bork testified.
Watergate aside, Bork also sought reassure Sen. Dennis Concini, B-Ariz, that he is not antagonistic to the rights of women. "As solicitor general I argued positions for the protection of women broader than se Supreme Court would accept," said
Concini, a key swing vote on the committee, also suggested Bork's sitions on poll taxes, integration of ubile accommodations and other sues over the years might cause lacks some alarm.
Bork responded, "If I were a black man but knew my record, I don't sink i'd be concerned because it's a civil rights record."
Still, Bork said he is troubled by the constitutional rationale for a supreme Court ruling ordering the segregation of public schools in the city.
"I have not thought of a rationale" the ruling, Bork said. But after a rief recess, he said he wanted to it clear he does not support school segregation in the nation's policy. In the 1954 dream of amending "the 1954 decision"
Bork received kind words during e hearing from Senate Republican hip Alan Simpson of Wyoming. "It seems to be the extremism has seen in the rhetoric of opponents of bdore Bork." Simpson said.
On the mild side
sunshine
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday September 17,1987 Vol.98,No.19
Details page 6
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Med workers are more wary of infections
Staff writer
By AMBER STENGER
Staff writer
More health care employees at the University of Kansas Medical Center are making an effort to protect themselves from contracting infectious diseases, especially AIDS, employees say.
The Med Center has not changed its infection control policy because of AIDS, said Marcia A. Gillandil, infection control coordinator. It's just that more employees are complying with its recommendations.
"Our philosophy really hasn't changed in regards to precautions," Gilliland said. "We've always taught that all blood and body fluids can be potentially infectious. What has happened is that people because of AIDS are more careful. And so somebody who used to be very lackadaisical when they got a little blood on their hands, is using gloves more now."
RAL HISTOR
1901
The AIDS virus can not be contracted through casual contact. The virus is transmitted through blood and body fluids.
The national Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta recommend that health care employees wear gloves whenever they may be in contact with a patient's blood or body fluids. When health care employees are in a situation where blood could splatter, such as treating a serious injury, they also are urged to wear protective gowns, masks and goggles. Blood, body fluids, mucous membranes and unattached skin are potentially infectious.
Jim Mathes, left, of Baldwin City, and Bill Medlen, Lawrence resident, apply Bird/X to the ledge above the Natural History Museum's main entrance. The chemical, which creates a sticky surface, is designed to prevent pigeons from landing on building ledges.
KU tries
Students favor tougher policy for admissions
By NOEL GERDES
Staff writer
The recommendation would require freshmen, in addition to graduating, to have taken four years of English and three years each of science, social studies and math from an accredited Kansas high school.
A student advisory committee today will recommend to the Board of Regents that Kansas high school students be required to complete certain courses to be guaranteed admission at the six state universities.
The student advisory committee consists of the student body presidents of the Regents schools.
The Regents schools now have an open admissions policy, which means any Kansas resident who graduates from an accredited state high school is admitted automatically to any state university.
intervention
The Regents will meet at 9 a.m. today in Topeka to discuss tightening admissions requirements. Their own proposed requirements include a high school curriculum similar to the students' recommendation, but with two years of foreign language. The Regents proposal also implies the more of 23 or better, and ranking in the third of a class.
By ANNE LUSCOMBE
"I think to say a student has to have a 23 on the ACT to be successful is ridiculous," he said.
The advisory committee considered the Regents proposal before making its own. Jason Krakow, KU student body president, opposed part of the Regents proposal.
Bob Valesente
More recently, I really thought Tom Landry of the Dallas Cowboys showed such commitment to an organization and had such a style of coaching.
LUNA'S
RESTORED
Bob Valesente
Kansas football coach Bob Valente is beginning his second year as head coach, but he is in his 24th year of coaching. He has coached at Cornell, Arizona, Mississippi State and worked with the Baltimore Colts as a secondary coach for a season before coming to Kansas.
A: I have always admired Coach Lombardi — followed his career very closely, what he taught to his players, the procedures, what it takes to be a coach — and then of course, Knute Rocke. He was a man who was legend. He was ahead of his time in coaching and working with players. He was the essence of what coaching was all about.
But Valesente didn't become involved in coaching immediately after he graduated from Ithaca College in New York. Instead, he signed a major league contract with the Chicago Cubs for the 1962-63 seasons. At Ithaca, Valesente played football and baseball. As a center fielder, he won All-America honors and led his alma mater to a berth in the College World Series in 1962.
Here is a look at Bob Valesente, the coach and the man.
Q: Is there a particular college or professional coach that you admired as a child or any you look up to now?
Answer: My favorite pro team when
I was a kid was the Cleveland Browns.
Question: What is your favorite pro team?
Otto Graham and Jimmy Brown had such tremendous talent. Paul Brown was an outstanding football coach. I had two favorite teams, the Cleveland Browns and Green Bay Packers. Vince Lombardi, Bart Starr, Timmy Taylor . . . Those were my ball clubs.
1 love competition. Competition is my life. I love to compete. I love to win. The whole idea of practice is to get ready to compete for the game itself.'
A: I walk, and I read. I go over game plans and personnel adjustments.
Q: Get much sleep before a game?
A: Oh yes, I love competition. Com
Q: What do you do the night before the game to relax?
Q: What do you think about Bo
Jackson and his new-found hobby?
Q: What were your reasons for switching from baseball to football?
A: I always loved football. Football is my life. I always envisioned myself as a pro football player, not baseball player. I love the contact. God gave me two gifts, one, that I love to hit, and that I had good speed. I didn't have a lot of talent, you know, and I was fortunate enough to build on those two gifts that I had and that's all. I never had a lot of talent, and I couldn't hit a curve ball. I started out, and I wanted to play professional football but no one would give me the opportunity. But they gave me the opportunity to play baseball. And then, when I was looking for jobs, the only way I could get to be a football coach was to be an assistant baseball coach. That led into being an assistant football coach. When it got to the point when I could get out of baseball, I did. But it came to the point there for four or five years when I was at Cornell University that I was eating peanut butter and jelly sandwiches for dinner because I was coaching two sports. I was juggling two sports rather than being with my family. And to keep that from happening I got out of baseball. But football was my first love, other than my family and my religion. You better put that down, or I'll get in trouble.
A. Boy Jackson is a great athlete. About his playing pro football, I think if he had a chance to retract that word, "hobby," he would probably take it back because he knows what kind of commitment it takes to play both. Any athlete who has played in the Southeast Conference in football and was an All-American and made it into baseball knows the commitment it takes to play professional sports. He's taken enough verbal abuse about it. I wish him success.
and instructors, the state
Association of the students' recommendation, to be
formed for fourteen
petition is my life. I love to compete, I love to win. The whole idea of practice is to get ready to compete for the game itself. I'm excited about the games. I'm in a very competitive frame of mind. The competition and pressure keeps you young definitely. But you have to have special time with your family. You have to realize the difference between dedication and stupidity.
1970
the students' recommendation, to be ate university in fall 1991, freshmen
gadget
A: Well, the day I took the top off the pen and I was diagramming something on the sidelines and I put the pen back in my pocket and I looked down about five minutes later and my whole shirt was covered with blue. Somebody came up to me and said, "Hey coach, are you bleeding blue? Are you really that much of a Jayhawk fan? You really must be to be bleeding blue."
Q: And after the game?
Q: Let's end this with a laugh. What is one of the most humorous things that ever happened to you during a game?
KANSAN MAGAZINE September 16, 1987 21
A: I like to spend quiet time with my family. The family is the focal point of my life. There are lots of times when I need to take care of their needs first.
grade in make-up courses (high school for subjects in the Regents recom- mend that were missed in high school. commendation also states that fresh-two years of foreign language in high while attending the university.
high school four years of English and f science, social studies and math with point average of 2.0 on a 4.0 scale; or n 2.0 GPA in nine hours of prescribed college-level work before their first r or
could make exceptions for special exceptions could total no more than 10 ber of entering freshmen. Admissions to Kansas residents 21 or older with ma, and admission requirements for ts would be left to each university.
legislative director for Associated a student lobbying group,said he did students' recommendation to be a policyman.
ig courses that you can choose to take
sessions." Tallman said. "It's still a
course."
re were two schools of thought behind ons standards. The first is that the nsas needs to restrict admissions nany students and not enough money. at some students who enter state t prepared for college, so something help them become more prepared. He nmite made its recommendation to me more prepared.
mack, student body president at Fort
rity, said he was not opposed to
for different schools.
ident body president at Kansas State I'm concerned that the Regents are
House devise a strategy to "stonewall" by defending the principle of executive privilege.
ng Bork
"I never advised the White House how to meet, how to deal with the Watergate special prosecution force," Bork said. He said he did act on orders from then-Attorney General Richardson to seek a compromise between Cox and the White House over executive privilege.
"We never achieved an accommodation." Bork testified.
Watgate aside, Bork also sought o reissue Sen. Dennis DeConcini, D-Ariz, that he is not antagonistic to the rights of women. "As solicitor general I argued positions for the protection of women broader than the Supreme Court would accept," lork said.
DeConcini, a key swing vote on the committee, also suggested Bork's positions on poll taxes, integration of public accommodations and other issues over the years might cause lacks some alarm.
Bork responded, "If I were a black man but knew my record, I don't sink I'd be concerned because it's a court civil rights record."
Still, Bork said he is troubled by the institutional rationale for a supreme Court ruling ordering the segregation of public schools in the district of Columbia in 1954.
"I have not thought of a rationale $n$" the ruling, Bork said. But after a reckess, he said he wanted to take it clear he does not support school segregation and wouldn't "ever dream of verringr" the 1984 decision.
Bork received kind words during hearing from Senate Republican bin Alan Simpson of Wyoming.
"It seems to be the extremism has seen in the rhetoric of opponents of edge Bork." Simpson said.
---
On the mild side
SUN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday September 17,1987 Vol.98.No.19
Details page 6
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Med workers are more wary of infections
BY ANNIE STRANGER
Staff writer
More health care employees at the University of Kansas Medical Center are making an effort to protect themselves from contracting infectious diseases, especially AIDS, employees say.
The Med Center has not changed its infection control policy because of AIDS, said Marcia A. Gilliland, infection control coordinator. It's just that more employees are complying with its recommendations.
“Our philosophy really hasn't changed in regards to precautions,” Gilliland said. “We've always taught that all blood and body fluids can be potentially infectious. What has happened is that people because of AIDS are more careful when they get a little blood on their hands, is using glovees more now.”
using gloves more now. The AIDS virus can not be contracted through casual contact. The virus is transmitted through blood and body fluids.
The national Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta recommend that health care employees wear gloves whenever they may be in contact with a patient's blood or body fluids. When health care employees are in a situation where blood could splatter, such as treating a serious injury, they also are required to wear masks and goggles. Blood, body fluids, mucous membranes and unattached skin are potentially infections.
RAL HISTORY
1831
Ollieland will display more
Jim Mathes, left, of Baldwin City, and Bill Medlen, Lawrence resident, apply Bird/X to the ledge above the Natural History Museum's main entrance. The chemical, which creates a sticky surface, is designed to prevent pigeons from landing on building ledges.
KU tries
---
Students favor tougher policy for admissions
By NOEL GERDES
Staff writer
A student advisory committee today will recommend to the Board of Regents that Kansas high school students be required to complete certain courses to be guaranteed admission at the six state universities.
the recommendation would require freshmen, in addition to graduating, to have taken four years of English and three years each of science, social studies and math from an accredited Kansas high school.
The student advisory committee consists of the student body presidents of the Regents schools.
The Regents schools now have an open admissions policy, which means any Kansas resident who graduates from an accredited state high school is admitted automatically to any state university.
The Regents will meet at 9 a.m. today in Topeka to discuss tightening admissions requirements. Their own proposed requirements include a high school curriculum similar to the students' recommendation, but with two years of foreign language. The Regents proposal also includes a number of 23 or better, and ranking in the top third of a class.
The advisory committee considered the Regents proposal before making its own. Jason Krakow, KU student, took over in 2016.
"I think to say a student has to have a 23 on the ACT to be successful is ridiculous." he said.
According to the students' recommendation, to be admitted to a state university in fall 1991, freshmen
fiction
TRUS 87
Q.D.K.
The Ratings War
Illustration by DAVE EAMES
Story by JEFFREY DRAKE
The big three networks were still at it. The cycle had run another course, and after the Cosby Show was canceled following a scandal that sounded like a National Enquirer headline — and started that way, as a matter of fact — NBC had come upon hard times, ending up, eventually, at the bottom of the totem pole. CBS surprised everyone by squeaking out with first place past the reigning king, ABC.
but more surprises were in the works. It was Wednesday night in early April, that time of year that mid-season replacements generally make themselves known. And Wednesday night was now — and had been for the past year and a half — the habitual CBS night. Most of the nation, or at least the sample that the Nielsen company claimed fairly represented the nation, had its dial turned to the local CBS affiliate.
KANSAN MAGAZINE September 16, 1987
gst school four years of English and science, social studies and math with point average of 2.0 am a 4.0 scale; or 2.0 GPA in nine hours of prescribed college-level work before their first or
ommendation also states that fresh two years of foreign language in high pile attending the university.
ade in make-up courses (high school or subjects in the Regents recom- that were missed in high school. commendation also states that fresh- two years of foreign language in high
could make exceptions for special exceptions could total no more than 10 or entering freshmen. Admissions for Kansas residents 21 or older with ma, and admission requirements for s would be left to each university
e legislative director for Associated a student lobbying group, said he did students' recommendation to be a policy
courses that you can choose to take issuations. "Tallman said. 'It's still a
we were two schools of thought behind our standards. The first is that the asas needs to restrict admissions; many students and not enough money. it some students who enter state prepared for college, so something help them become more prepared. He amitree made its recommendation to me more prepared.
dent body president at Kansas State
'm concerned that the Regents are
unable to act.'
mack, student body president at Fort
sity, said he was not opposed to
for different schools.
House devise a strategy to "stonewall" by defending the principle of executive privilege.
1g Bork
"I never advised the White House how to meet, how to deal with the Watergate special prosecution force," Bork said. He said he did act on orders from then-Attorney General Richardson to seek a compromise between Cox and the White House over executive privilege.
"We never achieved an accommodation." Bork testified.
Watergate aside. Bork also sought to reassure Sen. Dennis DeConcini, D-Ariz, that he is not antagonistic to the rights of women." As solicitor general I argued positions for the protection of women broader than the Supreme Court would accept," Bork said.
DeConciini, a key swing vote on the committee, also suggested Bork's positions on poll taxes, integration of public accommodations and other issues over the years might cause blacks some alarm.
Bork responded, "If I were a black man but knew my record, I don't think I be concerned because it's a good civil rights record."
Still, Bork said he is troubled by the constitutional rationale for a Supreme Court ruling ordering the collapse of the Wall Street banks in the District of Columbia in 1954.
"I have not thought of a rationale for the ruling, Bork said. But after a brief recess, he said he wanted to make it clear he does not support capitalism and instead national's capital and wouldn't "ever dream of overruling" the 1954 decision.
Bork received kind words during the hearing from Senate Republican Whip Alan Simpson of Wyoming.
"It itse to be the extremism has been in the rhetoric of opponents of Judge Bork," Simpson said.
On the mild side
ANGEL
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details page 6
Thursday September 17,1987 Vol.98,No.19
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Med workers are more wary of infections
Staff writer
BY AMBER STENGER
More health care employees at the University of Kansas Medical Center are making an effort to protect themselves from contracting infections diseases, especially AIDS, employees say.
The Med Center has not changed its infection control policy because of AIDS, said Marcia A. Gillandil, infection control coordinator. It's just that more employees are complying with its recommendations.
“Our philosophy really has changed in regards to precautions,” Gilliland said. “We've always taught that all blood and body fluids can be potentially infectious. What has happened is that people because of AIDS are less likely to get anybody who used to be very lackadaisical when they got a little blood on their hands, is using gloves more now.”
is using give to show how
The AIDS virus can not be contracted through casual contact. The virus is transmitted through blood and body fluids.
The national Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta recommend that health care employees wear gloves whenever they may be in contact with a patient's blood or body fluids. When health care employees are in a situation where blood could splatter, such as treating a serious injury, they also应加注意 masks and goggles. Blood, body fluids, mucous membranes and unattached skin are potentially infections.
Gillard said gloves were the most common protective clothing employees wore.
RAL HISTOR
1891
Jim Mathes, left, of Baldwin City, and Bill Medlen, Lawrence resident, apply Bird/X to the ledge above the Natural History Museum's main entrance. The chemical, which creates a sticky surface, is designed to prevent pigeons from landing on building ledges.
KU tries
--or succession is relegated.
According to the students' recommendation, to be admitted to a state university in fall 1991, freshmen would have to:
---
---
Students favor tougher policy for admissions
By NOEL GERDES
Staff writer
A student advisory committee today will recommend to the Board of Regents that Kansas high school students be required to complete certain courses to be guaranteed admission at the six state universities.
The student advisory committee consists of the student body presidents of the Regents schools.
The recommendation would require freshmen, in addition to graduating, to have taken four years of English and three years each of science, social studies and math from an accredited Kansas high school.
The Regents schools now have an open admissions policy, which means any Kansas resident who graduates from an accredited state high school is admitted automatically to any state university.
The Regents will meet at 9 a.m. today in Topeka to discuss tightening admissions requirements. Their own proposed requirements include a high school curriculum similar to the students' recommendation, but with two years of foreign language. The Regents proposal also includes the number of 23 or better, and ranking in the third of a class.
The advisory committee considered the Regents proposal before making its own. Jason Krakow, KU student body president, opposed part of the Regents proposal
"I think to say a student has to have a 23 on the ACT to be successful is ridiculous." he said.
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Naturally, the other networks were trying everything short of murder to knock the champion off its Wednesday night perch. So, in that respect, this Wednesday was not unlike any other Wednesday.
ABC was using its old standard fourth-place show followed by its tenth-place show which, naturally, was followed by its Emmy award-winning, critically acclaimed twenty-first place show. It was a shuffling of some familiar, successful and proved formulas. The network was taking quite a chance; to create this line-up, ABC had broken up its early Monday shoot-in and its late Thursday clincher.
But it was worth the risk.
For NBC, it was a night to sweat bullets. Two weeks of intensive campaigning would hopefully pay off tonight. It had spent a multi-million dollar budget, which it really couldn't afford, on one (allegedly) epic television spectacular. Virtually every hour for the last two weeks, one of twenty different plugs for the three-hour presentation had aired. It was sink or swim. All bets were placed on this one horse. The jobs of many high-ranking NBC executives balanced precariously on the buoyancy of this show.
But it was worth the risk.
The Fox Network still didn't have enough programming to dill each day, and thus didn't qualify as a "network" according to FCC regulations. So, Fox decided that this fight be left to the big boys. Its day would come soon enough.
After the first hour, NBC rejoiced. From what they could tell, they were in second place. The numbers were good. They weren't in first, but at last they had a change.
But no one at NBC had gone home, just in case they needed to pack up their belongings. Spies relayed the Nielsen figures on a minute by minute basis.
It just wasn't worth the risk.
So, the fight began at eight o'clock Eastern Time. ABC, CBS and Fox Network executives were home, having dinner with their families.
"They better make it quick," said the executive producer, having calmed down a bit. "We can't expect our viewers to stay up much past eleven; that's news territory."
"What is this?" screamed the executive producer whose idea this first-place-three-hour epic was.
"Must be somethin' bad," said another, flipping through the channels. "Even CBS pre-empted their shows."
a chance.
As nine o'clock Eastern time passed,
however, the unexpected happened: a
special report.
The announcer, their best, told them what was happening. He really didn't
need to tell them; they could tell by his appearance, by his voice, by the emotion that he couldn't control that this was something of unbelievably grave nature. It was.
"Nuclear war?" someone in the room said
Someone else whispered, "I didn't think it would happen. I hoped it wouldn't happen."
The president made a very brief statement, then turned the networks over to their Emergency Broadcast System programming. Well, that's what they were supposed to do.
"Now look," said the executive producer, with the sort of swagger that would imply he was the only one in the room with any ammunition fiber. "I know how all seems all seems."
"How bad it SEEMS?" another executive screamed, practically in tears. "This is it. This is the end!"
“OK, OK, that’s a given. But we can turn this to our advantage.”
No one could believe what was happening. War was breaking out, the president admitted that it was probably only a matter of hours before the bombs would fall, and here sat the high executives of one of the three major networks still raving about programming strategy.
Everyone in the room was stunned into silence by a mixture of impending doom and utter incredulity. Finally, someone said, very quietly, "What do you mean?"
"Well, the other networks will be showing where people should go, and what precautions they should take, so that we don't misuse them." What about the people who already know what to do?"
"Do you mean to imply that we disregard our civic duty and continue with normal programming?"
"Nobody cares NOW how this stupid show ends."
The executive producer snapped, leaping across the finished curly table top and grabbing the older executives by the lapels. I worked my butt off on this one! Put my job on the line!! I'm gonna do everything in my power to see that we get the best ratings possible! For crying out loud, this is our last chance!!"
"What's going to happen? Will they take our license away?" He giggled. "We'll be performing a civic duty by giving the people an escape from oncoming oblivion." "You're nuts, an older executive said. The last thing in the world people be thinking about is what sort of临危教 programming that those networks have."
They tried to calm him down, but he was like a man possessed. All that seemed to matter to him were the ratings. And
although they didn't want to openly admit it, many saw the logic in his reasoning. It was a tempting proposition.
The phone rang.
The phone ring.
The chaos that had been prevailing subsided. Each stared at the phone as he had never seen one before. The situation just seemed to get more and more unbelievable.
In every mind, the thought occurred that it was a wife, or a child, or a girlfriend calling, disbelieving, wanting that person to be home. The executive producer answered it.
"Hello?"
"Hello, this is the switchboard." He had forgotten that NBC had decided to keep the lines open to see if the show solicited any public response. The voice on the other end continued, very matter-of-factly. "I know I don't get paid that much, and my job's kinda low in the deck; but I'm the only one down here, and I'm being swamped by calls."
Somehow, it didn't occur to the executive producer to be astounded at the fact that the switchboard operator didn't realize the world was going to end. "What is it that the people are saying?"
"Well," the voice continued, almost surprised that the person on the other end cared about the drollery of his job. "A lot of it I don't understand. I guess for some reason, we've stopped showing our show. But anyway, most people want to know how it ends up."
"The consensus seems to be that they want to see the rest of the show."
The executive producer turned to the silent figures in the board room. "We've been deluged with calls about the show." He glowed with the pride of a new father. "They want to know how it ends."
So, they decided to show the rest of the show, running a message along the bottom of the screen throughout informing the viewers that if they desired information about the approaching apocalypse, they could switch to one of the other networks. They even skipped the commercial breaks. And the calls kept coming in.
By eleven o'clock Eastern time, they had found out that NBC had nearly cornered the ratings market. They scored the highest in television a single show in and of television history.
To celebrate, the executives broke out some champagne.
"Here's to being on top," the executive producer toasted before opening the bubby. "It's where we belong." He popped the cork, and simultaneously there was a flash.
And that was that.
"Looks like we're being pre-empted." And that was that.
gh school four years of English and science, social studies and math with ointage of 2.0 on a 4.0 scale; or 2.0 GPA in nine hours of prescribed ollege-level work before their first ; or
'ade in make-up courses (high school or subjects in the Regents recom-m that were missed in high school. ommandment also states that fresh- two years of foreign language in high site attending the university.
could make exceptions for special exceptions could total no more than 10 or entering freshmen. Admissions for Kansas residents 21 or older with ma, and admission requirements for s would be left to each university
legislative director for Associated a student lobbying group, said he did students' recommendation to be a policy
g courses that you can choose to take issuations. "Tallman said. 'It's still a
ident body president at Kansas State I'm concerned that the Regents are
mack, student body president at Forti
sity, said he was not opposed to
for different schools.
we were two schools of thought behind us standards. The first is that the usas needs to restrict admissions any students and not enough money. it some students who enter state prepared for college, so something elp them become more prepared. He nittered a recommendation to usas.
ng Bork
House devise a strategy to "stonewall" by defending the principle of executive privilege.
"I never advised the White House how to meet, how to deal with the Watergate special prosecution force." Bork said. He did act on orders from then-Attorney General Richardson to seek a compromise between Cox and the White House over executive privilege.
"We never achieved an accommodation." Bork testified.
Watergate aside, Bork also sought to reassure Sen. Dennis DeConcini, D-Ariz., that he is not antagonistic to the rights of women. "As solicitor general I argued positions for the protection of women broader than the Supreme Court would accept," Bork said.
DeConcini, a key swing vote on the committee, also suggested Bork's positions on poll taxes, integration of public accommodations and other issues over the years might cause blacks some alarm.
Bork responded, "If I were a black man but knew my record, I don't think I be concerned because it's a good civil rights record."
still, Bork said he is troubled by the constitutional rationale for a Supreme Court ruling ordering the death penalty in the District of Columbia in 1954.
"I have not thought of a rationale for" the ruling, Bork said. But after a brief recess, he said he wanted to make it clear he does not support school funding and "nation's intuition and wouldn't 'ever dream of overruling' the 1954 decision.
KANSAN MAGAZINE September 16, 1987
Bork received kind words during the hearing from Senate Republican Whin Alan Simpson of Wyoming.
"It it seems to be the extremism has been in the rhetoric of opponents of Judge Bork." Simpson said.
On the mild side
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday September 17,1987 Vol.98,No.19
Details page 6
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Med workers are more wary of infections
By AMBER STENGER
Staff writer
More health care employees at the University of Kansas Medical Center are making an effort to protect themselves from contracting infectious diseases, especially AIDS, employees say.
The Med Center has not changed its infection control policy because of AIDS, said Marcia G. Ailligan, infection control coordinator. It's just that more employees are complying with its recommendations.
"Our philosophy really isn't changed in regards to precautions." Gilliland said. "We've always taught that all blood and body fluids can be potentially infectious. What has happened is that people because of AIDS are more careful. And so somebody who used to be very lackadaisical when they got a little blood on their hands, is using gloves more now."
RAL HISTOR
1831
The AIDS virus can not be contracted through casual contact. The virus is transmitted through blood and body fluids.
The national Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta recommend that health care employees wear gloves whenever they may be in contact with a patient's blood or body fluids. When health care employees are in a situation where blood could splatter, such as treating a serious injury, they also are urged to wear protective gowns, masks and goggles. Blood, body fluids, mucous cananes and unattached skin are potentially infectious.
Gilliland said gloves were the most common protective equipment used here.
Jim Mathes, left, of Baldwin City, and Bill Medlen, Lawrence resident, apply Bird/X to the ledge above the Natural History Museum's main entrance. The chemical, which creates a sticky surface, is designed to prevent pigeons from landing on building ledges.
KU tries
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Students favor tougher policy for admissions
Bv NOEL GERDES
Staff writer
A student advisory committee today will recommend to the Board of Regents that Kansas high school students be required to complete certain courses to be guaranteed admission at the six state universities.
The recommendation would require freshmen, in addition to graduating, to have taken four years of English and three years each of science, social studies and math from an accredited Kansas high school.
The student advisory committee consists of the student body presidents of the Regents schools.
The Regents schools now have an open admissions policy, which means any Kansas resident who graduates from an accredited state high school is admitted automatically to any state university.
The Regents will meet at 9 a.m. today in Topeka to discuss tightening admissions requirements. Their own proposed requirements include a high school curriculum similar to the students' recommendation, but with two years of foreign language. The Regents proposal also includes an ACT score of 23 or better, and ranking in the top third of a class.
The advisory committee considered the Regents proposal before making its own. Jason Krakow, KU student body president, opposed part of the Regents proposal.
"I think to say a student has to have a 23 on the ACT to be successful is ridiculous." he said.
According to the students' recommendation, to be admitted to a state university in fall 1991, freshmen
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high school four years of English and of science, social studies and math with le point average of 2.0 on a 4.0 scale; or um 2.0 GPA in nine hours of prescribed college-level work before their first ter or
g grade in make-up courses (high school) for subjects in the Regents recommium that were missed in high school. recommendation also states that freshke two years of foreign language in high a while attending the university.
n. legislative director for Associated sas, a student lobbying group, said he did ie students' recommendation to be a ignious policy
rung courses that you can choose to take dmissions." Tallman said. "It still a s
tion could make exceptions for special se exceptions could total no more than 10 imber of entering freshmen. Admissions en for Kansas residents 21 or older with ploma, and admission requirements for ents would be left to each university.
here were two schools of thought behind sions standards. The first is that the Kansas needs to restrict admissions o many students and not enough money, that some students who enter state not prepared for college, so something to help them become more prepared. He committee made its recommendation to ecome more prepared.
student body president at Kansas State
"I'm concerned that the Regents are
not doing enough."
lve problems at KU." in Amack, student body president at Fort iersity, said he was not opposed to rds for different schools.
ing Bork
House devise a strategy to "stonewall" by defending the principle of executive privilege.
"I never advised the White House how to meet, how to deal with the Watergate special prosecution force," Bork said. He said he did act on orders from then-Attorney General Richardson to seek a compromise between Cox and the White House over executive privilege.
"We never achieved an accommodation." Bork testified.
Watergate aside, Bork also sought to reassure Senn. Dennis DeConciin, D-Ariz., that he is not antagonistic to the rights of women." As solicitor general I argued positions for the protection of women broader than the Supreme Court would accept," Bork said.
DeConciyn, a key swing vote on the committee, also suggested Bork's positions on poll taxes, integration of public accommodations and other issues over the years might cause blacks some alarm.
Bork responded, "If I were a black man but knew my record, I don't think I be concerned because it's a good civil rights record."
Still, Bork said he is troubled by the constitutional rationale for a Supreme Court ruling ordering the U.S. to release prisoners in the District of Columbia in 1954.
"I have not thought of a rationale for" the ruling, Bork said. But after a brief recess, he said he wanted to make it clear he does not support school segregation in the nation's capital and wouldn't "ever dream of overruling" the 1954 decision.
Bork received kind words during the hearing from Senate Republican Whip Alan Simpson of Wyoming.
"It seems to be the extremism has been in the rhetoric of opponents of Judge Bork," Simpson said.
24
KANSAN MAGAZINE September 16, 1987
On the mild side
SUN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details page 6
Thursday September 17,1987 Vol.98,No.19
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Med workers are more wary of infections
By AMBER STENGER
Staff writer
Lisa Jones/KANSAN
More health care employees at the University of Kansas Medical Center are making an effort to protect themselves from contracting infectious diseases, especially AIDS, employees say.
The Med Center has not changed its infection control policy because of AIDS, said Marcia A. Gillianl, infection control coordinator. It's just that more employees are complying with its recommendations.
"Our philosophy really hasn't changed in regards to precautions," Gilland said. "We've always taught that all blood and body fluids can be potentially infectious. What has happened is that people because of AIDS are more careful. And so somebody who used to be very lackadaisical when they got a little blood on their hands, is using gloves more now."
Pigeon
Campus pigeons, such as this one on a window ledge at Strong Hall, are facing a new adversary in BirdX, a bird repellent.
The AIDS virus can not be contracted through casual contact. The virus is transmitted through blood and body fluids
The national Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta recommend that health care employees wear gloves whenever they may be in contact with a patient's blood or body fluids. When health care employees are in a situation where blood could splatter, such as treating a serious injury, they also are urged to wear protective gowns, masks and goggles. Blood, body fluids, mucous organs and unattached skin are potentially infections.
Gilliland said gloves were the most common protective clothing employees wore.
One indication of employees' increasing concern is the number of rubber gloves they are using.
Jim Mathes, left, of Baldwin City, and Bill Medlen, Lawrence resident, apply Bird/X to the ledge above the Natural History Museum's main entrance. The chemical, which creates a sticky surface, is designed to prevent pigeons from landing on building ledges.
"Gloves will probably be the No. 1 thing that health professionals will use. In the past, I don't think the physicians and health care professionals considered eyes and mucous membranes as exposure," she said. "So, you are going to see more masks and, depending on the procedure, more goggles being used."
RAL HISTOR
1831
The Med Center has spent an additional $7,626 on gloves this year, Barbara Lockhart, director of the purchasing department, said yesterday. Demand for exam gloves increased by 35 to 40 percent in the first eight months of this calendar year, compared with the same period last year.
Lockhart said $50,658 was spent during the first eight months of this year to purchase five types of exam and utility gloves.
Jim Strobel, director of student health services, said the demand for gloves had doubled at Watkins Hospital. He said four cases of gloves lasted for three or four months in the past. Now, Watkins uses eight cases in that same period of time. Each case contains 1,000 pairs of gloves and costs about $40.
Kathryn West, purchasing manager for Baxter in the Kansas City area, said, "In the last four months, the demand has doubled in some cases and tripled in others."
One of the hospital's suppliers, Baxter Hospital Supply Division of Overland Park, has seen an overall increase in the demand for latex exam gloves in the Kansas City area.
But, Suzanne Shaffer, hematology clinical nurse specialist and a nursing service employee at the Med Center, said some nurses chose to risk infection to have personal contact with patients.
"There's been a reliance with nurses in particular to use gloves because we were taught that touch is very important." Shaffer said. "Gloves are a barrier. But what I have found lately is that the public is
See MEDICAL, p. 6, col. 1
KU tries new bird repellent
By BRIAN BARESCH
Staff writer
Pesky pigeons on the University of Kansas campus are facing a new weapon in facilities and operations' arsenal.
Landscape workers have started putting Bird/X on building ledges around campus. Bird/X is a sticky, unpleasant bird repellent that birds don't like to land on, said Mike Richardson, associate director of garage and landscape facilities operations.
Already this week, Bird/X has been applied to ledges at Dyche and Stauffer-Flint lhats. Richardson said the applications were preliminary, to see how the new employed work.
Strong Hall also will get a treat ment this week, he said.
At Dyche, the pigeons milling about over the main entrance had created enough of a mess on the sidewalk below that people were tracking the droppings into the building.
Bob Porter, associate director of physical plant facilities operations, said pigeons might carry mites and diseases in addition to
having sloppy personal habits.
"We have been trying to find some humane, ecological way of getting rid of these critters," he said.
At noon yesterday, several pigeons were cooing around Dyche, but none were near the treated parts of the entrance. Stauffer-Flint was similarly bird-free.
Bird/X is new to the market, and it doesn't hurt pigeons, Richardson said. If it works, it will be applied more, he said.
Richardson said he was not sure exactly how much the repellent cost.
"Compared to cleaning up the mess from the pigeons, it's not very expensive," he said.
Students favor tougher policy for admissions
By NOEL GERDES
Staff writer
A student advisory committee today will recommend to the Board of Regents that Kansas high school students be required to complete certain courses to be guaranteed admission at the six state universities.
The recommendation would require freshmen, in addition to graduating, to have taken four years of English and three years each of science, social studies and math from an accredited Kansas high school.
the student advisory committee consists of the student body presidents of the Regents schools.
The Regents schools now have an open admissions policy, which means any Kansas resident who graduates from an accredited state high school is admitted automatically to any state university.
mandatory to stay safe and attend school. The Regents will meet at 9 a.m. today in Topeka to discuss tightening admissions requirements. Their own proposed requirements include a high school curriculum similar to the students' recommendation, but with two years of foreign language. The Regents proposal also includes an ACT score of 23 or better, and ranking in the top third of a class.
The advisory committee considered the Regents proposal before making its own. Jason Krakow, KU student body president, opposed part of the Regents proposal.
"I think to say a student has to have a 23 on the ACT to be successful is ridiculous," he said.
be succession isihuohua, he said.
According to the students' recommendation, to be admitted to a state university in fall 1991, freshmen would have to:
- complete in high school four years of English and three years each of science, social studies and math with a minimum grade point average of 2.0 on a 4.0 scale; or
- earn a minimum 2.0 GPA in nine hours of prescribed summer session college-level work before their first freshman semester; or
earn a pass grade in make-up courses (high school or college level) for subjects in the Regents recommended curriculum that were missed in high school.
The students' recommendation also states that freshmen who don't take two years of foreign language in high school must do so while attending the university.
Each university could make exceptions for special students, but those exceptions could total no more than 10 percent of the number of entering freshmen. Admissions would remain open for Kansas residents 21 or older with a high school diploma, and admission requirements for out-of-state students would be left to each university.
Mark Tallman, legislative director for Associated Students of Kansas, a student lobbying group, said he did not consider the students' recommendation to be a selective admissions policy.
"To me, requiring courses that you can choose to take is not closing admissions," Tallman said. "It's still a student choice."
Tallman said there were two schools of thought behind tightening admissions standards. The first is that the University of Kansas needs to restrict admissions because it has too many students and not enough money. The second is that some students who enter state universities are not prepared for college, so they need to be prepared. He prepared. He said the student committee made its recommendation to help freshmen become more prepared.
Kent Bradley, student body president at Kansas State University, said, "I'm concerned that the Regents are trying to spot-solve problems at KU."
However, Kevin Amack, student body president at Fort Hays State University, said he was not opposed to different standards for different schools.
Democrats focus on Watergate while questioning Bork
The Associated Press
Law students oppose Bork's nomination
WASHINGTON — Supreme Court nominee Robert H. Bork, responding to interrogations of his integrity by Democratic senators, said yesterday that he acted honorably and legally in 1973 when he fired special Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox.
Group sends petition to U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee to voice opinions
In a dramatic retelling of what Bork called "an enormous governmental crisis," he said that as soon as Cox was dismissed, "I did promptly act to safeguard the special prosecution. I understood from the beginning my moral and professional lives were on the line if something happened to the special prosecution force."
the Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee questioned Bork in the same marble-columned room that was the site 14 years ago of hearings that helped lead to President Nixon's political demise. This week the room is the setting for a nationally televised confirmation hearings.
The questions on what has become known as the Saturday Night Massacre marked an interruption of the inquiries on Bork's political and judicial ideology as opponents sought additional grounds to defeat his confirmation.
Some KU law students opposed to the nomination of Judge Robert H. Bork want their opinions to be known by the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee.
Hemphill said about 33 students had signed the petition at the University of Kansas.
By VIRGINIA McGRATH Staff writer
Bork spent much of yesterday responding to questions about his views on such subjects as civil rights, abortion and privacy.
The proceedings generated few sparks as Bork spelled in calm, measured tones his conservative legal approach that has evolved in a 25-year career as lawyer, Ivy League scholar and judge.
The students are signing a petition urging the Senate to reject Bork's nomination. They plan to send it to the judiciary committee.
Dwaine Hemphill, third year law student, is president of the local student chapter of the National Lawyers Guild, which is a liberal alternative to the American Bar Association, he said. The guild, located in New York City, national Rights, is sponsoring the petition drive nationwide.
ion on how the Constitution should be interpreted. He thinks the Supreme Court should follow a strict interpretation of the original intent of the Constitution.
Bork holds a conservative opin-
I think some of his opinions could really gut the Constitution. He would take us 10 steps backwards. He has a lack of respect for precedent.'
He acknowledged that some of his views "have evolved and changed," and he sought support for that by quoting Benjamin Franklin as say-
- Laurie Blackburn first year law student
Greg Rohy, third year law student who signed the petition, said, "I understand his points from a legislative position, and they are
present. Scott Gesner, first year law student who signed the petition, said, "It's always helpful to let elected representatives know what people are thinking."
Martie Aaron, first year law student, also signed the petition. She said it was important to let lawmakers know.
Laurie Blackburn, first year law student, also signed the petition. "I think some of his opinions could really gut the Constitution. He would take us 10 steps backwards. He has a lack of respect for precedent," she said.
very true. They are academic and scholarly. But, I don't think it's appropriate for a continually changing society."
"You have to make your position known. That's part of the democratic process." she said.
No law school faculty members have signed the petition. Michael Davis, dean of law, said he hadn't seen the petition.
The Center for Constitutional Rights has helped collect signatures opposing Bork's nomination from all 50 states, said Dorothy Zellner, coordinator of the center's Campaign for a Just Supreme Court in New York City.
Gesner said he did not think
The center gave petitions containing 10,000 signatures to the judiciary committee Tuesday.
Bork would be confirmed. "If the Democrats for a change would stick to principles and show a little courage and decisiveness, he won't be confirmed," he said.
"We'll have to wait and see what the bearings bring," he said.
But Bork said he has never changed an opinion in order to win confirmation to a judgership or for any other reward.
"These petitions are a tiny fraction of a lot of other petition campaigns," Zellner said.
ing, "Having lived long I have experienced many instances of being obliged by better information or fuller consideration to change opinions even on important subjects."
Until his nomination last July, Bork was best known by the general public for his actions the night of Oct. 20. 1973.
That Saturday night, Nixon ordered Cox fired when the Harvard professor insisted the president surrender White House tapes to the special prosecutor's office. In quick succession, then-Attorney General Elliot Richardson resigned, his top deputy, William Ruckelshaus, was fired. Richardson and Bork, the third-ranking justice Department official, carried out the president's order.
Bork, noting he has frequently explained his role in the Cox firing before, revealed yesterday that he rejected a White House request in the midst of a turbulent department post of solicitor general to become Nixon's chief defense
lawver.
Bork acknowledged, as some critics have charged, that he did not "instantaneously" move to replace Cox with a new prosecution.
He said he persuaded then-White House Chief of Staff Alexander M. Haig that "I was not the right man for the job," and said that Nixon indicated he harbored no hard feelings about the rejection.
"We realized the need to appoint a new one because the American people would not be mollified without one," he said.
He said that initially he and others in the Nixon administration thought Cox's deputies could do the job of summoning the Watergate investigation.
Metzenbaum, showing Nixon administration memos, said there was evidence Bork helped the White
Responding to painted questions from Democratic Sens. Howard Metzenbaum of Ohio, Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts and Judicary Committee Chairman Joseph R. Biden Jr. of Delaware, Bork denied he ever weighed any actions that would terminate the Watergate investigation.
House devise a strategy to "stonewall" by defending the principle of executive privilege.
DeConciyn, a key swing vote on the committee, also suggested Bork's positions on poll taxes, integration of public accommodations and other issues over the years might cause blacks some alarm.
"I never advised the White House how to meet, how to deal with the Watergate special prosecution force," Bork said. He said he did act on orders from then-Attorney General Richardson to seek a compromise between Cox and the White House over executive privilege.
Watergate aside, Bork also sought to reassure Senn. Dennis DeConciin, D-Ariz., that he is not antagonistic to the rights of women. "As solicitor general I argued positions for the protection of women broader than the Supreme Court would accept," Bork said.
"We never achieved an accommodation." Bork testified.
Bork responded, "If I were a black man but knew my record, I don't think I be concerned because it's a good civil rights record."
Still, Bork said he is troubled by the constitutional rationale for a Supreme Court ruling ordering the desegregation of public schools in the District of Columbia in 1954.
"I have not thought of a rationale for the ruling, Bork said. But after a brief recess, he said he wanted to make it clear he does not support the ruling of the court's central and wouldn't "ever dream of overruling" the 1954 decision.
Bork received kind words during the hearing from Senate Republican leaders.
"It seems to be the extremism has been in the rhetoric of opponents of Judge Bork," Simpson said.
---
2
Thursday, September 17, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Philippine foreign secretary quits but will keep job as vice president
MANILA, Philippines — Vice President Salvador Laurel resigned as foreign secretary yesterday, citing fundamental differences with President Corazon Aquino and complaining he wasn't given enough power.
Aquino said she sadly accepted the resignation of Laurel, who remains vice president and is widely thought to harbor presiden-
trial ambitions. Laurel said that he would not join the political opposition but also said that he would not accept a Cabinet portfolio.
Laurel's resignation appeared to be aimed at cultivating support among military and civilian critics of Aquino's administration and distancing the vice president from the president.
Shultz says arms control talks progressing
WASHINGTON — Secretary of State George P. Shulz reported some progress yesterday toward an arms control accord with the Soviets and turned to the occupation of Afghanistan in his pre-summit talks with Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard A. Shevardnaze.
Two of Shultz's key goals are to narrow differences in the way of a treaty to scrap U.S. and Soviet medium-range missiles and to persuade the Soviets to adopt a short timetable for withdrawing 115,000 troops from Afghanistan.
South Koreans plan for national elections
SEOUL, South Korea — The governing party and its main opposition agreed yesterday to hold legislative elections next spring, clearing a deadlock that had blocked approval of the country's new constitution.
The agreement between the Democratic Justice Party of President Chun Doo-hwan and the opposition Reunionism Democratic Party calls for National Assembly elections by the end of April 1988. The exact date has not been decided.
Both parties expressed satisfaction with the agreement.
Fawn Hall savs North fit to be president
NEW YORK — Oliver North is a saint and would make a great president, Waffn Hall said this week in an interview with ABC's Barbara Walters. Hall also said she was content to remain a secretary for the Navy but signed
"Certainly, journalism would be a way to learn a lot about the world and a lot about the people who are in the world," she said.
with a talent agency to consider other possibilities.
Constitution's 200th year
Anniversary of document brings nationwide celebrations
The Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA — Schoolgirls on the deck of the USS Kitty Hawk recited the Pledge of Allegiance yesterday along with construction workers in Boston, President Reagan and millions of Americans celebrating the U.S. Constitution's 200th birthday a day early.
Reagan led a nationally televised Pledge of Allegiance for "Celebrate the Constitution Day," the preamble to today's bicentennial bash.
"It's still our blueprint for freedom," Reagan said from the Capitol in Washington, D.C.
Retired Chief Justice Warren Burger said, "On the eve of the signing of the U.S. Constitution, we pay tribute to the single greatest work of government the world has ever seen." Burger heads the Commission on the Bicentennial of the U.S. Constitution.
trading was halted briefly during the afternoon, and workers cheered and waved American flags on the trading floor. In Boston, workers took off their hard hats, dropped their tools and joined Reagan in the pledge.
"We're a part of history," said Holly Maultz, 16, one of 108 pupils from the Country Day School of the Sacred Heart in Bryn Mawr, who recited the pledge a half-hour before league games. A carrier USS Kite Hawk, which was in Pennsylvania for an overhaul,
In Lancaster, the pledge had special meaning for Peter Bellamy Jr., 18, whose great-grandfather, Francis Julus Bellamy, wrote the pledge 95 years ago as an assignment for Youth's Companion magazine.
At the New York Stock Exchange.
"It's been a family thing for generations, but nobody's ever made a big deal of it publicly for me before
now," Bellamy said in a telephone interview. "It's a sentiment, a feeling of what many people take for granted."
The day was marked by a variety of observances.
In New York state, courts recessed for a brief ceremony.
A teach-in was held in New York City explaining the Constitution. Long lines formed the National which is called Washington, C., to view the four-page parchment.
"If we Americans today enjoy freedom as well as security, it is due in great measure to the protections of liberty hammered over by the framers in Philadelphia 200 years ago," said Sol Wachtler, the state's chief judge.
One observance provoked picketing
At least a dozen elementary-school girls carried signs, one reading "Women Demand Equality."
Pope, bishops debate doctrine
There was no compromise in the pope's reply to the leadership of the U.S. church, as he affirmed the church's stand against women priests, contraception, divorce, abortion and homosexual acts.
LOS ANGELES — In a blunt exchange, U.S. bishops told Pope John Paul II yesterday that "an uncritical application" of old uncrites was no longer good enough for U.S. Catholicus. But the pope called dissent from church law "a grave error" and incompatible with being a good Catholic.
The Associated Press
"Dissent from church doctrine remains what it is, dissent," the pope said in remarks to 320 of the nation's 400 bishops. "As such it may not be proposed or received on an equal basis with the church's authentic teaching."
During the meeting, the pope was treated to an unusually frank discussion about what bothers U.S. Catholics and Christians alike. He扩大 many of the church's teachings.
Catholics may disagree with church policies and still be considered loyal followers. Sixty percent disagreed with the church's ban on women in the priesthood, and only 25 percent thought birth control was sinful. And most of those polled, including Catholics, thought the pope was out of step with American Catholics.
To accept faith, said the pope, is to abide by the church's teachings and "it would be altogether out of place to try to model this act of religion on attitudes drawn from secular culture."
The Associated Press
many of the church meetings
A Los Angeles Times poll of 957
Catholics last month found 9 of 10 say
Reagan defends rebel aid
WASHINGTON — The White House said yesterday it sees no contradiction between President Reagan's support for stopgap aid to the Nicaraguan contra rebels and his promise to back efforts for a Central American peace settlement.
"We see it first of all as a fairness
Marina. "Everwater,日报 reporters
Fitzwater denied that Reagan's stand was "a repulsion in any way" of his agreement with House Speaker Jim Wright, D-Texas, to delay requests for new aid for the rebels until after Sept. 30 to give the peace talks a chance.
The spokesman was questioned repeatedly about the president's announced support for a proposal by House Republican leader Robert Michel of Illinois to offer an amendment to a 30-day spending bill to continue assistance to the contras.
The spending bill is expected to reach the House floor this week.
From The Associated Press.
Fitzwater also denied Wright's contention that the White House is failing to cooperate with peace efforts. He said the administration was continuing to work for peace, either under a plan announced by Reagan and Wright on Aug. 5 or one unveiled two days later by Central American leaders at a meeting in Guatemala.
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Campus/Area
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Local Briefs
Back aneurysm leaves student partly paralyzed
A KU freshman is in critical condition at St. Luke's Hospital in Kansas City, Mo., after suffering an aneurysm in his back Friday.
Craig Nowatzek, Prairie Village freshman and Hashinger Hall resident, is in intensive care, para-
diatomologist, said he said his father, Robert Nowatzek.
Craig Nowatkze was riding his bicycle in front of Templin Hall when he suffered the broken blood vessel in his spinal cord. An unknown driver of a restored sportscar found him in the street and drove him to Watkins Hospital.
"Craig could very possibly have died right where it hit him," his father said.
The family would like to find the driver to thank him, his father said.
Nowatzke was transfered immediately from Watkins to Lawrence Memorial Hospital. He transferred Monday to St Luke's.
rite probably won't require surgery, his father said, but doctors can't determine whether he will have permanent damage or how long he will need hospitalization.
"It's very likely he's going to have to withdraw this semester," Robert Nowatke said.
Whistle turned off until repairs made
Because of a computer malfunction, the whistle that signals the end of classes has been silent since Monday, and facilities operations officials don't think it will resume its hourly duty yet this week.
"I wouldn't count on it," Bob Porter, associate director of physical plant maintenance, said yes and did what it supposed to do."
The whistle, which normally blows for seven seconds at the end of classes, started acting erratically earlier this month. Porter said it did midnight twice and in the minute before a worker shut it off.
The whistle was shut off Monday when it began malfunctioning minutes after workers replaced a circuit board that they thought was causing the problem. Porter said.
The whistle will likely be off for the rest of the week while officials wait for computer repairmen
Jackson cancels
three Kansas stops
CONCORDIA — A planned trip to Kansas by Democratic presidential hopeful Jesse Jackson this weekend has been canceled, but an organizer for one of the appearances says it may be rescheduled for early next spring.
Charles Meek, state coordinator of Jackson's Rainbow Coalition, said he was notified that the Kansas stops in Wichita, Concordia and Topeka were called off because Jackson was exhausted.
Correction
Because of a reporter's error, a story in yesterday's Kansan incorrectly reported that Ann Weick, acting dean of social welfare, wasn't teaching any classes this semester. Weick is teaching this semester.
From staff and wire reports.
Student Senate OKs finances
Bv BRAD ADDINGTON
Staff writer
The Student Senate last night approved overwhelmingly a bill allocating $7,000 to this year's Jayhawk Jazz Festival and approved after much debate a bill allocating $5,650 to the Higher Education Rescue Operation campaign.
The KU jazz singers were on hand to do what some considered musical lobbying for the Jazz Festival bill. The group sang "Not Like This" and "Like Ron McCurdy," and Ron McCurdy, jazz coordinator for the department of music and dance.
McCurdy said Senate was largely responsible for the growth of the festival over the last 10 years.
"The event has grown from a one-day event with a budget of about $300 to a three-day event with a budget of about $12,000." McCurdy said. "The festival has gained a national reputation."
The Senate also passed a bill allocating $3,400 to help the KU Jazz School. It finance a "Tribute to Kenton" concert planned for November.
the Senate debated for more than an hour before passing the bill for the KU Higher Education Rescue Operation (H.E.R.O.) campaign. The campaign will support for higher education through the Board of Regents three-year
Martine Aaron, campus director for the Associated Students of Kansas, spoke in favor of the bill. She said the campaign needed Senate financing and its special funds had been used to operate the campain this summer.
Margin of Excellence plan.
"The strapped child is coming for an infusion," she told the 57 senators.
Student body vice president Stephanie Quinney pointed out that an item in the bill violated Senate regulations by allocating money to be used for food at a reception. This sparked debate as to how well the Senate Finance Committee had reviewed the legislation.
Frank Partnoy, off-campus senator and finance committee member, said that perhaps the finance commission should have given the committee had more experience.
"It was not a collection of individuals," Partnoy said of Tuesday's finance committee meeting. "It was a rubber stamp of approval."
Partnoy said he did not vote on the bill because he was on the finance committee.
The Senate approved the bill with an amendment that decreased money for the reception from $300 to $150, with the provision that no money be used to buy food. The rest of the money will be used for mailing and advertising.
Unidentified body may be KU student
Bv IAVAN OWENS
Staff writer
Colorado authorities have not identified the body of a man found Sept. 3 at the bottom of a waterfall near Telluride, Colo., who they suspect was a KU student.
San Miguel County Sheriff Bill Masters said yesterday that his office had been trying to link the man to the University of Kansas after numerous interviews with people who said they had spotted him at a bar in Tucson. The man was also seen at a Harmonic Convergence festival near Telluride.
The search for the man's identity has been complicated because police found his body naked and decomposed.
People who told the man before his death told police that he identified himself as Eric, an art student from KU. The man was 5 feet 7 inches, had a stocky build, and possibly was of Middle Eastern descent, police said.
Through several interviews, police have gathered pictures and a two-minute video tape of the man at the festival.
The caller said he had picked up the man, who was naked, in his camper because the man said his money had been stolen at the festival.
Masters said a man from South Dakota called the sheriff's office yesterday after seeing the story in the Telluride newspaper.
"We have had numerous people who spotted him. Masters sand. "The team has," he said.
"Many people had to have seen the guy because he needed three or four people to help him move the thing out of the way he went somewhere." Masters said.
Masters said the man had been carrying a colossal tree-like sculpture with clumps of hair hanging to it. Police learned from interviews that he had named the sculpturian harmonic Convergence Tuning Fork.
James Larson/KANSAN
"The limb was about 25 feet long. And as the story goes, he got the limb from a tree near Kansas City that had been struck by lightning. He made this thing and hitchiked out here with it."
Ln. H.
A. O. Q.
Tom Docking, former Kansas lieutenant governor and 1986 Democratic gubernatorial candidate, speaks to a group of students at Robinson Center. Docking's talk yesterday was part of the School of Business Executive Lecture series. See story p. 16.
Faculty and staff to pay fee to get health care coverage
New policy begins Jan. 1, will range from $11-$20 a month
By MICHAEL HORAK
Staff writer
TOPEKA — State employees, including KU faculty and classified personnel, for the first time will have to pay a monthly fee to receive health care coverage, the chairman of the state's health care commission said yesterday.
H. Edward Flentje, Kansas Secretary of Administration and head of the three-member commission, said the state had agreed to accept a bid from Kansas Blue Cross-Blue Shield that would cost more than the state had agreed to pay. Shortfall, he said, will have to be paid by state employees. Last year, the state contributed $39 million toward insurance for 23,000 employees.
Increased use of benefits and the rising costs of hospitalization are the main drivers.
who can prove they do not smoke.
"Unpleasant choices faced the health care commission this year." Flentje said. "Prices for health care services nationally were increasing by 10 percent, and Kansas costs mirrored the national trends."
The new policy will begin Jan. 1 and will immediately affect KU employees. Those who earn up to $17,000 will have to pay $11 a month, those earning between $17,000 and $24,999 will have to pay $18 a month, and those earning more than $30,000 will pay $20 a month. A monthly $10 discount will be given to employees
The new policy also creates a waiting period before new state employees can obtain health insurance coverage. Flentje said the waiting period would be 60 days, but could be waived under special circumstances. That may occur if state agencies have no plans to recruit new employees, he said. Exemptions will be decided on a case-by-case basis.
Some KU faculty said yesterday that they were concerned the new insurance policy would hurt faculty recruitment. They also saw the insurance charges as a cut in their benefits.
"It itses a precedent that makes me nervous," said Evelyn Swartz, chairman of the Senate Executive Committee. "We've had this fine benefit." Charging a user fee for insurance is an erosion of those benefits."
Swartz said she and several other faculty members had met this week with KU administrators to express concern about the increases.
Today, Mel Dubnick, president of University Senate and associate professor of public administration, will ask the Board of Regents at their monthly meeting to make a statement asking the health care commission to reconsider its insurance contract.
"For the University, the most
damaging thing is the 60-day waiting period," Dubnick said. "How would you like to come to a job and hear the story of your life?" dollar for health care right away"
Dubnick said the University hired many graduate students to teach. Those graduate students will come into new jobs having to pay for health insurance at a time many can't afford it, he said.
He doubted that any other university in the nation makes new employees wait to receive health care benefits, he said.
"The state is working against itself," Dubnick said. "On one hand, they are pushing to increase faculty wages throughMargin of Excellence. Then they turn around and take that money away through our health care plans. It just doesn't make sense."
Margin of Excellence is the Board of Regents three-year plan to lobby the state Legislature to, among other things, bring average faculty salaries up to 100 percent of those at peer institutions.
Flentje said the health care commission knew of faculty concerns and did not take them lightly.
"I think they have a legitimate concern and the members of the commission did not ignore it. We still have a Cadillac or near Cadillac which was very generous compared to those in most states, he said.
Budget cuts silence Wichita State marching band
Staff writer
By MICHAEL MERSCHEL
The Wichita State University marching band may have played its final song, but the effects of the program's demise will be played out over the next few years, the former director of the band said.
Brad Bone, assistant director of bands at Wichita State, said the school might have problems recruiting students to its music program without a marching band and also would have to cope with the loss of an important public relations tool.
Budget cuts forced the school to cut its football program and marching band this year. Bone said that from the beginning the idea to use the football band in-hand with the idea to eliminate football.
Bone will stay at Wichita State until the end of this year, after which his position will be eliminated. Bone, who has directed at the 1978, doesn't know what he will do after that.
He said he tried to show the need for a marching band without a football team but to no avail.
"Their minds were so set that without one you don't need the other," he said. "It was very hard."
Bone said his primary concern over the loss of the band was for music education majors who planned to teach at junior highs and high schools. He said his first tasks would be to direct marching bands.
class that would teach show design. Students in the class would work with high school bands
Bone said the band had been good public relations for the school by marching in parades before hundreds of thousands of people and by doing other public performances.
To compensate for the experience students would miss from marching. Bone is creating a
Without a band, Bone said, it would be harder to recruit people to the school's music program.
He said he knew several incoming freshman had decided against Wichita State because it didn't have a marching band, although he hadn't lost any veteran players.
Rob Johnson, Derby freshman, said he might have considered Wichita State if the school had a marching band. Because it didn't, he looked elsewhere and now marches for the University of Kansas.
Johnson said he thought one effect of the end of the marching band at Wichita State would be that high school marchers in the area would no longer have a role model.
Bone said Wichita State used to sponsor high school band competitions that introduced students to the university and brought bands in the area closer together.
Bone said Wichita State still had several programs that would appeal to music students, such as its music collective, an assortment of bands and friends to play where the marching band used to.
One part of the band that lives on is the drum line. J.C. Combs, professor of music and percussion teacher, said the drum line would continue to compete at international competitions just as it had for the past several years.
ROCK CHALK REVUE
In Between Acts Director
is looking for an
Good organizational skills and some dance experience is required. Pick up applications in the Student Organizations Office, Burge Union.
Deadline: 5 p.m. Monday
By Richard Stra In English
DER ROSENKAVALIER
FUN FILLED WEEK #1
Saturday, September 19, 8:00 p.m.
Monday, September 21, 8:00 p.m.
Wednesday, September 23, 7:30 p.m.
Friday, September 25, 8:00 p.m.
Amy Warner
PHONE: 816/471-7344 FOR TICKETS
Single tickets priced from $5.00
Student Rush 30 minutes prior to curtain - $3.00 with student ID.
Lyric Opera of Kansas City
Hair and Central
The hair is a dense feature of restraint from
The National Endowment for the Arts The Missouri Archt Council U.S.AIR The Official Lice Opera
al Center
KU STUDENT ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
STUDENT ALUMNI ASSOCIATION "Membership Meeting"
7:00 p.m.
Adams Alumni Center
1266 Oread Avenue
You are invited to learn more about SAA and our plans for the year!
4
Thursdav. September 17, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Drafting democracy
A constitution represents agreement and unity.
A constitution represents agreement and unity. Korea is on its way to adopting a constitution. On Sept. 1, the ruling Democratic Justice Party and the opposition Reunification Democratic Party reached agreement on the basic elements of a constitution. A special committee is working on a sentence-by-sentence draft to be completed in October. A presidential election is even anticipated — perhaps as early as December.
oboy to an age, argue. He then laid between the assertion of basic principles and the implementation of effective democratic government is filled with hurdles, as the history of our own United States demonstrates.
When the framers of our Constitution gathered 200 years ago, the Revolutionary War was over and the "patriots' dream" was ripe for fulfillment. All 13 colonies wanted basically the same thing: freedom, a new representative form of government, justice. Yet agreement was not easy. Arguments and dissension occurred. Disagreement. Compromise. No compromise.
occurred. Disagree. How much greater a challenge Korea faces today. The country is divided into opposing factions; riots and political arrests occur frequently; troops have political loyalty. For compromise to occur, power already held by some must be surrendered to others.
other. It will not be a smooth path, but the first steps have been taken and a constitution is in the works.
and a constitution is in the works.
Even after a constitution is drafted and adopted, the proof of the sincerity implied by that piece of paper is manifested by the actions taken to uphold it. Our country has survived the debates of its founding fathers, secession, civil war, the maturing of political processes, prosperity, depression, swings of public opinion, growth in population, addition of territory, racial and economic strife, civil rights disputes — 200 years of striving to create a country of and for the people ... and all with its Constitution intact. The years have not been easy ones. Democracy and freedom have been upheld at a price.
The Constitution of the United States was signed by its framers 200 years ago today. It is a day to celebrate. It is also a day to reflect on the nature of our country today, the progress that has been made and the injustices that still exist.
been made and the injustices have been made For Korea, the way will be long and the problems numerous. The democratic nations of the world must wait and see. And hope.
A strict judge
It is not an easy decision.
It is not an easy decision.
The nomination of Robert H. Bork to fill the Supreme Court seat of Justice Lewis Powell ensures a long, bloody debate in the Senate.
Senate.
What the senators face is a struggle to determine whether Bork's personal views regarding abortion and civil rights would taint his decisions while serving on the High Court. He insists that his rulings would be based on his knowledge of the Constitution and on original intent, the practice of basing decisions on what the founding fathers meant when they drafted the Constitution.
Did the 39 delegates who signed their names on the 200-year-old document define their opinions on the rights of women to legally obtain an abortion? Hardly. They had not even recognized a woman's right to vote.
woman's right to vote.
Did the framers cringe to know that slave owners violated the basic human rights of the blacks they imprisoned? Hardly. Some were slaveholders themselves.
Technology has proved troublesome to the "correct" interpretation of the Constitution. And the future of genetic engineering, the rights of AIDS carriers in public and the ability of government officials to secretly finance conflicts without congressional authority, pose nebulous judicial questions.
Perhaps these questions should be decided by the lawmakers and then interpreted by the High Court. Senators lead the cries that Bork's nomination would thwart the progress made by blacks and women after years of crisis.
But the senators themselves make no move to guarantee the rights of these groups through legislation.
Doesn't it make sense that a justice who believes in original intent would be desirable? Thus, he or she would not base decisions on popular opinion.
on popular opinion.
A Bork nomination would return Congress' job to Congress.
Legislation would set civil rights into stone. It would assure that women would hold equal footing as men.
women would hold equal voice as a member A Bork nomination would ensure a strict interpretation of the Constitution, not one that would succumb to the winds of public opinion.
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
News staff
Jennifer Benjamin . Editor
Juli Warril . Managing editor
John Benner . News editor
Beth Copeland . Editorial editor
Sally Streff . Campus editor
Brian Kabeline . Sports editor
Dan Ruffelmann . Photo editor
Bill Skeet . Graphics editor
Tom Eblen . General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Bonnie J. Hardy...Business manager
Robert Hughes...Advertising manager
Kelly Scherer...Retail sales manager
Kurt Messersmith...Campus sales manager
Greg Knipp...Production manager
David Derftt...National sales manager
Angela Clark...Classified manager
Ron Weisma...Director of marketing
Jeanne Hines...Sales and marketing adviser
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We the People of the United States
are still in charge of making it work.
JIMBERTSMAN
CAROLINA CANDIDATE
Homage due on 200th birthday
It has been called the most wonderful work ever struck off at a given time by the brain and purpose of man.
purpose of man.
The document in the heart and soul of every American, the Constitution, has entered its 200th year, but even in its antiquity, the power and consequence of its words remain the backbone of this great nation.
this great hall.
Crafted by 55 dedicated and independent men, the Constitution was the culmination of a long, bloody struggle for freedom by the people of the colonies. In the end, on Sept. 17, 1787, 39 of the remaining 42 delegates at Philadelphia's Freedom Hall stepped forward to sign their approval of the greatest document the world will ever see
Our great Constitution, for which millions of Americans have fought, grants its people enormous power, unprecedented at the time of its birth. It provides the foundation for the most admired self-government in the world, and it gives Americans the opportunity to choose their representatives and to choose their level but also twice at the legislative level. A system of checks and balances is ensured by the Constitution and it makes for a workable and rational governmental process.
Christopher Wilson Staff Columnist
But what makes the Constitution a moral and feeling document and not just a governing statute is the Bill of Rights, which became law in 1791, three years after the Constitution's enactment in 1788.
The late Sam Rayburn, former speaker of the
A.
House, said of the Bill of Rights, "You might call it the statement-of-purpose of our entire republic.
Whereas the balance of the Constitution basically sets forth legislative procedures, the Bill of Rights is the heart behind the bureaucratic machinery."
machinery.
As the heart of the Constitution, the Bill of Rights is the lawful protector of our liberty and human rights, which are so often taken for granted. It is under the Bill of Rights that we are guaranteed freedom of speech, freedom of the press and freedom of religion, which are outlined in the first of 10 amendments.
But in our great nation, a number of liberties are granted to us, the citizens of the United States, such as the guarantee that "...the right
Considering the immensity of the First Amendment alone, just imagine how many people of this world strive for these basic liberties and remain unfulfilled. Imagine that more than half of this world's people live without these fundamental human rights, and it is easy to appreciate what we have inherited.
of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed." We are also ensured by the Bill of Rights against unwarranted search and seizures, double jeopardy, self-incrimination and judicial excess.
excess. The amendment process is adaptable. It has been utilized 16 times since 1791 and seen this nation through the worst of times, the Civil War, when the 13th, 14th and 15th amendments culminated America's greatest internal battle.
The Bill of Rights is evidence of the Constitution's unending applicability. As the world's oldest governing document, the American Constitution has survived the test of time and has given the United States an unparalleled sense of justice and identity.
but will the Constitution be rendered obsolete in the face of advancing technology and changing values?
The Constitution is now two centuries old, and our love and respect for this great work and its framers are unending. We can only hope the next 200 years are as sweet as the first, but we must remember that words alone do not make a nation, but, as the Constitution stresses, people do.
Our Constitution is "a tough old soldier," says Supreme Court Justice William Brennan. Though issues may bruise it, "It will survive intact."
Christopher Wilson is an Olathe junior majoring in political science and personnel administration.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Solution; better student
Over the past week, the editorials presented on the problems caused by this year's record enrollment have been confusing and contradictory to say the least.
On Aug. 26 the Kansan criticized President Reagan and the Department of Education for placing a dollar sign on an education. It also commented that more and more students would see their "hard-earned scholarship money taxed" away before their eyes.
accepted.
er away when he comes.
These are both very commendable and politically safe positions for the Kansan to take. But for some reason, the very next day the Kansan did an about-face when it printed an editorial about the over-crowding at our school.
It suggested that in order to curb the fall semester enrollment jumps, out-of-state tuition should be increased. Now that makes a lot of sense. At a time when the school is trying to attract better teachers and students, it would serve no purpose to make our school an unattainable financial goal for less materially fortunate students outside of Kansas who would otherwise be an asset to the University. Raising tuition would do no more than give our quite often stingy legislature more money in the form of fee releases to dangle in front of our faces.
So what to do? Raise those out-of-state academic requirements again. Make the minimum ACT higher along with the average GPA. Make admission to the University as competitive as that of other schools that offer such a fine academic atmosphere. It would follow that only the better students would apply and therefore be
accept for the in-staters, at least put some academic requirements on them, too. If one must spend a year in a junior college it isn't the end of life as we know it.
As a last resort, why not do the obvious? Expand! In a world with a population that is consistently growing, it would also follow that the college population would grow. If the University must increase the tuition, use it to add more staff and new buildings, not just remodeling the Union.
I am a firm believer that getting a good education is a right of every student. However, I feel strongly that those who have the ability should not be impaired in their pursuit for a degree by a university that refuses to improve its reputation by admitting only the better students that seek to attend. Denying a qualified student an education simply because he or his parents can't afford it is asinine.
Mark Madigan, Omaha, Neb., sophomore
In Wednesday's Kansas, Brad Taylor informs freshmen and sophomores that the best advising they can get is from upperclassmen "who have been through the wringer." OK, Brad, tell it to the students we see every day who tearfully tell us. "But nobody told me . . ." or, equally often, "But my friend told me . . .!" as in, "nobody I had to take two semesters of math." "But my friend said I could use Underwater Basketweaving as my lab science." Many of these students are astonished to learn that, at KU, information published in the Undergraduate Catalog and Timetable takes precedence over what they heard at a party four years ago.
Bad advice
Students who are serious about doing well at KU will find that good advising is available if they are willing to make some effort of their
own. For starters:
Be prepared to talk to your adviser, to answer and ask questions. Yes, Brad, you do have to look at the catalog and actually think about what classes you want to take. Your adviser can't do it for you.
■ Keep an open mind. Be willing to try a class you didn't have in high school. Think about classes and majors other than those your dad, mom, buddy, boyfriend or girlfriend thinks you should take. Also, just because someone speaks with an accent or speech impediment doesn't mean he or she is stupid or incompetent. Remember, to most of the world, you talk funn-
■ If you get bad advising, change advisers. Tell the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Advising Support Center. We can't solve advising problems if we don't know about them.
Make an appointment to see an adviser at the CLAS Advising Support Center. If you'd looked at your catalog or read your pre-enrollment material, you'd have known we exist, Brad. We are always happy to help students any way we can.
■ If you are serious about pre-med, pre-business or pre-journalism, drop by their advising offices and pick up an information packet. Then discuss your plans with your liberal arts adviser. You will be strongly encouraged to do liberal arts coursework your first year. This will not most intended pre-business, pre-journalism and pre-med students end up receiving liberal arts degrees.
So, freshmen and sophomores, it's up to you. You can get all sorts of advice from your presumably older and wiser friends, but think about whether that's really best for you.
Linea Sundstrom, advising assistant at the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Advising Support Center and Lawrence graduate student.
Noelle Henrickson, advising assistant and Gladstone,
Mo., senior.
BLOOM COUNTY
MEANWHILE...OUR HERO, LACKING
A SCRIPT OR STORY, IS
CALLED UPON TO WING IT...
PRESSURE'S ON...
THEY'RE GONNA
"VOID" MY IDEA... I
KNOW IT... LESEE...
HOLY COW! IT'S JIMMY HOFFA!
RIDING THE LOCH NESS MONSTER! IT'S CRASHING INTO AN AIR-
LINER!
UH...
by Berke Breathed
NO NO NO...
WHERE'S THE IRONIC
TENSION ? TOPICAL
THINK TOPICAL...
LOOK!!
ERNEST
BORGNINE
VOID VOID
VOID VOID
VOID
CYRALDCO
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, September 17, 1987
5
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Say. How'd you like to have your beak straightened out?
Flamingo toughs
Regents discuss expansion
Campus/Area
School officials discuss admitting community colleges
By MICHAEL HORAK Staff writer
TOPEKA—Representatives from the Kansas Board of Regents and the state Board of Education met yesterday to discuss the implications of bringing Kansas community colleges into the Regents system.
The ten-member Board of Education now sets policy for the state's 19 community colleges, but a bill approved last spring by the House and now before a Senate subcommittee would transfer that authority to the Regents.
Yesterday's meeting at the Department of Education was intended to exchange information and views on the governance issue. Two members from each board and their aides attended.
"Last spring this issue of governance was a hot issue in the Legislature." Regent Richard Reinhardt said at the beginning of the meeting. "We thought it would be valuable for both boards to sit down and talk about what would be best for Kansas college students. By getting together and discussing some of these issues, maybe we can give some input to the Legislature."
Lengthy pauses were common at the beginning of the meeting as members from both boards carefully worded their comments, but an informal discussion developed and members of both boards spoke candidly about their views.
Their concerns centered on two key points — administration of vocational and technical courses taught at community colleges and the control that the education board exerts on its schools.
Under the House bill, the education board would continue to administer vocational courses at community colleges, while the Regents would control the schools the courses were taught in. The education board administers all high school and community college vocational education programs in the state.
Reinhardt said he was concerned about the plan, saying that it would be difficult to have a dual authority over academic programs at one school. He said he preferred to see the Regents take the responsibility of community college administration of the vocational programs and allow the education board to set policy for high school courses.
Members from both boards pledged to work closely together to make any administration change more feasible, and again this fall to discuss the issue.
But Dale Dennis, assistant commissioner for the division of finance with the board, said that would be unwise. He said that high school and college students often were mixed in the same vocational classes and that separating them would be nearly impossible.
Education board members William Musick and Kathleen White told the Regents about the relationship the education board had with its community colleges.
The Regents would have to become accustomed to dealing with those trustees if they took over community affairs, education board members said.
County property taxes, state financing and tuition revenues pay for the community colleges, White said. Because of the county investment in the schools, local administration is directed though local boards of trustees.
The Senate committee may consider the issue when it convenes in the spring.
FOR MEN
AND WOMEN
FOR APPTS CALL
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Nassel & Salabri 1987
Lawrence Book
A MUSEUM OF FIREFIGHTING
Welcome to Lawrence!
ECM Center Events
Sept. 18: Friday Free Movie
"Gallipoll"
7:30 p.m.
Sept. 20: Sunday Evening
Worship and Service
5:30 p.m.
Robin Estefan
"Personal Power
and Dignity in Loving
Relationship"
7:15 p.m.
Sept. 22: Seminar
"Liberation Theology
Sept. 23- University
Forum: " Civil Liberties and the U.S. Constitution"
Date: Gottfried speaker
11:40 a.m.
12 noon: speaker
1204 Oread
Sponsored by
EUGENICAL CHRISTIAN MINISTERS
The Metropolitan Church
The Presbyterian Church (USA)
The United Church of Christ
The Anglican Church
for your home.
ECM Student Christian Center
fields 712 MASS • 842-7187
INTERNATIONAL presents its
○
second annual BENEFIT CONCERT
with
- DARRELL LEA
- the HOMESTEAD * RANDOM GRAYS AZTECH
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17 8:00 p.m.
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6
Thursday, September 17, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Medical
Continued from p. 1
beginning to expect this sort of thing."
She said some of her patients had requested that she wear gloves.
Gilliand said that maintaining personal care was important.
"You still want to be able to touch them and hold them if the need arises," she said. "We don't want our health professionals to treat our patients in space suits."
Health care professionals will become more educated about which situations demand protective clothing, Gilliand said. For example, when the emergency room receives a call, emergency room workers should take the necessary precautions before waiting to assess the patient.
patient. "The emergency room staff should be prepared and assume there may be blood all over, because that is a possibility," she said.
Candyee Waitley, nurse health educator at Watkins Hospital, said health care employees were strongly advised to protect themselves from infectious diseases by wearing gloves, masks, gowns and goggles. However, she said that the employee had freedom to decide whether to follow the recommendations.
think it's made people sit up and stand. Lawrence Memorial Hospital, on the other hand, requires its employees to wear gloves, masks, gowns and goggles, depending on the situation.
decide whether to follow the instructions. "They still have a choice." Waitley said. "But medical staffs are being more conscientious because of AIDS. I think it's made people sit up and take notice."
goggles, depending Pat Parker, chairman of the infection control committee and director of pharmacy at the Lawrence hospital, said. "We are saying to our employees, 'Yes, you have to do this for your own self-protection.' I think most employees will be willing to do this."
Reggae star's assailant sought
The Associated Press
KINGSTON, Jamaica — A warrant was issued yesterday for the arrest of an unemployed handman sought in the fatal shootings of reggae star Peter Tosh and two other people during a robbery last week, a detective said.
The handyman, identified as Dennis Lobban, 33, was paroled recently from a prison in Spanish Town, said a detective close to the investigation.
Lobban knew Tosh and had visited his house several times, according to the source, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.
Tosh, 42, and Wilton "Doc" Brown died Friday night on the way to the hospital after three gunmen forced their way into the musician's home. The trio demanded money, ordered the seven people in the house to lie on the floor and then shot them.
the floor and then shot them.
The third victim, disc jockey Jeff
Dixon, also known as "Free-I Tafari," died Monday of head wounds.
The four others were treated for gunshot wounds and released and are now under police protection.
now under police patrol According to the detective, police think the gunmen are hiding in the countryside.
country. The government said yesterday that it was planning a memorial church service for Tosh next week.
Legislator wants to help future teachers
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — In an effort to stem a growing teacher shortage, a legislator has proposed that the state help cover some of the college costs of students who want to teach in Kansas classrooms.
callers in Iowa. Vernon Williams, R-Wichita, told the Legislative Educational Planning Committee yesterday that if steps were not taken soon to attract
students into the the teaching profession, Kansas schools were going to be in serious trouble.
Williams' proposed legislation would provide forgivable loans for students enrolled in teacher education programs. The loans would cover tuition costs and fees for no more than six semesters.
Students would not have to repay the loan if they received a teaching
certificate and teach in Kansas for seven years. The loan would be reduced by one-seventh for each school year a person taught.
Students who received the loan and failed to graduate, left the state or decided not to teach would have to repay the loan.
WEATHER
From the KU Weather Service
loudy
77°
57°
partly cloudy and mild with
the same tonight. Highs will be in
upper-70s with lows in the upper-50s.
5-DAY
FRI
Mostly Cloudy
P.M. Shower
80/55
HIGH LOW
SAT
Mostly Cloudy
75/53
SUN
Sunny
79/58
MON
Partly Cloudy
81/60
TUE
Showers
78/54
North Platte
69/46
Showers
Omaha
75/58
Partly Cloudy
Rain
F-Storms
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Goodland
70/46
Cloudy
Hays
75/53
Partly Cloudy
Salina
78/55
Partly Cloudy
Topeka
78/57
Partly Cloudy
Columbia
77/58
Partly Cloudy
St. Louis
76/60
Partly Sunny
Dodge City
80/56
Mostly Sunny
Wichita
82/59
Mostly Sunny
Chanute
80/60
Mostly Sunny
Springfield
81/60
Mostly Sunny
Forecast by Kevin Damofal.
Temperatures are today's high
and tonight's overnight low.
Conditions are forecasted for
this afternoon.
Tulsa
85/63
Sunny
云
and Iowa streets.
A Latin American Solidarity rice
■ KU baseball versus Johnson County Community College is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. today at Quigley Field.
■ "Writing Effective Resumes and Letters," a University program, is scheduled for 1:30 p.m. today in 149 Burge Union.
On Campus
and beans dinner is scheduled for 6 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. The speaker is Susan Cookson, a doctor who has been in Nicaragua since October 1986.
- Tryouts and practice for the KU Men's Soccer Club are scheduled for 5 p.m. today at Shenk Complex, 23rd and Iowa streets.
The art films "Spanish Earth" and "Living at Risk" are scheduled for 3 p.m. today in the Spencer Museum of Art auditorium.
October 1968.
An orientation meeting for ushers for the KU Concert and Chamber Music Series is scheduled for 4 p.m. today in the Skilton Lounge in Murphy Hall.
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hawks for UNICEF is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. today in Parlor A of the Knsas Union.
Union An organizational meeting of Jay-
Kansas Union:
“*Rethinking Rape.*” a film sponsored by Women for Educating KU Society, is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. today in Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
■ San Francisco Bay area artist Margo Humphrey will talk about her work at 7:30 p.m. today at Spencer Museum of Art auditioner. A reception will follow in the museum's Central Court.
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Pick up filing applications at SUA Office in the Union
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Informational Meeting Tuesday All candidates must attend- Tuesday, September 22
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, September 17, 1987
Arts/Entertainment
7
Jello Biafra:
Lead singer of Dead Kennedys talks about censorship cultural terrorism, music and his recent obscenity trial
By JULIE McMAHON
Staff writer
Jello Biafra, lead singer in the band Dead Kennedys, was in Lawrence last week for the River City Reunion. Biafra's trip came after an obscenities trial which ended in Los Angeles two weeks ago. He was tried for distribution of harmful matter to minors.
The charges stemmed from a poster by H.R. Giger, who was the Oscar-winning set designer for the movie "Alien." Giger's poster, which pictures penises, was taken in the Dead Kennedys' latest album, "Frankenchrist."
Biafra's trial resulted in a hung jury. The judge declared a mistrial, so Biafra was acquitted.
Q. How would you describe the Dead Kennedys' music?
Biafra spoke about his music, censorship and his trial in an interview Friday.
A. I would say musical stonefish, the stonefish being the most poisonous fish in the world. You step on one and you can die within minutes. We're cultural terrorists, or shall we say people who used music as a form of journalism and information as well as had a pretty well-planted sense of humor.
Q. What is your audience like?
A. Our audience is very cosmopolitan. We draw a wider spectrum of people than almost any other hardcore band ever has. We had everything from old beatniks to parents who wanted to take their kids there, including real little kids. Occasionally we've even seen five-year-olds dive off the stage.
11 had in recent years in some areas turned into more and more of a white male audience, particularly in New York and New Jersey and Los Angeles. That kind of bummed me out because at one point women got on the dance floor as much as anyone else.
Q. How did you hear about the River City Reunion?
Q. Did you wear a suit during the trial?
A. I've known Bill Rich and James Grauerholz of River City productions for years. They introduced me to Mr. (William S.) Burroughs on a couple of occasions — twice in San Francisco and once here. Bill also put on Dead Kennedy in Lawrence. He called early on trying to get me in for River City, and when he did not succeed to last as long as six weeks, I couldn't jump back in until the last minute, so I hope people at least know I'm here.
A. Yeah, you might as well confuse the issue as to who the real crooks are. I not only wore a suit; I wore a lawyer's suit. One of them was the famed suit I wore when I ran for mayor of San Francisco. So, for the best in courtroom attire, shop Salvation Army.
A. There was a long battle over that. Pre-trial motions took almost 10 days. Most of it was arguing over what was admissible evidence and what the instructions were that were going to be read to the jury. It was very important how that was worded.
Q. Were you tried for the lyrics on the album "Frankenstein" or for the poster inside the album or both?
After a couple of victories on jury instructions, two defendants had charges dropped against them because they couldn't convict them after that. There were five total defendants
And then came time for admissibility of evidence and of course the prosecutor wanted to keep all references out of the album itself because he knew that paint cast an entirely different light on the H.R. Giger painting inside the
He knew we included it for real reasons and not for just a cheap promo gimmick like he alleged. That was a key victory — that they were able to let the whole album in. It was a real crack-up to watch the whole jury, each holding their "Frankenchrist" lyric sheets, all following the lyrics like a bouncing ball.
Ironically, this painting in question, "Landscape XX," has also been printed in magazines and in a book called "20th Century Masters of Erotic Art" by Bradley Smith, which is available to many people of any age at many public libraries and university libraries.
Q. Do you feel there is a lack of publicity about your trial?
a. I know James (Grauerholz) and Bill (Rich) knew about it and a lot of people in the underground in hardcore scenes knew about it and a lot about it. We even got a letter from a mother in Topeka about why she didn't think our music was harmful to her children and that the PMRC (Parents' Music Resource Center) and the
religious right was much more harmful.
Towards the end a group called Musicians in Action in New York, who had been formed to fight censorship, had been helping us get attention from the New York Daily News and the New York Times. The Kansas papers have the option of picking up the day-to-day account of the story from the wire services, and they chose not to. There were different times, especially on CNN and ABC, but it was mainly biased towards the prosecution for the most part.
BENEFIT OF MARKETING
I was also on the Oprah Winfrey show with Tipper Gore of the PMRC, although I was hardly ever allowed to talk. . . The amusing highlight was when a woman called up on the air claiming that Dead Kennedys were responsible for her son trying to kill her. She couldn't cite specifics nor could she actually detail whether the guy was really trying to kill her or whether she was just another paranoid, chicken-hearted parent who would rather let the PMRC and the police do her parenting for her.
Jello Biafra, lead singer of the band Dead Kennedys.
Q. Do you believe it is possible to go too far with art?
A. Not really, because history has always sided with the artist. The government of ancient Greece thought Socrates was too dangerous and they executed him. Yeh his plays and literature survive to this day.
his past.
And I think Lenny Bruce has been vindicated. They tried to prosecute Allen Ginsberg over "Howl" and now they teach it in classrooms, although there are many people who are trying to turn the clock back. And they've succeeded, especially in North Carolina, where a few words of the state obscurity laws were changed at the request of Sen. Jesse Helms to take out educational and artistic value. Most of the legislators probably didn't even look at it because it looked like such a minor change.
But now the law in that state is so strict that if you flash a picture of a Michelangelo nude in a college art class, you can go to jail for three years and be fined $10,000. There are many movies where that it is now ill. A video of in North Carolina
And so consequently the colleges, instead of going to court, have simply dropped a lot of classes, including law school classes on obscurity law, because the transcripts are under consideration by legislatures in five other states.
Q. Do you think pornography exists?
A. It's in the eye of the beholder. Let's go back to the law I was prosecuted under, the distribution of harmful matter to minors. What is harmful to a kid? I think something like "Rambo" or "Top Gun" or some of the really right-wing racist metal bands that come out on Combat Records would be a lot more harmful to an impressible kid than anything we could come up with if we tried. But I don't think banning it would solve the problem. It would just put it under the table so the kid would sneak the record in next time and have that much less communication with his parents.
Rather than censor, we just have to come out against it and that's the reason we got prosecuted in the first place. Who encourages more kids to wind up dead? Ozzy Ozbourne or military recruiting ads? That's what I think is harmful to minors.
Q. Would you ever consider banning something you didn't agree with?
A. No. Because that would be giving someone else the option of doing the same to me. Once you say that your taste is better than someone else's and therefore you have the right to ban it, you have become a surrogate Jimmy Swaggart even if it's coming from the left. I want no part of that.
Q. Why did the record industry cooperate with PMRC after the Senate hearings?
A. It was a pure and simple game of money and back room politics. The industry wanted to have a sales tax placed on blank cassette tapes that would go directly to them. In other words, it would be an unprecedented tax where the federal government would impose a tax to benefit a particular part of the private sector, which would be a $250 million windfall for the record industry.
The record companies are willing to censor and even blackball their own artist in order to try to get this tape tax. All they've gotten is a rejection of the blank tape tax and an outrage of the censorship of the leadership of their artists in some cases - blackballing
What happens when the owners of these chain shopping malls threaten to evict a record store if they carry any record with any sticky? The store could either pull the record or go out of business. So nine times out of ten, they pull the record. This is where the blackballing and censorship really hits home.
The Lady and Tiger
Artist will give two talks
"The Lady and the Tiger" is one of 13 lithographs by Margo Humphrey on display in the Spencer Museum of Art.
Scott Carpenter/KANSAN
A well-known San Francisco area artist will visit the University of Kansas today at Spencer Museum of Art.
By a Kansan reporter
The artist, Margo Humphrey, a lithographer, will give a talk at 11:30 a.m. at the museum's South Balcony Gallery. She will give a public lecture at 7:30 p.m. in the museum auditorium.
Humphrey will speak about her work, including 13 lithographs that
Stephen Goddard, curator of prints at the museum and assistant professor of art history, says, "They're very personal images. They have a lot to do with love and life. They're a lot colorful, very vibrant."
will be on display until Oct. 18 in the gallery.
Goddard said the display covered about a ten-year-period of Humphrey's work. Some of the pieces evolved from her recollections of 1950s comics.
KU prof choreographs play in Greece
By KIRK ADAMS
Staff writer
A University of Kansas professor returned recently from a trip to Greece, where he helped choreograph a dance. Sophia is a 2-year-old theater
Andrew T. Tsubaki, professor of theater and media arts and chairman of the department of East Asian languages and cultures, spent the last two summers at the International Meeting of Ancient Drama at the ancient fortress Oeniales in west-central Greece.
The event was sponsored by the people of Katokhi, a village near the fortress, and the nearby city of Agrionin. He said the cast and crew were lodged and fed by the local people.
The play was performed in English by U.S. actors for primarily Greek-speaking audiences.
After the three performances in
celebration in June, the company was
the recipient of a 100 million prize.
He worked under the direction of internationally known director Heinz-Uwe Haus of the German Democratic Republic. Tsubaki was assisted by co-director Nicos Shiakalis, a Greek Cypriot.
Tsubaki choreographed the play and was in charge of the actors' physical training.
Tsubaki said Haus asked him to work on the play because of his knowledge of Japanese traditional theater.
"I'm very conscious of style, form and movement, and he wanted me to
give input in those areas."
Tsubaki said Haus was most concerned about presenting the play with energy and visual appeal. He intended to make the chorus more of a visual element
He said the techniques they used to make the play more exciting were almost revolutionary.
One of the most innovative aspects of the play, he said, was the way the chorus functioned. The chorus was composed of all the actors, with characters separating from the chorus when they were identified. The play then reverted to the original script.
Tsubaki added aspects of the surviving Japanese traditional Noh theater for the chorus' chanting.
"Based on Noh style chanting I developed a tune or melody for chorus people to chant, and then I added dance movement."
He said he choreographed the dancing by incorporating many non-traditional moves.
"We used from Greek steps to Japanese martial arts to rock music."
Tsubaki said the innovations were well-received.
Professor Ronald Willis, chairman of the department of theater and media arts, said that he had not seen Tsubaki's work on "Antigone," but that Professor had a long-standing record of integrating aspects of the Oriental theater into non-Oriental scripts.
"They responded to our performance so positively. Many of them made a point to tell us what was going on there than the traditional Greek style," he said.
"I've seen his shows and admired them," Willis said. He said he thought Tsubaki had developed a small core of followers and that his
work had significantly benefited the department.
Tsubaki said the play was so successful, he would be returning to the theater and work on the production of "Oedipus" in 1896; the third play in Sophocles' trilogy.
BALIAN ISLANDS
Andrew T. Tsubaki displays a map of Greece, where he recently choreographed "Antigone," a play written by Sophocles. Tsubaki is a KU professor of theater and media arts, director of international theater studies, and department chairman of East Asian languages and cultures.
---
8
Thursday, September 17, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Arts/Entertainment
一
Courtesy of the William Rockhill Nelson Trust "River Landscape with Fireflies," a painting on a Japanese paper folding screen by Shikawa Bunrin, is one of 17 screen paintings on display at the Spencer Museum of Art.
Courtesy of the William Rockhill Nelson Trust
Japanese dividers viewed as art form
By JENNIFER ROWLAND
Staff writer
Originally used in Japanese homes as shields against evil spirits and cold weather, Japanese folding screens are many art forms around the world.
An exhibit of 18th- and 19th-century Japanese screens will be on display until Nov. 29 at the Spencer Museum of Art.
Patricia Fister, curator of Oriental art, said the idea for the exhibition came after the Kress Gallery in the museum needed an exhibit and had been vacant for about a year and a half.
The screens range in height from several inches to about five feet, and the images printed on them range from landscapes to birds and flowers. The screens are displayed in folded positions.
The exhibit was convenient for students in Fisterv's class in Oriental Studies.
dimensional pieces of art require seeing them firsthand, she said.
touch. Poor touch.
The screens were used as room dividers in Japan. They since have been viewed as art forms.
"In Japan, screens are functional as well as being art objects," she said. "They also allow us to customize decorations. They do present certain aspects of Japanese culture."
Fister said the exhibit was meant to show various examples of Japanese folding screens.
From Broadway to the classroom
"We didn't try to be comprehensive. It was more to kind of give a cross sampling of a range of things than it was the 18th and 20th centuries." she said.
"People have been intrigued with the actual format, and have also been intrigued with the designs one finds in screens," she said. "I think anybody will find something of interest there."
KU student enjoys Kansas living after being in New York fast lane
By BRIAN BARESCH
Staff writer
Broadway beckons to young actors, but the University of Kansas has been knocked to one Broadway actor.
Tom McCauley, Philadelphia graduate student, has seen the lights on Broadway. He acted for two seasons in "Da," a play that won a Tony award for its lead actor, Barnard Hughes. He has also acted off-Broadway in New York and in numerous regional theaters.
Cauley also has produced and directed several productions, been in a few commercials and appeared in the movies "Hair" and "Altered States." He also has kept himself busy as a hairstylist, working for Vidal Sassoon and trimming the locks of TV and music stars, including the entire cast of "Da."
"You have to be crazy to be in the business because it drives you crazy," the 36-year-old actor-student said. "One week we’re making hundreds of dollars, the next you're begging for work."
McCauley, muscular and fit, relaxed in an old T-shirt and blue jeans, his accent most East Coast with a little British thrown in. His eyes were intense but serene as he talked about life in the show-business world.
McCauley said he was feeling jaded and burned out by the nonstop parties with stars almost every night. "I was getting bored with parties in New York, to tell the truth," he said.
When he recently came to Kansas to visit his mother, who lives in Baxter Springs and who was ill, he took some time to re-evaluate his life. "I was starting to feel like I needed to get away from New York," he said.
So he decided to come back to
school and get a master's degree.
School and get a master's degree. McCauley had attended Temple University in Philadelphia for two years and then got a scholarship to study at the Royal Academy in London, but he never finished his degree
McCauley said he chose KU after talking to some of the faculty members here. "It just clicked," he said. "I felt right about it and decided to dive in."
After finishing the work required for a bachelor's degree here, McCauley will begin work in earnest on a master's degree in directing. In the meantime, he's rehearsing for a part in "The Trojan Women" for the Wilkinson Theatre Series, and is planning an avant-garde theater experiment.
Lisa Jones/KANSAN
JAMES BLAKE
The party scene in New York, with parties every night, rock and TV stars everywhere, and the glamour of hairstyling, finally got to be too much for him, he said. He saved Billy's hair by letting it be styled and styled the hair of three stars of the soap opera "Ryan's Hope," but sometimes felt crowded.
Lawrence presents a nice contrast. "People are a lot more genuine," he said. "This is a beautiful campus."
He used to get about $45 for a haircut, but now he gets less than a third of that, clipping part-time between his other activities.
But after the fast-lane life in the Big Apple, McCauley is more than glad to be in the relatively slow-paced Midwest. "The people are so laid-back here," he said. "It's to my advantage, because I am so hyper after being in New York for so long."
Tom McCauley, Philadelphia graduate student, mimics a part from "The Trojan Women." McCauley, who has acted both on and off-Broadway, plays Poseidon in the play.
McCauley is hardly slowing down. He and Kevin Reeves, Ottumwa, Iowa, graduate student, are putting together what they hope will become
Reeves, who also has been on stage in New York, said the new stage, at Dynnex, 530 Wisconsin St., would increase the number of outlets for them to sell products and get people to display talent with only "X" number of projects," he said.
an avant-garde theater to provide a place for local artists to perform, sharpen their skills and experiment.
A number of prizes were given McCauley said he was excited
McCauley still keeps his ear to the ground for good movie roles and said he might take a sabbatical from school if he were offered a significant part.
about the chance to add to Lawrence's cultural scene, because of the rich tradition here. "It seems like this is the hub of the Plains," he said.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, September 17, 1987
Campus/Area
9
Committee plans downtown project
By VALOREE ARMSTRONG Staff writer
Yet another surge to strengthen retail development in downtown Lawrence was evident at last night's meeting of the Downtown Lawrence Association, although a downtown mall was far from the objective.
Myles Schachter, DLA vice president and a member of the Downtown Improvement Committee, said a downtown mall would conflict with the DIC's comprehensive plan for development in downtown Lawrence. C is a citizen board that advises the city on downtown development.
"If we're going to have a major project, we should keep the good qualities of the downtown, not change them." Schachter said.
"We don't say that 'm' word more," he said and laughed. Instead, Schachter said, the committee wants "m" to be used in financially lagging areas downtown.
"It doesn't have to be in one complex," he said. "It might take two or three areas — not one big project that takes away from the rest
of the downtown."
The DIC is in the process of choosing a developer consultant for a downtown project. The DIC is seeking a creative consultant who can carry out the committee's specialized wishes. Schachtter said members of the team must have two weeks and hoped to present a workable plan to the city by Dec. 31.
Also at the meeting, DLA members approved new bylaws — a change precipitated by the Lawrence City Commission's recent approval of a new law. The vote will not be complete until remaining members vote by mail.
Business owners in the improvement district, which is bordered by Sixth, Eleventh, Tennessee and Rhode Island streets, are assessed a fee for improvements and promotions of the downtown area. About 380 businesses are in the district. Peggy Johnson, DLA president, said.
Johnson said the DLA's new role was that of a retail promotion committee that carried out and coordinated items decided upon by the BID board.
Rare opera records enrich music library
By BRIAN BARESCH Staff writer
Staff writer
The KU music library was enriched this summer by the donation of 2,738 rare opera records from a KU alumnus, James A. Pinney.
Pinney, a retired physician who lives in Hilbert, Wis., played in the University Symphony Orchestra while in school. He bought the records a few years ago from a Philadelphia physician and donated them to the University of Kansas to ensure that they would be well cared for.
The collection has records from as long ago as 1900, including many from Russia, Japan, France, Italy and Germany. All the records are fragile 78 discs, but none broke on the way in 2015. Elkhart Johnson, librarian at the Gorton Music Library in 448 Murphy Hall.
Pinney said the collection was appraised by a California expert at $18,090.
Also in the collection are 130
publishers' catalogs and a floppy-disc inventory of the records, which has been alphabetized for easy access.
Mark Ferrell, assistant professor of music, said the recordings would be important for voice students in several wavs.
"It's interesting to us to see how different singers rebel the problems in singing," he said. "Everyone has its own particular problems."
Ferrell, who is the musical director for the University's opera workshop, said he would encourage opera students to listen to the records to hear how many ways a part could be sung, which would help the student receive a wider perspective on the work.
The differences between time periods and between individual singers with different talents will add to this perspective, he said.
"There are fads that come and go," he said. "Opera has many living pieces."
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M U M
On the Record
An AM-FM radio/cassette player valued at $600 was taken between midnight and 8 a.m. Tuesday from a car parked in the 300 block of Wisconsin Street, Lawrence police reported.
A 1982 Yamaha motorcycle valued at $1,350 was taken between 1:30 and 8 a.m. Friday from a parking lot at
Fireside Court, Lawrence police reported.
A forged check for $473.24 was discovered between 3 and 5 p.m. Saturday at a business in the 1000 block of 23rd Street, Lawrence police reported.
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THE BASKETBALL STAFF CAN'T WAIT FOR THE FOOTBALL SEASON!
21
KU
Students made Allen Field House one of the greatest places in the country for basketball. We could do the same for football, but it has to start with you. I hope you'll join me, and the rest of the basketball staff at all our home games. We're all Jayhawks.
Erinny Brown
10
Thursday, September 17, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Professor speaks about Constitution
By KIRK ADAMS
Staff writer
The signing of the U.S. Constitution 200 years ago today was not boring, but people don't get excited about it because it's not fun like the Super Bowl, a professor of journalism said last night.
Calder Pickett, the Clyde M. Reed distinguished professor of journalism, told about 250 people at Woodruff Auditorium, "I hope I won't put up with that." He excited as a rock concert or "LA Law' or watching Danny Mann."
But it might be as exciting as watching the KU football team, he said.
Pickett showed slides of people and places and played music from the revolutionary and constitutional periods throughout his speech.
The summer of the Constitutional Convention, 1787, was one of the hottest in memory at the time, he said.
A French visitor wrote, "At each inhaling of air, one worries about the next one. The slightest movement is painful." "Pickett said.
Before the founding fathers ratified the Constitution, the colonies were operating individually without federal government, Pickett said.
At first, the delegates did not know they were writing the Constitution — they were there to revise the Articles of Confederation, and the concept of the Constitution came later. The meetings were secret, and delegates could not copy the daily journal without permission.
And initially, the concept of a formal government was not supported by many people.
"The idea of a single executive (branch) frightened some people, who remembered a single executive called George the Third."
Other issues heavily debated were how members of Congress should be selected, the proposed judiciary branch of government and how much power Congress should have over the states.
Pickett said, "James Wilson came up with the idea of presidential electors, a matter we're still struggling with."
Eventually, the delegates agreed upon the Constitution, and the states ratified it after heavy debate. Some states held out for two or three years.
To conclude his speech, Pickett said, "We as a people would have been long dead had we not had the Constitution those founding fathers wrangled about in the Philadelphia heat of the summer of 1787."
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Greek week 87
K.U. FACULTY/STAFF AND STUDENT QUARTERBACK CLUB
You are invited to join football coach Bob Valesente for Monday noon Quarterback Club meetings.
Date - Mondays during football season
Time - 12:00 (Noon) · 1:00 p.m.
Place - Adams Center Summerfield Room
*Optional Lunch - $5.00 Soup and Sandwich Buffet
Coach Val will review the previous game, show game films and preview the next game.
1
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, September 17, 1987
11
Nation/World
Nursing homes fail to meet standards
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — More than 3,000 of the nation's nursing homes repeatedly failed to meet at least one federal health requirement over a four-year period, and Kansas is one of four states that repeatedly has failed to meet requirements. Congress was told yesterday.
"Repeated noncompliance with nursing home requirements is widespread," said the report, released at a news conference by the General Accounting Office, the investigative arm of Congress.
The biggest problem was found to be in nursing services, which include everything from treatment and care to preventing bedsores and injuries.
In addition to a survey of compliance reports on 8,298 nursing homes throughout the country, the federal survey on 26 nursing homes in five states.
Four of the states Arkansas,
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The report cited examples of problems, including a 1985 inspection at a California home that found 10 instances in which care was not adequate to keep residents or their belongings and sheets free of human wastes.
California, Connecticut and Kansas — were picked because researchers said they had a large percentage of their facilities repeatedly fail to comply with selected requirements. Homes in Wisconsin were added for comparison purposes because there were relatively few repeat offenders. No state-by-state compliance records were made available.
The report also described a Kansas home, also not identified, in which 13 residents in 1985 had bedsores, and one of the residents had a bedore on the hip that was four inches in diameter with muscle visible.
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Hours:
Mon-Thurs. 4 p.m-1 a.m.
Friday 4 p.m-2 a.m.
Saturday 4 p.m-
Sunday 11 p.m-Midnight
Recreation Services presents
INTRAMURAL FOOTBALL for students, faculty and staff
For all leagues will be held, Monday, Sept. 21 at 6:30 p.m., North Robinson Center. If you miss this meeting you may miss the football season! Priority scheduling will be awarded at this time.
INSTANT SCHEDULING:
Tuesday and Wednesday, Sept. 22 and 23.
Sign your teams up and pay fees from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.at 208 Robinson.
MANDATORY MANAGER'S MEETING:
ENTRY FEES: Trophy Leagues: $20
Rec A, Rec B, Co-Rec Leagues: $10
PLAY BEGINS: Monday, October 5, 1987
For more information call 864-3546.
INTRAMURAL
The Interfraternity Council and Panhellenic Association of the University of Kansas would like to thank all Greek members who participated in "GREEK WEEK 1987."
Congratulations to the top three winners:
—Sigma Nu
—Alpha Epsilon Pi
—Pi Kappa Alpha
Tandon wins state contract
See PCs on campus, September 10
Lawrence, KS - Success in the OEM (Original Equipment Manufacturer) market has prompted Tandon Corporation to enter the microcomputer market. The company is now a New Hampshire) and the Tandon PC line has become increasingly bouncil on campus.
Since the late seventies, Tandon Corporation has been known as the leader in the microcomputer disk drive market. To maintain their position as a market leader, they have redirected their marketing and manufacturing efforts to better meet the needs of their manufacturers and end-users, including the introduction of an IBM-compatible computer.
In March, the State of Kansas signed a contract with Tandon Corporation to purchase PCAT/compatible machines. The PCA is functionally equivalent to the IBM PCAT/at almost half the price.
Tandon went to the top to ensure the success of their microcomputer launch. Four IBM veterans, who were closely involved in the development and manufacturing of the IBM Personal Computer, were hired to manage the engineering and marketing divisions. This dedication to a quality product has allowed Tandon to make significant inroads into the PC marketplace.
With an 80286 microprocessor, an optional 80287 co-processor, and keyboard selectable clock speeds of 6 and 8 MHz, it offers comparable performance. The PCA was rated "operationally compatible with IBM PC/AT" by Future Computing, which is the highest compatibility rating given. The University of Kansas has
The Tandion PCA comes with 1 MB of RAM and a wide selection of hard disks for about half the price of a comparable IBM.
found that a computer with these features and benefits is definitely a good buy, especially at state contract prices.
Tandon also has a PCNT model which is ideal for word-processing and data entry. Both Tandons are a good choice for anyone who needs the security of a brand name and nearby dealer service. "Tandon offers high quality workmanship at an affordable price", says Mark Husby, Computer Olet Sales Representative, "Overall, it is a good value."
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12
Thursdav. September 17, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
County amateur radio club offers classes to beginners
Weekly teaching can qualify students for novice license
By JENNIFER ROWLAND Staff writer
Students who want to communicate with someone as far away as Japan or as close as a few blocks away now can learn to use ham radios in weekly classes sponsored by the Douglas County Amateur Radio Club.
The club will offer the classes from 7 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. every Thursday, beginning today, in the basement of Fire Station No. 1, 745 Vermont St.
Club secretary Klissa Rueschoff, who is also a secretary in the mechanical engineering department, said students must be able to decipher Morse Code at the rate of five per hour nationally approved test on ham radio rules to receive a novice license at the end of the nine-week course.
Students will learn eight letters at a time until they master the code. later lessons be spent practicing and learning radio regulations, Rueschhoff said.
Novice is the lowest of five FCC license levels, and the holder is limited in the number of bands, or frequencies, available.
The classes are free, but participants must buy a $10 manual and tape American Radio Relay League, a American Radio Relay Rueschhoff said. The radio league
also distributes the national license test.
The Federal Communications Commission opened the airwaves to voice privileges for novices last spring. Voice privileges had been available only to those with upper-
1.
Klissa Rueschhoff Club secretary
If you're in an emergency situation, you want to be able to send a message as quickly and as accurately as possible.'
level licenses. In the past, novices had only been allowed by the FCC to use Morse Code, which transmits seeping signals in dots and dashes, Rueschhoff said.
"That has generated a lot more interest in the novice license, because now they can have voice privilege and can talk to people all over the world, depending on band conditions," she said.
"If you're in an emergency situation, you want to be able to send a message as quickly and as accurately as possible," Rueschhoff said.
Ham radio operators sometimes use jargon to send messages. For example, "CQ," which means "seek you," tells the listener that the sender is willing to talk, Rueschhoff said.
In addition to jargon, the course will teach technical radio information such as antenna, voltage and equipment usage.
Ham radios can be used to communicate to all parts of the world, she said.
"In the last two months, for example, I've talked to people in Central America and a station in Christchurch, New Zealand," she said.
The club has helped local weather services during severe weather watches by relaying updated weather information. Rueschhoff said.
Ken Olson, the club's newsletter publisher and shop supervisor for KU's division of biological sciences, said he joined the club in 1956.
Radio operators also have been used as check points for safety procedures.
Olson said he had participated in a ham radio program at Forbes Field in Topeka that relayed messages from military personnel overseas to their relatives in the United States during the Vietnam War.
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Avalon Apartments
I'm an American; therefore I am.
I'm Lutheran; therefore I am.
What makes me who I am?
Lutheran Campus Ministry
1204 Oread 843-4948
Sunday Worship: 10:30 a.m.
offers you:
SERVICE
QUALITY
- One or two bedroom apartments.
- Extra storage space available.
- Applianced kitchen.
- Applianced kitchen
- Off street parking
- Gas and water paid.
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- Rental Furniture available from Thompson-Crawley.
- On KU bus route.
9th & Avalon Rd. 841-5797
Avalon Aps. Located: 4 blocks east of Iowa on 9th to Avalon Rd.
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WOMEN for EDUCATING K.U. SOCIETY, SPONSOR
Machine Shop Service Available
A film examining rape as a "by-product" of social values as presented by the media. A short self-defense demonstration and discussion will follow the film. Admission is free.
"Rethinking Rape"
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, September 17, 1987
Sports
13
Frederick hopes to boost ticket sales
James Larson/KANSAN
Bob Frederick, KU athletic director, said he would like to see a marketing strategy in place for the football program by next season to boost ticket sales.
Bv MIKE CONSIDINE
Staff writer
One of Bob Frederick's first stated goals when he was hired as KU's athletic director in June was to increase football attendance. It is a problem badly in need of attention.
Over the past five years in the Big Eight Conference, only Kansas State has lower attendance than KU. During that period, the Jayhawks have compiled a 20-33-1 record and averaged 34,904 fans per game. By contrast, Missouri is 19-34-3 but has averaged 47 772.
Frederick said that two conditions needed to be met to correct the lagging sales.
Additionally, early KU football season ticket sales were down this week.
"One is to improve the program," he said. "The more successful the team is, the more interested people are going to be in watching it.
"The second thing is that we have to do all the other things that make the game work."
Frederick's main focus so far has been upgrading the non-conference schedule for future years. Sports Illustrated declared this year's schedule, which includes three NCAA games, one of the worst in the nation.
Auburn and Baylor are booked for 1988 home games. Southern California will be in to kick off the 1989 season.
"We'll be playing better-quality opposition in the years ahead." Freeman
Frederick said he was in the process of scheduling games with Virginia, Oregon State and Michigan State. He said he was also trying to negotiate contracts with Air Force, Indiana, Northwestern.
Frederick said that one of the keys to improving overall attendance was to have a clean, dry floor.
I think the long-range solution is to get more students involved," said Frederick, who served as director of the Williams Fund from 1981-85. "If memory serves me correctly, in the late 70s we were averaging 13,000 to 14,000 students per game. This past year, we averaged 7,500."
Frederick spoke to campus fraternities and sororites about the problem during Greek Week. He said he also wanted to meet with students at residence and scholarship halls and ask David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, for input.
One area he'll be looking into is the cost of student tickets, which prices vary.
“It's important to get them out because they're our future,” Frederick said. “Soon they'll become alumunates and have to have to ask for their help then.”
Boosting attendance among current alumni, especially the 25,000 in the Kansas City area, is a top priority.
"We've worked really hard the last two summers with our Hawks Club and had a fair amount of success," Frederick said. "The biggest thing at this point is Johnson County. That has to be the focus for us in the future."
The Lawrence area is another under-utilized source of revenue. Based on studies of similar-sized communities, Frederick estimated that the community could add $15-20 million.
"It has to start here. We really had success (two summers ago) in selling new season tickets, but not as much this year," Frederick said.
The new sources of income would reduce the strain on present contrib-
"We put so much pressure on donors right now for private contributions," Frederick said. "We've got to take some of that pressure off by increasing the gate revenue at football (games). We want to sell season tickets, that way we'll know we've got that many banked."
Missouri has experienced success with a different approach this year, said Laura Toy, administrative assistant for the Tigers' athletic department. The Tigers are emphasizing single-game ticket sales and focusing on attracting interest groups like the School of Agriculture.
"We've tried very hard to make it an event with an entertainment package that will appeal to the whole family." Toy said. "We feel we're having better success marketing to large interest groups than we would having pompon days which have more limited appeal."
To make the game an event, Missouri plans a number of activities for its football weekends including downtown "Spirit Nights" on Fridays and a one-hour rock concert shortly before kickoff time.
Missouri has also hired a full-time employee to concentrate on corporate ticket packages.
Frederick said that he was not planning to use many one-time promotions such as the Willie Nelson State season opener Sept. 5.
"I don't want to say they're gimmicks." Frederick said. "But we
want the people to come out on a consistent basis."
Frederick was hired too late to be able to institute changes for the current season, but said he would like to have a comprehensive marketing strategy for the football program in place by December or January. He said the school presently had a $7.5 million budget for football advertising and had one half-time employee involved in marketing.
"It's a situation we need to take a real hard look at," Frederick said. "I think eventually we have to get to a point where matching is a year-round effort for us."
Director no stranger to Kansas athletics
Bv MIKE CONSIDINE
Staff writer
When Bob Frederick was selected to fill the KU athletic director's position in June, he was far from being a stranger to people around the University.
Frederick has been a part of KU athletics as an athlete, a coach and an administrator.
basketball under Dick Harp. After receiving his bachelor's degree in education, Frederick worked for Harp for two years as a graduate assistant. He returned in 1971 to serve as golf coach and assistant basketball coach under Ted Owens. After coaching stints at Brigham Young and Stanford, he was basketbal coach at Lawrence High from 1977 to 1981, when he was named
director of the Williams Fund.
In 1985, he resigned to accept the position of athletic director at Illinois State.
As an undergraduate, he played
"I think one of my personal strengths is the ability to draw a wide range of constituencies together," Frederick said. "I don't want to be perceived as a faculty or student athletic director. I want to represent all constituencies including alumni
One of his main ambitions, Frederick said, was to open the lines of communication as he did at Illinois State.
"I spent a lot of time with the faculty and students at ISU," he said. "Enthusiasm for an intercollegiate athletic program starts with the students.
and friends."
Picking goalkeeper tough job for coach
By ROBERT WHITMAN
Staff writer
Only minutes before every game, the KU men's soccer coach solves the club's biggest mystery: who the starting goalie will be.
Coach Glenn Shirtlife said he made that decision just moments before game time. As it turned out in Sunday's match against Missouri, Shirtlife needed both goals, Jon Gregor and Scott Schaffer.
Gregor was injured about 15 minutes into the game and was replaced by Schaffer, a freshman in his first collegiate club match.
"The guy had a great shot and was unmarked," Schaffer said. "The ball deflected off one of our defenders and went right to him. I was on the left and I ran back to the right. I missed it by a little bit. It went off the post."
Schaffer played for Parkway Central High School in suburban St. Louis, the Missouri state high school soccer tournament runner-up last
Less than 10 minutes later, the Tigers welcomed Schaffer to collegiate club soccer by scoring a goal from a ball deflected off the head of a Kansas defender. Missouri made the goal stand in a 1-0 victory in the Jayhawks' opening game of the fall season.
"The way I handle keepers usually is, as far as they're concerned, they're both starting." Shirlttie said. "Injuries happen in warm-ups, somebody can hurt his shoulder or break a bone. You don't want that skiff off if he knows he's not starting. I want them both to be mentally sharp for the match."
But as far as who will start the next game for Kansas, only Shirtlife knows, and he won't tell until just before the next game.
He said both goalies were nearly equal in ability, so competition in practice during the week determined who would start.
fall.
Shirtlife said everyone else on the team had an idea by Friday afternoon's practice who would be starting.
Though he is trying to win a place
with the Spartans, he said, he and
Gregor set. So well.
"Jon and I are working really well together. I like the way Jon is taking it," Schaffer said. "This is more a team not individualism.
"To be a successful team, you have
to be able to do as good as each
other." Shirt slid over.
is n smart to judge yourself against somebody else. I guess that's what coaches are for."
Angels beat Royals 6-4; Boone catches record
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Bill Buckner had three hits and drove in two runs, and Ruppert Jones had twoRBIs as the California Angels beat the Kansas City Royals 6-4 Wednesday night.
Greg Minton, 4-2, got the victory as relief for starter Chuck Finley, and the Angels' Bob Boone caught his record-setting 1919 game. DeWayne Buice went $2\frac{1}{2}$ innings for his 16th save despite allowing a bases-loaded walk to George Brett in the ninth inning.
Jones doubled home Buckner from first base off Royals starter Bret Saberhagen, 17-9, snapping a 3-3 tie in the sixth inning after Buckner led off with a single. The Angels added two insurance runs in the ninth on an RBI double by Mark Rayal and a run-scoring single by Devon White.
California hit three straight doubles in the first inning, scoring three runs. Wally Joyner singled with one out and took third on Johnny Ray's double to right-center field.
Buckner lined a double to left-center and scored both runners, and Jones reached second when his pop
fly fell inside the left field line, just out of the reach of field gary Thurman. Buckner barely beat Thurman's throw home.
Finley balked home one run after Bill Pecola and Thurman singled. Thurman was sacrificed to third and fourth in the 12th. He was when Wilson grounded to first.
Danny Tartabull doubled home a run after Wilson led off with a single in the first inning for Kansas City, and the Royals scored twice in the second, tying the game.
Boone broke the record set by Al Lopez when he appeared behind the plate in the bottom of the first inning. The record came near the end of Boone's 15th season in the major leagues.
The game was stopped at the start of the bottom of the first and Boone took the field alone to an ovation. The next play ended onto the field to congratulate him.
Angels Manager Gene Mauch presented to Bone a plaque with a home plate and the words "Bob Boone" in Record 1, 1941 games. Sept. 16, 1987.)
Negotiator says strike is possible
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — The chief negotiator for NPL club owners said yesterday that a strike next week was a bad signal, unless federal mediation takes place.
Jack Donlan, the executive director of the NFL Management Council, said the proposal submitted by the players on Tuesday would cost owners $200 million above the figures he said. He also laid out his plans he said, that was without taking into account the union's demand for free agency.
"This proposal is not a framework for settlement. We can't get there with this proposal." Donlan said of the union position.
He also said he would like to resume negotiations but only with a mediator or face-to-face with his union counterpart, Gepshaw. The union has so far rejected Donald's calls for mediation, although Upshaw has said he would welcome the participation of NFL Commissioner Pete Rosele or anyone else who could make a deal for management.
Upshaw, the executive director of the NFL Players Union, said he was disappointed in Donlan's response and would meet tomorrow with AFL-CIO president Lane Kirkland and other national labor officials. He also again dismissed the call for a mediator.
"They (management) have taken the position that the middle ground is their ground," Upshaw said. "If we want to settle anything, we have to move to their ground. When we've had mediators in the past, they weren't even at the table when the deal was struck. We're willing to negotiate. Why are they calling for a mediator?"
The Management Council also disclosed it had filed with the National Labor Relations Board an unfair labor practice complaint against the union.
MILKES
Darryl Terrell works on his receiving during practice. Terrell, who was made a starter this week, was playing for Southern Methodist University when its football program was suspended.
Football player adjusts to life after fall of SMU
Bv CRAIG ANDERSON
Staff writer
All the stereotypes of crooked, overemphasized, big-time Texas football seemed to be played out in real life when the NCAA suspended the Southern Methodist University football program after last season.
The termination of football at SMU came after it was discovered that Mustang players had been receiving payoffs from some of the school's athletic boosters, among other violations.
Kansas junior tailback Darryl Terrell was a member of the MU football team when the house came tumbling down on them. He got a first-hand view of about the only way known to keep fans from enjoying his crazy state from enjoying their sport. Well, almost first-band.
"There were always rumors that guys were taking money, but I never saw any of them getting paid." Terrell said. "I was never offered any money by anyone."
"It was real crazy down there for awhile," he said. "Coaches were running around all over the place trying to talk to players. A lot of times they wouldn't even know the players they were talking to."
Terrell did witness one football stereotype — the one of college football coaches in a frenzy, trying to recruit the type of athletes that might make their own jobs more secure.
The recruiter Kansas sent, linebacker coach Scott Conley, took a different approach, the tailback said. Terrell said he was moved most by the good education he would be able to receive at Kansas.
The thought that Texas high school football was like playing in a pressure cooker turned on high power wasn't totally accurate, Terrell said. Playing at W.T. White High School in Dallas for
"There's some pressure in just playing football, but there were so many star players in the area that it kind of spread out," he said.
During his high school career,
Terrell rushed for over 2,700 yards
and scored 27 touchdowns. He also
intercepted seven passes playing at
cornerback. Terrell made the all-district team each of the three
hemes he played varsity football.
three years didn't cause him any high-anxiety stress attacks, he said.
While being recruited in high school, Terrell said local fans tried to pressure him to play at his hometown college – SMU. Terrell visited Oklahoma and Texas El Paso State University to become a Mustang. He said the final decision on where to go to school was completely his.
"I went to SMU because back in 1984, when I signed, they had some great teams and some great players." Terrell said. "I also liked the chance to be able to play in my hometown."
The winning tradition of Jay hawk football might not rival that of SMU, but so far the transition to SMU has gone smoothly. Terrell said
This week the 5-foot-11, 180 pound Terrell was moved to firstteam tailback status after rushing for 21 yards in six carries in the Jayhawk's 49-0 opening game loss and improved as he grew more accustomed to his new team and new school.
"Every day I feel more comfortable with my surroundings," he said. "My teammates have really made me feel welcome."
What would not be welcome to Terrell would be another game like he and his teammates experienced against the highly regarded Tigers. Aburn surprised Kansas with five touchdowns in the first 16 minutes of the contest.
14
Thursday, September 17, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Sports
Tennis team to send nine to tourney
By a Kansan reporter
The Kansas women's tennis team will send nine players to participate in the Kansas State Invitational on Friday in Manhattan.
Thirty-two individuals from Kansas, Drake, Oral Roberts and Kansas State have been invited to the tournament. Kansas will send nine players to the singles competition and four doubles teams. There will be no team competition in the double-elimination tournament.
Kansas tennis coach Scott Perelman said the Jayhawks had a deeper team than the other three competing, but the Kansas players to be the ones to beat.
"I'm expecting us to be the dominating team," he said. "I'd be disappointed if we didn't have the championship." He said he would draw in the singles and doubles."
"The most important thing to me at this point is that everyone is in shape and concentrating on improving their game," he said. "I like to see people playing trying to improve things we've worked on in practice."
Kansas singles players will include seniors Tracy Traps, Marie Hibbard and Susie Berglund; junior Jeanette Jonsson; and freshmen April Condit, Mindy Pells, Kathy Bird, Michele Balsom and Stacy Stotts.
Sports Briefs
Two players questionable for KU
Backup strong safety John Autenreith, one of seven freshmen who played during the loss at Auburn, is questionable for the home-opener against Kent State because of his slow recovery from severely sprained right ankle.
Auburn player struck him in the ankle with his helmet.
Autenreith was injured early in the game last week when an
Coach Bob Valentees also listed starting right tackle Bob Pieper as questionable. Pieper, a 6-foot-5, 290-pound senior, has been signed since straining his right knee during the first week of practice.
Assaulting ump costs man 1,000 words
WESTMINSTER, Calif. A 40-year-old man who conted no contest to assaulting a teen-age ampire in a youth league game wrote a 1,000-word essay on "proper behavior at a sporting event" as required by the court.
16-year-old C.J. Ellison.
But he didn't say he was sorry. In fact, Robert Foster, who filmed his essay with the student at least partially the fault of the ampire,
16-year-old Colleen. "This incident need not happen again, if we, as spectators, can be ensured that the umpires calling our games are adults, not children." Foster wrote.
On June 16, 1986, Foster arched onto the Edison High School baseball field in Huntington Beach and reportedly struck Ellison, who had made two calls that went against the team of Foster's 15-year-old son.
Scoreboard
Baseball
American League
American League
Seattle 5, Cleveland 3
Milwaukee 5, New York 4
Detroit 4, Boston 1
Toronto 7, Baltimore 0
Chicago 13, Minnesota 10
California 6, Kansas City 4
Texas 4, Oakland 1
National League
National Leagues
San Francisco 7, Houston 1
New York 10, Montreal 0
Philadelphia 8, Chicago 5
St. Louis 8, Pittsburgh 5
San Diego 3, Atlanta 0
$2^{00}
Pitchers
Draws
50¢
THURSDAY
At
THE WHEEL
LAWRENCE, KS.
ParkInn
Dear Lawrence.
On December 1, 1986 our family purchased the Masters Inn. Since that time, we have been busy reorganizing and restaffing to give Lawrence a QUALITY MEDIUM-PRICED convention facility. We franchised with Park Inn International to give you access to a nationwide reservation system plus quality standard lodging facilities. Our rooms are CLEAN! We invite your inspection.
Our restaurant, CAFE IN THE PARK, is open from 6 a.m. to 2 p.m. and from 5 p.m. to 10. We feature an excellent BREAKFAST BUFFET for just $3.95. Our evening menu features sandwiches, as well as a variety of dining delights! Liquor is available with lunch or dinner.
Our lounge called PUB IN THE PARK has just been remodeled and is open for business afternoons and evenings daily.
We also have a GIFT SHOP featuring unique country art by Virginia Jones of the Ozarks.
Before coming to Lawrence, we owned and operated an excellent motel. We know what it takes to offer quality, personable lodging. We are strong believers in FAMILY OWNED BUSINESSES. Our two sons are university students and also work in the motel. Both Nancy and I, as well as our daughter-in-law, Linda, are active in the day to day management. This is strictly a family owned business. We care about you and hope you will stop by and say Hello!
Our MEETING ROOMS and BANQUET FACILITIES are available at resonable prices. We try very hard to please you.
Let us get to know you!
Thank you,
PARK INN OF LAWRENCE 2222 W. SIXTH STREET
Jack Leipzig + Family Jack and Nancy Leipzig Mike, Jay, and Linda
842-7030
SUA SPECIAL EVENTS and KJHK Present
Hoodoo
gurus
Sunday, October 4, 1987 Kansas Union Ballroom Opening Act: TBA Tickets on sale tomorrow at the SUA office $9 with KUID/ $10 public
The Kansas Relays Are Coming!!
KU
Applications are now being accepted for the Student Relays Committee.
This committee is instrumental to the organization and administration of one of the nation's oldest and most prestigious Track and Field Meets.
BECOME PART OF THE TRADITION!
BECOME PART OF THE TRADITION! Working with the Kansas Relays can be an exciting and rewarding experience. Applications will be accepted through FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25. Interviews will be conducted the following two weeks. Stop by the Kansas Track Office, Room 143 Allen Field House today and fill out an application
Pants $19.99
U.S. wear reg. to $32
ANNIVERSARY Sale $19.99
Sweaters $19.99
Bold Signals, Crystal, Pickett & Smith reg. to $30
Skirts $19.99
Jordache, G.J. Forbes reg. to $32
Blouses $19.99
Desert Rose, Palmetto reg. to $28
Denim $19.99
Jeans from Rio & Broadway Transfer reg. to $38
Skirts from Traffic Stoppers
- Plus an entire store full of values
HARPERS FAMOUS LABEL FASHIONS FOR LESS
9:30 to 5:30 Monday-Saturday
9:30 to 8:30 Thursday 945 Mass., Laurence
1:00 to 5:00 Sunday 331 Poyntz, Manhattan
75% OFF
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for unusual jewelry
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リクルートからのメッセージ
求ム!
日本語話ス
新国際人
1960年創業以来,株式リルートは常に独創的な情報報知連雲システムを展開しました。今年は、日米間を結ぶ国际RCSも始始します日本で、アメリカで、リルート流の、そしてあなた流的ビジネスを試す時かきています。株式リルートは今、新国際人を求めています。
Recruit Co., Ltd. employment openings currently include opportunities in Tokyo, New York and Los Angeles for Application Analysts, Market Analysts, System Engineers, Sales Engineers and Administrative Coordinators.
For more information, call our toll-free numbers listed below or write Recruit U.S.A., Inc.
お問い合わせは
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担当:伊藤
725 S. Figueroa St., 31st Floor Los Angeles, CA 90017
TOLL FREE
California (800) 423-3387
Other (800) 325-9759
Yo-Yo Ma ..one of world's greatest cellists
He's worked a lifetime to bring you 90-minutes of pleasure...
Presented by the University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert and Chamber Music Series
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved/For reservations, call 913/864-3982
8:00 p.m.
Tuesday, September 22, 1987
Hoch Auditorium
Public: $15 & $13
KU & K-12 Students: $7.50 & $6.50
Senior Citizens & Other Students: $14 & $12
Funded, in part, by the Kansas Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts; additional funding provided by the KU Student Activity Fee. Swarthout Society and the KU Endowment Association.
HALF PRICE FOR KU STUDENTS
SIR ALFRED BERTOLLIER
The Arts
Classified Ads
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Gay and Lesbian Services will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday September 17 in the Centennial Room in the Kansas Union. Come join the fun.
BIDEN FOR PRESENTED Campus Chapter of students for BIDEN forming now* Call John at (802) 765-4555.
Just starting and you're already stressed out? Get the kninks in out of Lawrence Music Therapy. Certificate available too! Tell your teacher about it, Bruce and Alice at 814-606 or its kids to you!
15
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, September 17. 1987
Members of Delta Sigma Phi in KU campus,
members of Delta Sigma Phi in KU campus,
SAVE THE COURT! Save society. Save Civil rights.
Join the drive to block Bork's confirmation.
Save the college's table at the union Friday, September 18, 103
BEFORE YOU BUY,
Check the KANSAN.
Our advertisers
might save you money.
STUDENT ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
"Membership Meeting"
TONIGHT
7:00 p.m.
Adams Alumni Center
1266 Aread Avenue
You are invited to learn more about SAA and our plans for the year!
Hillel קלה
EVENTS OF THE WEEK
Thursday, Sept. 17
United Jewish Appeal
Planning Meeting
7:30 p.m. Hillel House
Sunday, Sept. 20
Parents Weekend
Open House/Bagel Brunch
12:30 - 2:30 Hillel House
940 Mississippi
For more information call 749-4242.
P
Mental Health Issues for Women in the 80's
Tuesday, Sept. 22, 1987
7:00-9:00 p.m.
This workshop is designed to make women aware of the changes that have taken place in mental health issues for women. We aim to specifically focus on new developments in the psychological literature, how this affects their own development, and how it affects women when they are in the community. This workshop will be an opportunity for discussion.
Pine Room, Kansas Union
Sponsored by the Emily Terry Women's Resource Center, 218 Strong Hall. For more information, contact Sheril Roberta at 864-3552
Dr. Sandra Shaw, Executive Director Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center
ENTERTAINMENT
At your request in Lawrence's Best and Most Affordable Loud and Sounding for Any Occasion.
Have Discs-Will Travel Mobile Sound Service. Complete selection of dance music including Progressive, Soul and Top 40 dance music. Exp. Listen to Equipment, Affordable Mark at 749-4990.
Rent a hot tub for your next party. Call Tub-to-go
841-2691
ULTIMATE ENTERAINTIAMENE
ULTIMATE ENTERAINTIAMENE
DJS System For All Occasions.
Phil at 862-3300
Phil at 862-3300
WANTED: LEAD SINGER for established rock band. We play a variety of music including REM Dire Straits, and U2, Call Paul at 841-9652
FOR RENT
MEDITERRANEAN CITY
SUNRISE PLACE 9th & Michigan
Sunrise Apartment
Offering hurricane townhouses and apartment living.
Show by to see our show unit at 9th and Michigan or call on:
841-2077 for an appointment.
Office hours are 1-5 F. M.
Apartment for sublease October 1. 2 br, 2 bath.
Microwave, dishwasher, and on bus route.
749-5844
Available now. Large furnished b 1 apet, subt
thru December. Including gas/gaiw/3
water. Call 718-590-2486.
mBRAND NEW completely furnished 4 bedroom
available immediately on the bus route and
in walking distance of KU. Call 749-2428 or
^ 8 4 2
CALL CBA - Care Management ******
Furried two bedroom apt. one block from the University with off street parking. No pets.
2 Bedroom apartment-bus route. $255. Call 218-4316. Call in the morning or evening.
Must submit one bedroom, entire third floor of
house. Very quiet, 2 blocks from campus.
Moisture. Available immediately. Call
843-3631 after 6 o.m.
Large basement bedroom 518. Upholts pair
kitchen, bathroom, & living room. Cal Muay
Sang.
HOUSE FOR RENT Start large 5 m²/bath/house CLOSE TO CAMPUS with LAUNDRY IN BASEMENTS HOWEVER, and responsible arch. design students need 2-4 more people to share rent and bats at 14th and Kentucky. Contact Darryl at 801-736-8250, 1237 N. Troutka Wichita, KS 67214.
Must subst 2 bedroom apartment $130/month.
Or must substitute on-board car. On bus route 841-869. Low utility prices.
On bus route 841-869. Low utility prices.
Not satisfied with where you're living? Nismith Hall has one female space available for impaired individuals, who can maintain individual lease liability, excellent "Al-H-Can-Eat" meals, paid utilities, weekly maid service and other benefits. For best housing options at KU! For more info, call or come by Nismith Hall, 1800 Mashin Drive.
Space available at Nismith Hall. Girls only.
Contact Johanna at 842-7511.
Sublease=1 bedroom plus loft. Very unique.
Available immediately. Call 841-5797.
SUNFLOWER HOUSE. Rooms available as members graduate in September. Low rates, great location. 749-0871, ask for Ann, Deb, or Tom.
FOR SALE
130 WATT amplifier Peavey Special 130 Channel
watt pedal,款号 l年岁型 $250,842-6153
swimming pool, year round.
1978 350XL Honda motorcycle. Good condition.
2007 400XL Honda motorcycle. Good condition.
Call John at 841-5881.
1000 Trans Am T-top. Very good condition. $4250.
842/724
1981 Honda Twinstar 200cc Motorcycle. Call
1159
Honda Nightawk S, 3,000 miles, 2 helmets,
Must eat! Call 841-6762
www.honda.com
and sandbags. Mute self. Call 341/672-6925
1985 Honda Elite Leaf. Call 341/672-6925
1985 Toyota RAV4 LE. Call 749-5325
ADDS Viewpoint Data Terminals, excellent for computer hobbyist, building system, $150,390 baud acoustic cable. 50, Okidata M38 Printer, 641-0460, leave message.
A great school bike -1800 Honda C7- 2650 actual
mixture. Perfect condition . $250. Bali-841-0297.
Absolutely Awesome Array of Antiques, collectibles and neat stuff we have: hardback and 1/2 price paperback books, full line of new combo books, fashion books and cosmetics, and costume jewelry & glitter.
pe, indian, and costume jewelry (gillette and Perry), costumes, antique toys, fine art glass, doll house furniture, miniatures, fittings, and Quintella Prints Market, 811 New Hamphire, Open Sal & Sun Bank.
Arkansas quartz crystals, wholesale prices.
748-4426.
AT&T wall phone #40. Mountain bike, $350 Lawn mower, $190 Truck bed, $600 Bassett recumbent. We have just received a truckload of factory close-out recumbents for Hurry to Mark & Quaint Furniture Warehouse, 8th and 12th St., Louisville.
HIC 250 WINDSURFER-$250-SPECIFIED
RICKROOPER MOUNTAIN BIKE EXEC
BUSINESS SUPPLY
SUZUKI 450 GSL, RUNS GOOD, $LEAVING
TOWN MUSTSEE MAKE OFFERS 749-121
CHEVROLET
Brand new Samsung microwave $100, value for $80 at Colony Woods, apartment N17.
*opater* : Zenth 150, IHM Computers, 20 MEG
*bursary* : Bursary 650, IHM Computers, 100 or best offer *buyer* : Call 841 6953 or motters after
Electric guitar for advanced beginner or intermediate musician. Electra X 280 guitar with hardshell case, amplifier, and acoustic pickup. Low mileage equipment, $350, 841-8961, leave
FOR SALE: 1978 Mercury Color television, 19'. Great condition. Call Yang at For Sale. Litton large capacity digital television $150; electric digital electric typewriter $150; both in excellent condition
FULLY IBM PC/XT COMPATIBLE fountain computer with internal MODEM # 841-1234-5678
**PROGRAMS.** Five easy to use programs for the Hewlett Packard 1C calculator. Clearly presented step-by-step instructions, include a 3 x matrix, decimal to binary conversion, synthetic division, and more. Send **21 (chek/m.o)** to: Wm Kullmann, Dept. I, P.O. Box 1904, Rolla, MO
LOW MILEAGE LIKE NEW N28 Yamaha Seca 500 only 170 miles $180 or best offer. Call after.
p.m. or any other time.
His s*peed is fast, full set of golf clubs.
He evenly worn, keep trying.
**MOTHIBALI GOOD USED FURNITURE**
6th Floor, p. 8 pm. Saturday 12 p.m.
9th Floor, p. 746-7466
Moving Sale: Queen foam and water bed, Sony Walkman with rechargeable cells, Yamaha tail-mounted, 10-speed bike records, cassette players. My name is Laila. My phone number is and much, much more. One year old carpet $50, fits dorm room. Dorm refrigerator $8. 3 component stereo $125. 841-447 for
*****New Cordless Bell Phones*****
Overtake 100m
Overcharge 40m
Kit 81-641-7244 749-7270
Nikkor PS5C shift 980 $35/1.2/1 KVAR $175,
Nikkor PS5C shift 980 $40/1.2/1 KVAR $175,
A/v light/bight power flash $75, #84-7767
Previously rental taxes, will sell as 3 piece ($3) or separately. 842-834 for more info. Dress for summer.
Fiat 124 Spad CONVERTIBLE-must sell immediately. Best read offer. New brake
Programmable Technology CD player. Brand new
Technology CD player. Will sell for $180 or best
offer of 641-259-8260.
Portable computer w/monitor, printer & modem,
*out of software* $400. Call 432-2125.
racing bite 1867 Bianché 59 cm, $400 Ross
9-inch bike 1867 Bianché 59 cm, $400 Ross
32-inch bike 1867 Bianché 93-137 $375
Save rent money—own your own mobile home
two bedrooms. Comfortable and spacious
Sherwool 57100 A receiver and Panasonic turntable. $100. The pair FIRM 68124 after 2 years.
Twin mattress, box springs, and frame. New
Asking $100. 841-8491. Call 5-6:30 p.m.
Vacuums-Save big money. Reconditioned with 3
Sailboats: BIC 2005 Funboard with 5.7 foe
weight; sailboat boom or will separate
boom-barge or will separate 1,642 $^{2}$ FOZ
Records-Huge sale! One day only! *Lawrence*
Holdings, 9:30-10:00, this Sunday, September 28th
Twin mattress, box springs, and frame. Like
Wynn, $120, $180, $441, Call $3-6.30 p.m.
Trucker dine sale! Over a dozen styles to choose from with 4 of 6 chairs. Starting at $18 or terms. Inspect at Mark & Quain Furniture House, 8th and New Hampstead, Lawrence.
juneline cooler - 1 and 10-speed at 739
Massachusetts, Miller Furniture
squares- Save money today - Rebate on
monthly guarantee. Prices start at $14.95
Lawrence Vacuum & Sewing center, 916 Mass.
845-1287
70 VW Beetle, excellent condition. No rust, heat
works, radio, white. NW Lawrence. $750.
749-1837
1979 Super Beetle convertible new; top, paint, interior. Includes:
Complete restoration. $425 OBQ. Callave at bobbie@subaru.com
AUTO SALES
VDA WD Vacher, $300, needs little work. New tires.
75p & brakes. 842-3738.
2019 saturn pickup; Silver, 5sped, A/C, Must sell. Priced below book value, with new AM/FM cassette stereo and near new Topper thrown in. 842-2386.
WATERBED-King complete plus sheets. $100.
Call 844-9829-230 after 3 p.m.
**Kevin Citation:** V4. 4, a speed, sumarow, hatchback; **hack-140**, **1927 Ford Tortoise**, 31, **dairy-408**. Both cars very reliable. Call 842-1071 from 6:30 a.m. or weekday.
$800 CJ-7, 4-speed, high mileage, very clean.
$1000 Lenexa, 1-469-6532.
Bertone XI9-184, leather interior, loaded 31K,
good condition. 841-4609 or 381-4742.
ORDER NEW 1988 CARS - TRUCKS-
VANS-$250-800 OVER COST - DERTB.
D. B. $450-600
79 Toyota Celica Manual standard features wair-conditioning, door-cleaning, power windows, 1982-1993 184-892-3600
p.m. or weekend
1982 Old Fireenza 4-door, 4-speed, A/C, cruise,
till-wheel, AM/FM stereo. $2200. 842-0976
VW Hing, salver, excellent condition, AM FM
Cable, 918-4911, call 814-4727
76 VW Camber, silvex condition, M-F-S cam,
package, $160; call 812-4727
1983 Le Car, immaculate, sunroof, stereo, $105.
Also, a 1980 Le Car, rough, $495. 864-7580 or
843-2740
78 Chevy van, air, cruise, tilt, AM/FM cassette condition, C.B. radio, 360 V low mileage, excellent condition, $50 or make offer. Call 842-1216 after
CAMARO-1984 Benineta. Red, auto, AM/FM/A/C power, powering steppers, brake, cruise, tilt, overdrive, V-L. Loaded, excellent condition and clean. 6400 or make offer. Call 846-2125 after
For Sale: 1980 Pontiac Suntbird, A/C, sunroof,
great gas mileage. $2000/best offer. Phone
749-1716.
CARS SELL for $155 (average)! Also jeeps,
SUVs now available. Nibble up 6000-6997
for 5788 or less.
Tune up your import car.$33. Parts and labor included, satisfaction guaranteed. Call Aaron, 841-642-6900.
Lost. long hairred black cat at 12th and Tennessee
Declawed. Anawors to Shadow. Reward
to the owner.
Found. clockback checkbook near the Catholic Center. If you can identify, call Mona. 844-203-865.
Found a set of kees on Jayhawk ring. Found near Blake Hall last thursday. Call 843-769-3090
LOST-FOUND
Found: black checkbook near* the C簿巾.
Center. If you can identify, call Mona. 842-283.
Found-cassette case and cassettes. Identify them to claim. Call 842-8171.
Lost wire-rimmed eyeglasses in black case
K48 832-398. Reward offered.
10-66 Weekly/up mailing opportunities; Rush self-
addressed stamped envelope; Opportunity, 9016
418share Blvd, Box 226, Dept. Q, Beverly Hills, CA
90271
$5/hour telemarketing Monday, Thursday 5-9 and
Friday, morning. Frequencies. Lenexa
location-carpool from Lawrence available.
For interview, call Mr. Lackey at 749-4492.
...WARD-For information leading to the recovery of a red 184 Kawasaki in the stolen Waterloo car from front of 1422 Ohio Wailer at 15 i am and 45 m. Did anybody see anything? Call 843-1531
Apartment Leasing Agent, part-time position of, Kensington, MA. Resumes to 119 Stauffer Fint Hall, Lawrence, KS.
ATTENTION: STUDENTS! Natl firm preparing for Fall Winter work. #775 us at http://www.attention.edu/internships are possible, & you may earn 2.3, 4 credits/qt or semester. Must apply now.
HELP WANTED
ATTENTION: Certified Aerobic Instructors needed for Fall/spring semesters, interview time at 154 Robinson Hall. Registration for 29 years, openings for the noon-hour shift, weekend shift, night shift. Apply in person between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. THANK YOU BUCK'S DRIVE-IN.
Checkers Pizza has an immediate opening for 10 pizza delivery drivers. Drivers must be 18 yrs or older and must be fluent in English plus commission & tip to start. $36.00 per week *2 weeks. Apply in person between 3:00 - 5:00 on the evening of each week.
Full or part-time work as NANNY. You set the hours. Child Care Coordinating Service. 842-0855.
GVERMENT JOBS. $16,040-859-2320.yr. New Hiring Call: 803-697-4007. Rt. 978 for current
Editor, Weekly Kitten Methodist Church regional newspaper. Part-time position. EOE. Member Project Equality. Submit resume and references by September 30th. Tkcs Teks, KSA Alert. Council Director.
H A R D E E S
takes it need a little extra cash
HELP WANTED in the landscaping department and the retail survey. Apply at Pence Garden
H
students, students who need a little extra cash.
Come join the fun of working on the turnipke!
Hardie now a accepting applications for all shifts.
Good pay, flexible hours, meal discounts, free toll
allowance, and a pleasant atmosphere.
You byapply to our company glad you did it!
Please provide an anytime. Call 843-8203
Looking for mature female student to live with elderly man (Perfect health). Request cooking of evening meals, preparing breakfast in bedroom, bath, laundry privileges, single car garage Lives in Toronto.
Help needed, part-time duty shift hours. Apply in
Burger King, King 1107 W eight street.
HIRING! Government jobs-your area
451-600-8500 Call (662) 838-8857. EXT 4055.
PART-TIME JOBS. Sports officials are needed at Recreation Services for intramural football. No experience necessary. Attend the meeting Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. in Room 158 Robinson Center
Needed. Handman, flexible schedule available
Call 842 8346.
Student Programmer (Using Dbase IIIplus, "Genifer", and "Documenter")—must love Dbase and accept design challenges. Work will involve maintenance of existing program files. We will release software packages and hardware enchantments. 20-30 hours/week, $4.00/hour, flexible work schedule. Make application Room 205. Plant Operations operations before 4:30 p.m. September 25, 1987
RESORT HOTELS, Cruisesmen, Airlines, Amusement Parks, and accepting applications for summer vacations. For more information and an application; write National College Recreation P.O. Box 3257.
Part-time legal secretary wanted Experience in the areas of legal support, typing, transcribing skills required. 843-1135
There are a few openings left for evening and weekend shifts at Naismith Hall cafeteria. If you need some extra cash, hurry to in Naismith Hall lobby desk and fill an application for a part-time position.
We have openings in carpentry, electrical and general labor crews. If you are willing to follow our guidance we would be happy to allow us 8:12 to 15:4, S.E., we would like you to apply. Housing Maintenance Shop, 2303 West, 12th
Student needed for breakfast preparation.
m. m Monday-Friday $4/hour. Contact
874-7406
Work Steady-Clerical work in medical office.
Must be available some aftermorns. Accurate typing. Secretarial/Secretariat activities. Apply in person, 112 W. Flight, 40th Suite. References:
Vita Restaurant is now taking applications for time-point tainance and grill help. Apply in person
Want your own business? Now is the time to start earning an ASV representative. Call Julie at 212-569-4023.
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JESUS SAYS, "Seek not ye what ye shall eat, or what ye shall drink, neither be of your doubt mind. For all these things do the nations of the world seek after; and they shall fear. But rather seek ye the Kingdom of God; and all these things shall be added unto you." Church God (Holiness), 724
SKI KEYSTONE for Thanksgiving, November 25-29. Low package prices, include airfare/hotel/ski rentals/laft tickets. Call 843-5608. Package available without air.
We have a new store that you can get cash on almost anything of value. Also, good buys on cameras; jewelry; stenter equipment (auto & camera equipment); jewelry; pawn & Jewelry; Pawn & Jewelry; 6, 8th, 6:19, 749
MISCELLANEOUS
Small small established foreign car repair shop for sale in Lawrence. Inquiries: 841-549-960
Hey, Sweetie, you nice bums, you. You may be another year older, but you're still not as old as me or the Constitution. So let's go eat frozen yogurt. Yogurt! On me. Ha! Ha! Hapov Birthday
PERSONAL
get in! - welcome.
Paco Bear: PURRRR!!! Who needs catnip?
Kitten
Bike Workshops—Our mechanic will teach you how to charge a bike, true wheels, maintain brakes and tires, learn to fix common issues on $5 each. Saturday, 10 a.m., begins September 19. Sunday, 04/24, Massachusetts.
SCOTT Camping without a tent, drawing with no paper, how-to get old-disney soaps or a new one.
BUS. PERSONAL
ARE YOU CREATIVE
ARE YOU CREATIVE
Decisive, Confident, know
your related occupation field.
or find a job in Handwriting Analysis. Write
Kingston KP Printing
Mr. Long 333 N. Valley KCK 66102
For all your Printing Typesetting, &
Copying Needs!
Resumes - Cover Letters - Thesis -
Stored on a disk for fast/easy
serwriter - every copy on our original
Mastercard & Visa Accepted!
North
20th Street East
Kroger's
Land Taker
Taylor
Vale City
Mollett
East
4th Street
8th Street
Stored on a disk for fast/easy changes or corrections! Printed on a L-sheetwritter every copy an original!
REC JR
HOURS
MON- TUES
SUN 1-18
DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
912 749-4211
912 749-4211
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
PENNYLANE
CREATIVE & COMPUTER DOCS. RECORDS. VIDEOS
HEADCACHE, RAKCHACUE, ARM PAIN, LEG PAIN? Student and most insurance accepted. For complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Mark Johnson 843-3679
Pregnant and need help? Call Birright at 843-821-7601 Confidential help free pregnancy care
SNK REEK AT VAIL JAVERE CREEK!! 4 day package, from $199 person including luxury co- and free skiing. Add extra nights, just $18.50 per person. Call 1-800-6275-7551
Ski: Winter Park $199. Thanksgiving trip leaves
Thursday night on sleeper bus. Stay in Snow
Blaze condominiums 2 nights. Also, 2 days ski
rental and lift tickets. For information, call
The ETC SHOP is open Sunday from 11-14. New
biment of cotton outwear. 72万余袋 Hawaii.
Weckend Room: Bowie Raint on CD). $12.99.
*genipile Record.* 844 Massachusetts.
Sunflower Mt. Bike Workshop-Learn how to
repair & adjust your Mt. Bike-Thursday evening,
6:4 p.m., begins September 17, $5,804
Massachusetts, Lawrence, 934-5000
SERVICES OFFERED
GREENS
Capture that golden tan with boubrio portrait on front face. Call Mira or Gate at 749-2060 emergency phone.
G
841-2277
The Coldest Beer Around
COMPUTER CONSULTING: Tutoring and programming for: elementary computer science students, computer engineers, and engineering projects and other works. Reasonable prices for individuals and groups.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
"CRIMSON SUN PHOTO" is looking for young women interested in developing a modeling portfolio. 15% over cost. Call 841-8690
800 West 23rd
FLASHBACK PHOTO fast and dependable party picture service. Call 843-7870 to book your next visit.
GRAF/X: Scientific and statistical illustration, maps, drawings, slides, editing aid, also watercolorères. Phone 841-2561.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* TIE DYE! *
927 Mass M-5 I-10,30' in. ft.' n" 847245' F
927 Mass M-5 I-10,30' in. ft.' n" 847245' F
GREENS
PARTY SUPPLY
808 W. 23rd
JEM FAVORS for all your party favor needs.
Hats, sirts, paddles, glasses. If you have a unique favor idea, call us and we'll find it for you.
843-8770
MUSIC
Red House Audio - Mobile Party Music, B&W
Bed House, P.A. and Lights, Maximum Audio Wizard.
Call Brad 749-1275
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $8/hr, 843-9032 (p.m. tutor)
RH PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ektachrome processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W services. PASSPORT $6.00 Art & Design Building, Room 206. 864-4757
Weekly Beer Specials
Now in Lawrence, *inexpensive* 4-track demos,
D3 sound and light company, private guitar and
string arrangements. (50) 617-280-4900.
Sept. 16-Sept. 22
DJ sound and high company, private practice
bass lessons. Basic Productions, 843-4243
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Ser-
teaching experience Call Dens at n62 for SWEING-ALTERNATES loves love at 842-4356 or 842-4356
vices. Overland Park, 914-325-3870,
firesmith contraception and abortion services in
Cincinnati.
QUALITY Tutoring Statistics, Economics, and Math. All levels. Homework assistance, test preparation, or general review. MA with 7 years teaching experience. Call Demis at 842-1055.
Michelob 6 pk. $2.99
Coors Light 12 pk. $5.39
Budweiser 12 pk. $5.49
Miller Lite 12 pk. $5.29
Old Style 12pk. $3.69
Strohs 15 pk. $3.99
Strohs Light 15 pk. $3.99
Wiedemann 15 pk. $3.19
reasonable rates. Please call june at 643-4500.
Seamstress: All ladies' dresses can be made here in town. You choose your favorite designer or brand. Call us at 811-291-7072. I will make them for you. Call Suzie. 811-344-3940
Leaving Town?
at airline counter prices
no extra service charge
Make your travel
arrangements
Airline Tickets
See Maupintour travel
Service for:
- Lowest airfare Comparison
* Airport Shuttle Routes
* Eurl and Japan Rail Passes
* Car rentals—Hotel confirmations
* Travel insurance
* Travel Insurance
ON CAMPUS LOCATION in the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
Mainintour travel service
749-0700
1101 Mass
Suite 201 749-0123
HARPER LAWYER
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided: 841-2316
Time saves-Affordable and professional cleaning
for those students who need to speed more
time stunting and less time cleaning. Call 749-3950.
Free estimates!
Gravstone Athletic Club
Special School Membership
515.100 amsterdam
Racquertial, Tanning
Exercise Equipment
2500 W. 6th Street 841-7230
TYPING
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing. Jury: 842794 or Lisa: 841-1915.
A4Aboulately Fast Tapping Is Back! Dependable,
Reasonable Rates, Late Night Tapping Available
Kathy 8142 2005 749 3268 view
ACCT. NEW PAPERS - THESIES - RESUMES
24 hour typing service. Professional word processing on letter quality printer 847-7043
2 Smart Word Spelling. Spelling Corrected.
Mail Reply 26/24/04
very reasonable. Can trust you.
A-1 reliable professional typing. Term paper.
Theses, Resumes, etc. Reasonable IBM Electronic Typewriter. 842-3246.
1. Der woman word processing. Former editor will transform your scribbles into accurately spelled and putuated, grammatically correct pages of letter quality type. Call 843-2057 days or e-mail: editor@schulen.com
Reebbass Kathy 841-2400 days, 749-3284 eve.
ACT NOW. PAPERS-THESES-RESUMES
WRITING UFELINE 841-3469
DISTRIBUTIONS, THIRES, LAW PAPERS
MOMMY'S TYING is a case from Australia
NURTURES & MEDICINES
Business Term Types and Word Processing
Term papers, theses, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter quality
printing spelled correct. 842-2747.
Experienced editing. Theses-dissertations.
Our specialty is foreign students. Call 841-2291.
For professional typing/word processing.
Myra A. 481-4900. Fall special 312 page, double-
margin
spa
SCIENTIFY (SECRETARY) Typing and word processing,
fastest, able. Accurate. Spelling corrected,
letter quality. Pickup on campus. Mon 814-635-814. Evenings-weekends
Quality Typing includes excellent spelling, punctuation, grammar, editing, editing service. Contact: 360-219-5480.
BOSTON TICKETS WANTED (2) Good seats
well, really!! Call St. Clare-841-3690.
Quality typing or word processing for these,
dissertations, resumes, term papers, applications.
Professional editing, composition available. Have M.S. Degree.
TOP_NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing, manuscripts, resumes, theses, letter quality printing, etc. 843-5062
WRIGHT'S TYPING SERVICE. Term papers.
WiRIGHT'S HM SIECRE. Spelling correction.
845-9034
WANTED
Female roommate wanted to share nice two bedroom apartment. West apartments all unit furnished. Female roommate wanted to share female roommate needed to share two bedroom house. $165 monthly + 1/2 utilities. Call 842-9748. Liberal roommate wanted for a 2 room house close to house. $150 plus 1/2 utilities. Call after 5:30.
PROFESSIONAL TYPING 842-4868 before 10
414-6406
Need money?? Sell me your all sports ticket. Ask for Jenni at 864-6947 Please call!!
Male or female grad student, or mature undergrad to share a new 2 br apartment 2 blocks from the Union. $180 plus 1/2 utilities. Call 841-4705.
Roommate wanted. Female, $65 per month, includes utilities. Close to campus downtown. Calgary
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Roommate wanted for 2 bedroom house near campus. Fully furnished except bedroom. Big backyard, dog or cat okay. $160 month plus half year fee. 941-7550
Tutors. All subjects. 44 individuals. 48 group.
Submit application, transcript, schedule of classes and tutoring times. Supportive Educational Services, 864-3971.
- Policy
Wanted: ALL SPORTS TICKET - Make fast $$$,
call John at 749-4896.
Wanted All Sports Ticket Will pay well for it!! Call 847-7951
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 or alteration of a phone number
No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising
Contact us by phone +54 100 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 Kansan
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 on 6月14日 at 4:00pm for 2 days prior to publication.
Deadline for cancellation is Monday at 4:00pm 2 days prior to publication.
CLASSIFIED RATES
| Words | 1 Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | 10 days | 15 days | 1 month |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 0-15 | 2.85 | 4.20 | 6.00 | 10.00 | 14.95 | 18.90 |
| 16-20 | 3.35 | 5.00 | 7.05 | 11.30 | 16.55 | 20.75 |
| 21-25 | 3.90 | 5.80 | 8.10 | 12.60 | 18.10 | 22.60 |
| 26-30 | 4.40 | 6.55 | 9.15 | 13.90 | 19.70 | 24.40 |
| 31-35 | 4.95 | 7.35 | 10.20 | 15.25 | 21.25 | 26.25 |
Classifications
CLASS I (150 students)
100 announcements 300 for field trips 100 job wanted 800 services offered
100 entertainment 110 auto sales 700 personal 900 equipment
100 transportation 990 utilities 990 owned
100 recreation 990 owned
Classified Mail Order Form
Please print your 25 rows
ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KANSAS
Ad dates begin ___ Make payment to:
Total days in paper ___ University Daily Kansas
Amount paid ___ 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Travelation ___ Lawrence, KS 66045
---
Thursday, September 17, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
16
State/Local
Politics viewed as service, not just job, Docking says
By MARK TILFORD
Staff writer
At the end of his informal lecture yesterday, the former lieutenant governor of Kansas was given a small bronze Jayhawk statue in appreciation of his appearance.
"This is what I really came here for," Tom Docking said, to the lauger of about 100 students, many of whom were in college or degrees in business administration.
The symbol of the state in which Docking received his education fit well with his address that was part of his business. Business Executive Lecture series.
"Politics in the public sector is an honor to be involved in," he said. "But you do have to do it as a public service, not to get yourself a job."
"The best advice I have had is to get your training, get your education and get yourself established."
Those were the keys to turning the lieutenant governor's office into a high-profile position, Docking said.
"The office was, to be blunt, almost comatose when I came in," he said.
"Gov. (John) Carlin was well aware of the image, and felt it did not reflect well on his image in his first term."
Docking ran with Carlin and was elected lieutenant governor in 1983. He was defeated in the 1986 gubernatorial race by Republican Mike Hayden.
As lieutenant governor, Docking said, he was given the staff and the budget to initiate his own policies, but it was his education and experience in business that gave him the motivation to follow through with those policies.
"You have to define your potential and resources and then exercise them to the best of your ability," he said.
Docking, 33, is a Lawrence native. He received his master's in business administration from the University of Wisconsin and he is a partner in a Wichita law firm.
He gave examples of his work on property tax laws and his efforts to attract business to Kansas as an arts and business skills while serving in office.
"I had some pretty handy tools in my portfolio for dealing with these issues." Docking said.
On a chalkboard he mapped out a rough diagram of his campaign's organization to show the similarities between business and politics and the importance not only of formulating a strategy but also marketing it.
"It all looks great on paper — it'a a shame it didn't win the election."
Docking encouraged students to try their hands at politics if they felt motivated to work in the public sector.
He later mentioned a fund-raising visit Sept. 27 in Wichita by Massachusetts governor and Democratic presidential candidate Michael Dukakis. Docking's campaign debts total about $20,000, and he plans to use the fund-raiser to eliminate them.
He has not endorsed Dukakis for president, but Docking's wife, Jill, who also attended the lecture yesterday, is working on the Dukakis campaign.
State colleges request funds
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — The state's universities need a massive infusion of money to buy or replace equipment in classrooms and laboratories to remain competitive with universities in other states, university officials told lawmakers yesterday.
The officials, representing the state Board of Regents institutions, said the universities' equipment needs far outstripped the state's current mechanism for financing the mass or replacement of equipment.
"We have to devise some way to keep our state competitive educationally." Robert Kruh, associate provost at Kansas State University, told the Legislature's study Committee on Ways and Means. "It's just a matter of which of your starving children you feed first."
The committee has before it a proposal to allow the state to issue bonds to pay for equipment. The bill
was introduced last session and is not being formally discussed yet, said Sen. Gus Bogina, R-Leneca, chairman of the study committee and the standing Senate Ways and Means Committee.
However, lawmakers asked the regents to supply them with equipment requests they would make if a bond issues of $10 million, $25 million or $50 million were approved by the Legislature.
The institutions sent back the requests, and several added more proposed equipment purchases their officials thought were needed. In all, the institutions listed $77.7 million of proposed equipment purchases.
"The needs they put on the table are legitimate," said Marlin Rein, associate director of business affairs for the University of Kansas. "They appear large because we're dealing with a problem that was created over a substantial number of years."
In fact, the officials said they could feel justified in asking for even more. Kruh said Kansas State, which was allowed to list $8.5 million worth of equipment needs under the highest level of the proposed bond issue, could easily find $15 million worth of needs on its Manhattan campus alone. KU officials listed $16.6 million worth of equipment needs for its Lawrence campus.
In Fiscal Year 1987, which ended June 30, the regents institutions spent $28.7 million on equipment.
"We have some severe problems in funding new equipment," said Morgan Olsen, associate vice president for fiscal affairs at Emporia State University. "We cannot keep up with technology."
Kruh and Olsen said universities sometimes had to wait until the end of the fiscal year to buy equipment, so that they could spend unused funds previously set aside for contingency plans.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details page 6
Friday September 18,1987 Vol. 98, No.20
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Regents hear admissions plan
KU, K-State and WSU would have stricter standards under Koplik's proposal
By MICHAEL HORAK
Staff writer
TOPEKA - The executive director of the Board of Regents unveiled a plan yesterday that would restrict in-state admission standards at the state's three largest universities.
Stanley Koplik, the director, asked the eight-member board to follow a national trend and change the state's 72-year-old open admissions policy. The change would improve the quality of students that attend state schools.
"We believe the time is right for the discussion of selective admissions." Koplik said.
The plan includes required high school curriculum, grade point averages and test scores for Kansas residents. It would not take effect until 1991 and would include only the University of Kansas, Kansas State University and Wichita State University.
Pittsburgh State University, Emporia State University, Fort Hays State University and the Kansas Technical Institute in Salina, the four other Regents institutions, would continue open admission policies.
The majority of the Regents school presidents said they liked aspects of the plan, but said time would be needed to study what effect the
proposed policy would have
KU Chancellor Gene A. Budig told the Regents that he would ask Judith Ramaley, KU executive vice chancellor to thoroughly study land and ocean resources on KU. He said Ramaley's analysis would most likely take 45 days.
In the past, Budig has been an opponent of selective admissions. He did not comment specifically on Kooplik's plan at yesterday's meeting.
Under the proposed plan, to be admitted into KU, K-State and Wichita State, students would have to meet at least one of the following criteria:
■ Complete a Regents recommended preparatory curriculum with a grade point average of 2.0.
That curriculum includes four years of English, three years each of math, science, and two years of a foreign language.
■ Achieve at least a 23 composite score on the ACT.
Rank in the top one-third of their high school graduating class.
Non-traditional students over 2.1 would be exempt from the standards as long as they graduated from a Kansas high school.
Koplik said his plan allowed universities to make exceptions in the criteria, but it limited exemptions to 10 percent of the freshman class.
Out-of-state freshmen also would have tougher criteria to get into KU. They would have to maintain at least 80 PA in the same preparatory classes.
No remedial classes will be taught at KU, K-State and Wichita State if Koplih's plan is passed.
"Remediation is more properly the role of community colleges," Koplik said.
He predicted that by enacting selective admission policies, the state would reduce the freshman dropout rate and increase the percentage of students who graduate. Twenty-one percent of last year's freshman class at KU dropped out, he said.
KU has a degree completion rate of 46.1 percent and K-State has a 41 percent completion rate. Koplik said The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, which has selective admission, has a graduation rate of 71 percent. The University of North Carolina is one of KU's peer institutions. Peer institutions share similar size, mission and scope.
"While students drop out of school for a variety of reasons, we know that raising the standards for admissions also raised the quality of the raw material entering the institution and the level of instruction," he said.
Koplik's plan allows students who begin at one school to transfer to another if they take at least 24 transferable credit hours and maintain a 2.5 GPA. He said students who couldn't get into the school of their choice could work hard at another school and have the option to transfer
After Kopik presented his plan, KU student body president Jason Krakow spoke on behalf of the Student Advisory Committee. That committee is composed of all the student body presidents at the seven Regents schools.
Krakow asked the board to consider a plan that would concentrate more on "student preparedness" for college, instead of test scores and class ranking. He said an ACT score could not measure motivation.
Stephen Wade/Special to the KANSAN
Wichita State President Warren Armstrong said Kopik's plan was starting point for discussion, but said if the state approved selective admissions, the state would have to change its financing philosophy.
Krakow presented a plan from the K Student Advisory Committee that closely resembled Koplik's proposal, but did not require high school foreign language and allowed students to be admitted to college if they took hours of post secondary summer school and received at least a 2.0 GPA.
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Stanley Koplik, executive director of the Board of Regents.
"They will have to change from quantitative funding to qualitative funding." he said.
The Regents did not discuss Koplik's plan in detail. However, two Regents members said the high government language requirement concerned them.
The selective admissions issue is expected to be discussed at the Regents meeting Oct. 15 in Wichita and throughout the fall. Koplik said he hoped a consensus could be reached before the Legislature met in January.
1072
Hien Cong Hguyen, of Manhattan, recites the oath to become a naturalized U.S. citizen. Hguyen, originally from Vietnam, was one of 109 people to participate in the ceremony at the state capitol yesterday.
By VALOREE ARMSTRONG
Immigrants become citizens on anniversary of Constitution
TOPEKA - They came from 34 countries in every corner of the world.
Staff writer
In a celebration yesterday marked by thousands of red, white and blue balloons and a 500-pound birthday cake, 109 immigrants from countries such as El Salvador, the Soviet Union, Poland and Mexico were welcomed as U.S. citizens by Gov. Mike Hayden.
The naturalization ceremony, performed on the south steps of the State Capitol by U.S. District Judge Richard Rogers, was part of Kansas' celebration of the 20th anniversary of the signing of the U.S. Constitution.
Lirio Umengan Mahmoud, of Leawood, came to the United States in 1972 from the Philippines in hopes of starting a new life. Yesterday she renounced her allegiance to that nation.
Deanell Tacha, judge for the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, in her address at the ceremony, said that each new citizen should strive to be a sovereign individual. She said the new citizens should make informed decisions and could do that only through education.
"I'm getting older and would like to participate in politics — voting. That's the only thing I can't do as a resident." Mahmoud said.
"But you're not sovereign if you give up your right to make decisions and make your views beard." Tacha said.
Mahmoud's two children were born in the United States, and her husband immigrated from Jordan and was naturalized six years ago.
School children waved miniature flags, and adults applauded after each of the 109 immigrants
and their former countries were identified. The crowd of citizens, new and old, said the Pledge of Allegiance.
Biden downplays plagiarism charges
"A Dramatic Reading by Alexander Hamilton," a narrative of the events leading to the signing of the Constitution, featuring the music of the time, was presented by Donald Hickey of Wayne State University and Robert A. Garry, university garb, Hickey recounted how the Constitution was ratified.
WASHINGTON — Sen. Joseph R. Biden, his presidential campaign under siege, said yesterday that he committed plagiarism in law school in 1965 but dismissed the furor over his failure to attribute the words of others in his speeches as "much ado about nothing."
At a Capitol Hill news conference, the Delaware Democrat released law school records that disclosed his plagiarism at Syracuse University as a first-year law student and said, "I intentionally move to mislead anybody."
The Associated Press
"I did something very stupid 23 years ago," Biden said. "Little did I know I would be standing before the whole world acknowledging the fact I did not know how to write a legal memorandum and the mistake is costing me as much as it is costing me."
The fountain, financed by private donations, consists of an inner pool with three fountains that symbolize the three branches of government, and an outer pool with seven smaller fountains that symbolize the seven justices of the Kansas Supreme Court.
Before the noon ceremony, the newly filled Fountain of Justice was dedicated in front of the Kansas Judicial Center.
Biden also said he committed a series of errors in not attributing quotes correctly in several campaign speeches this year. But Biden said fellow presidential hopeful Jesse Jackson called to say he also uses phrases Biden has been accused of lifting.
Saying all candidates use "certain generic quotes" from past leaders, he charged that the controversy is meaningless.
"I am being honest. . . . The American people will judge. I think it's much ado about nothing," Biden said.
He said he rejected the notion that his admission of errors in speeches suggested he cannot control himself.
"In the marketplace of ideas in the political realm, the notion that for every thought or idea you have to go to someone else is frankly ludicrous."
"I feel very capable of using my mouth in sync with my mind," he
And Biden said he would fight on for the Democratic nomination.
"I want to tell them all. I'm in this
camp. I am in this race to win.
And here I come."
Biden repeatedly said that the sources of the stories about his speeches and law school record came from his opponents, although he said he did not identify any one campaign, Republican or Democratic, as the source.
It is no coincidence, Biden said, that these allegations came to light just as he began leading the Senate Judiciary Committee hearings on the nomination of Judge Robert H. Bork to the U.S. Supreme Court.
But he said he didn't think it would undermine his leadership during the budget crisis.
Biden explained how he lifted five pages from a law review article for a brief he wrote in a legal methods class. He did not quote or footnote the material, an omission noted by a classmate who criticized his paper
"But that I did not intentionally move to mislead anybody. I didn't, I was mistaken, but I was not in anyway malevolent." Bidian said.
When he was confronted by the law school dean, Biden said he admitted his actions and asked for a chance to explain them to the faculty. He wrote a two-page letter on his mistake and the faculty for a chance to recoup.
In his letter written in 1965, Biden said his plagiarism was the result of "my mistaken notion" of what a legal brief was supposed to be.
After consideration, Biden was given an F in the course and the chance to retake it the next year. He returned it earned a B, now reflected in his record.
Task force proposes drug plan
Staff writer
By MICHAEL HORAK
TOPEKA—State universities need to double their efforts to educate students about drug and alcohol abuse, Dawid Waxman, chairman of the Governor's task force on Substance Abuse Regents Institutions said yesterday.
"Education" is our best weapon related to increased awareness of these problems." Waxman said he was meeting with the president and Begens at their monthly meeting.
The report focuses on substance abuse education, intervention, and support services offered to students in the school district testing programs for college athletes.
Gov. Mike Hayden created the four-member task force last spring to study the issue.
Regents chairman Norman Jeter; Galen Davis, special assistant to the Governor; Stanley Koplik, Regents executive director; and Ted Ayres, Regents general counsel, served with Waxman on the task force.
'Education is our best weapon related to increased awareness of these problems.'
David Waxman Task force chairman
"I was quite pleased to learn that many good things are presently taking place in the area of substances abuse education, but obviously additional ideas could be explored." Waxman said.
The report was presented to the Regents after Waxman and four task force committee members complied information about the issues over the interviews with students, faculty and administrators across the state.
Ilicit drugs are as available to the student population as they are to the general population, but alcohol still is widely used, usually used substance, the report said.
The report recommends that each university develop a pamphlet specifying where students can get help for addiction and abuse problems.
Hayden has assured the task force that he will allocate $50,000 of his budget to pay for the cost of recompensation. He will be spent on drug abuse education.
On the issue of drug testing of student athletes, the task force said every Regents school had a drug testing policy that could detect illegal substances, including marijuana and cocaine.
The task force asked athletic departments not to make any changes in their current testing programs until the constitutional problems surrounding the issue had been resolved in the courts.
KU currently budgets $25,000 a year for drug testing of athletes, the report said.
In another action at yesterday's meeting, the Regents approved policies for serving alcohol under appropriately controlled conditions at some campus events. The new policy required non-classroom areas.
At KU, those events are subject to the approval of the executive vice chancellor.
U.S., Soviets extend arms talks; summit planned for December 1
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Secretary of State George P. Shultz and Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard A. Shevardnadze decided dramatically yesterday to extend their talks on a missile-reduction treaty, and a Soviet spokesman said "history is in the making."
In the first sign of progress, their spokesmen announced "full-scale" negotiations would begin by Dec. 1. The intention of ending all nuclear weapons tests.
However, in a joint statement, the two sides said the first step toward a cessation — which Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachek has termed the most urgent nuclear issue — would "effective verification measures."
This reflected President Reagan's insistence on devising foolproof safeguards against Soviet cheating before considering a test ban.
Shultz and Shevardnadze scrapped
"We're moving ahead across the full range of issues," said Charles E. Redman, the State Department spokesman.
"History is in the making," said Gennady Gerasimov, the Soviet spokesman. "We must wait a little bit."
The first indication of a shift was a telephone call to reporters from the Soviet embassy that Shevardnadze ordered to release the contacts which had been scheduled for 4:30
plans for a midday windup and separate news conferences, sent down to the State Department cafeteria for tuna fish and turkey sandwiches and pressed on with their talks over a treaty to abolish intermediate-range missiles.
The original plan had been to wint up the talks at about noon. Shultz and Shevardnadze were then to hold separate news conferences and make separate visits to Capitol Hill to talk to members of Congress.
Later, Redman and Gerasimov announced the joint decision to hold "full-scale, stage-by-stage" negotiations on nuclear testing issues.
"We decided to give you something to chew on." Gerasimiyoked.
Gorbache has called a ban on further weapons tests the most urgent nuclear issue. "There is no more urgent and important task today than that of ending all nuclear testing," he said in August 1986.
The Soviet leader suspended further Soviet tests, but failing to persuade Reagan to join in the ban, he left the United States after February a 19-month hiatus.
---
The Reagan administration takes the position tests must be conducted to ensure the reliability of U.S. nuclear weapons and to develop new ones. Also, the U.S. effort to develop an space-based defense against missiles involves setting off devices at the Nevada underground site.
2
Friday, September 18. 1987 / University Daily Kansar
Nation/World
Aquino fires top adviser Arroyo; officials investigate failed coup
MANILA, Philippines — President Corazon Aquino said yesterday she had dropped her closest and most controversial adviser, Executive Secretary Joker Arroyo, from her Cabinet.
Leaders of last month's failed coup attempt had demanded
Pope greets AIDS victims in San Francisco
Arroyo's dismissal, saying he was inefficient and pro-Communist.
Armed forces chief Gen. Fidel Ramos said authorities were investigating possible foreign involvement in the bloody Aug. 28 military mutiny.
SAN FRANCISCO — Pope John Paul II arrived yesterday in this city hit hard by the AIDS crisis, bringing a message of love to victims of the disease who have suffered under Catholic Church's disapproval.
"God loves you all without distinction, without limit," the pope said in remarks prepared for delivery to 62 AIDS victims gathered at Mission Dolores.
The pope came to San Francisco after a visit to Monterey, where he asked growers to respect the just claims of migrant farm workers.
Study says women in military harassed
NEW YORK - Navy and Marine Corps women based in the Pacific face a demoralizing gantlet of sexual harassment and job discrimination, according to published reports about a new survey conducted by independent consultants.
last month to Secretary of Defense Caspian Weinberger, the New York Times reported in yesterday's editions.
The report was submitted late
The paper quoted unidentified Pentagon sources as saying Weinberger would announce the organization of a group to review military policy toward women.
Pizza diplomacy aids superpower relations
MOSCOW - The newest breakthrough in superpower relations will deliver American-style pizza to Muscovites, who may be surprised to learn the U.S. version contains neither salt pork nor olive
pits.
Pepsico Inc. yesterday signed a contract to open two Pizza Hut restaurant in moscow, a joint venture with all three U.S. fast food to Soviet citizens.
Bork denies changing views
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Supreme Court nominee Robert H. Bork, complaining of unfair attacks by critics, bristled yesterday over an accusation that he favored unbridled presidential power and complained that his record is being misrepresented.
Bork, in his third day of questioning by the Senate Judiciary Committee and facing a fourth day tomorrow, engaged in a tense exchange with Michael D. Dixon, Mass., over his views on presidential authority and expressed frustration about a news report describing his denial that he is a racist.
Bork suggested the report made him sound defensive by failing to point out that he was answering a question about whether he is a racist.
"All of a sudden I'm denying something I was not accused of," Bork
He also was accused again of softening some of his views to win the Senate's approval — a phenomenon with the AVT,叫 confirmation conversion.
said.
Bork said he had stuck to a number of positions that were controversial. And in other areas, he said, he had not changed his original views but rather accepted Supreme Court decisions as settled law.
"There are many cases we accept that we don't agree with" he said.
Bork, a former Yale University law professor, said some liberal groups which have analyzed his record have done sloppy research.
Prompted by a supporter on the committee, Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, he directly challenged one organization's published report that he almost always voted for the government and big business, and
against individuals
"If you look at my decisions on race, on women, on labor unions, on individuals versus the government, you will find no consistency along those lines; 'Bork said. You will learn that you are not aligned along which those decisions line up. They go both ways. They line up only according to legal reasoning."
Meanwhile, Sen. Dennis DeConcini, D-Az., a key swing vote on the committee, appeared more receptive to Bork's responses on a number of issues, particularly protection for women against discrimination.
DeConcioli said that he had been very concerned but that Bork's explanation of his views had been helpful.
"I appreciate the time you have spent and your forthrightness. You have been forthcoming," DeConcini said.
Proposals may alter apartheid
But South Africa says integration would not be imposed
The Associated Press
The panel also proposed eliminating segregation on trains, buses and planes in the government said intention would not be forced upon whites against their will.
CAPE TOWN, South Africa — A presidential commission yesterday proposed major changes in apartheid laws that would permit multiraclal neighborhoods while preserving the basic system of racial segregation.
The chairman of the committee, Andries Oosthuizen, said some of the recommendations could go into
effect within six months, assuming the government approved.
From The Associated Press.
Anti-apartheid leaders said the recommendations were too cautious. They demanded outright abolition of all discriminatory laws.
- Replace the Group Areas Act, which mandates racially segregated neighborhoods, with legislation allowing localities to establish multiracial areas, subject to veto by a government-appointed provincial administrator.
"The government realizes it cannot continue to rule with old-style apartheid, so it is making minor adjustments," said Azhar Cachalia, treasurer of the United Democratic Front anti-apartheid coalition. "It falls well short of any real, fundamental change."
would:
If implemented, the proposals
- Scrap the law that designates segregated public amenities on a nationwide basis.
Make possible voting for local authorities on a non-racial basis in the new mixed communities.
Americans celebrate Constitution
The Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA — The birthplace of the Constitution threw a spectacular party yesterday to celebrate the 200th birthday of a document President Reagan hailed as "the triumph of human freedom."
The bash was one of hundreds, solemn and sparkling, across the country yesterday as Americans rang bells, saluted the flag, became U.S. citizens and took train rides into history to commemorate the Constitution.
In Topeka, water from the Fountain of Justice began to flow by the Kansas Judicial Center culminating in a major court action by local residents and businesses.
On the boundary between New York and New Jersey, the largest free-flying flag in the country, allied with the United States, is based on the George Washington Bridge.
Former U.S. Chief Justice Warren Burger, who turned 80 yesterday, led an international bell-ringing ceremony at 4 p.m., the precise time he signed after four steamy months of hot debate two centuries ago.
In Georgia, hundreds of schoolchildren were treated to a reading of the great document amid marches and flag shows at the state Capitol.
The city's $6 million bash featured a parade, picnic, pageentry and seven barges of fireworks to honor the day when the Constitution was signed by 39 of its 55 designers.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, September 18, 1987
3
Local Briefs
Hurt student has condition changed to fair
A KU freshman who suffered a ruptured base aneurysm while riding his bike has had his condition upgraded from critical to fair.
Craig Nowtakze, Prairie Village freshman and Hashinger Hall resident, is still in the intensive care unit of St. Luke's Hospital in Kansas City, Mo. He suffered a broken leg on his way back cord while he was riding his bicycle in front of Templin Hall on Sept. 11.
Sales tax election planned for Nov. 3
The Douglas County Commission gave preliminary approval yesterday to a resolution setting forth the plan for county-wide sales tax election.
The commission must approve a final reading of the resolution at its meeting Monday before that date becomes official.
The 1-cent sales tax proposal has been a subject at both Lawrence City and the Douglas County Commissions recently. Revenue from the tax would be split between the county's tax collection, Lawrence, and would be allocated to social services and public improvements.
If county commissioners approve the final reading of the resolution, students who are not registered to vote and wish to must register before Oct. 13. Polling places for districts highly popular in the region include Field House, Hillerster School, 1045 Hilltrop Dr, Dorset School, 1837 Vermont St., and South Park Recreation Center, 1141 Mass. St.
Costa Rican head to visit Manhattan
Oscar Arias Sanchez, president of Costa Rica, will deliver the Landon Lecture Monday at Kansas State University in Manhattan, the first stop on a U.S. speaking tour.
During the 10:30 a.m. lecture in Ahearn Field House, Arias is expected to discuss the peace accord he reached with four other Central American countries in August. Arias will speak to Congress on general government assembly on Wednesday, and will receive an honorary degree from Harvard University on Thursday.
Lake Perry clean-up planned tomorrow
the Army Corps of Engineers and state organizations will sponso a Lake Perry Clean-up from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. tomorrow for National Keep America Beautiful Public Lands Day.
Organizations that sign up will be assigned to pick up trash in an area of Lake Perry. Seven-up baskets provide trash bags and soft drinks.
In case of rain, the clean-up will be moved to Sunday.
Interested groups should call the Volunteer Center of Topeka at (913) 272-8890.
Correction
Because of a reporter's error, the out-of-house cost for Alpha Chi Omega sorority members to eat one meal a week was incorrectly reported in Wednesday's Kansan. The cost is $15 a month.
From staff and wire reports
20 percent oversold Yellow parking permits
By JORN E. KAALSTAD
Staff writer
KU Parking Services has sold 4,516 yellow permits for 3,671 yellow zone stalls this semester, according to an unofficial count, said Donna Hultine, assistant director of parking.
So far, that is an oversell of more than 20 percent. And that percentage will increase, she said.
"It is early in the semester, and we're still selling permits," Hultine said. For example, nine students were enrolled yellow permits yesterday, she said.
Don Kearns, director of parking,
said that there were no limits on how
many yellow permits could be sold.
"But that is not our decision," he
said. "Parking Services only enforce
and administer the directions of the
parking board."
Ray Moore, chairman of the parking board, said that it was necessary to oversell permits because not everyone purchased one was on campus every day or at the same time. He said that the board would not deny anyone the right to park by limiting the number of permits sold.
"This is a pragmatic response to a difficult situation." Moore said.
Hultine said that students were told that having a parking permit didn't guarantee a space. She said this information was in a brochure given to students who bought permits.
Yellow permits cost $40 for a year, which is five dollars more than last year, and $28 for a semester.
searring in it he said that he was upset that he was forced to park at a metered stall. "I wouldn't have bought a permit if I had known I had to park on meters anyway." he said.
Mark Sharp, Overland Park junior,
was driving around Lot 90 south of
Robinson Center at 9 a.m. last Friday
searching in vain for a vacant stall.
Sharp added that it was almost impossible to get a free stall after 9 a.m., especially on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. "Those days cost me a dollar in meter money," he said.
About 500 metered parking spaces are located in lot 90 near Robinson. Although they are located in a yellow building, there are no metered spaces, which cost 25 cents
The 3,671 yellow stall figure already takes into account the more than 500 yellow-zoned stalls that will become metered by the end of this year. Those stalls are located in Lot 91, which is north of Spencer Art Museum.
an hour.
The meters are being installed to benefit 300 to 500 daily visitors and an additional number of commuting students who spend only a couple of days a week at the University, Kearns said.
Kearns said that Parking Services was conducting a survey to find out whether the meters were used by the intended visitors and commuters or by students with yellow stickers. He said that parking services may remove some of the meters if there were more students with yellow sticker parkings there than commuters and visitors.
Kearns said that many students were not aware of some of the yellow-zoned areas on campus. Lot 59, which is between Potter Lake and Memorial Stadium, is as close to Strong Hall as the lot by Spencer Art
Parking permits vs. parking stalls
All figures are unofficial
856
stalls available
Blue lot 656
permits sold for vehicles
1333
1250
Red lot
4516
Yellow lot 3671
Source: Parking Services
Museum, but few students know about it and rarely use it, he said.
Yellow zone permits are the only on-campus permits available to students. Red zone and blue zone permits are available to faculty and staff. The number of red and blue permits sold is not limited.
an oversell of about 7 percent. About 856 blue-zone permits have been sold for 656 spaces, for an oversell of about 32 percent.
According to unofficial figures, Parking Services has sold 1,333 red-door permits for 1,250 stalls, which is
One off-campus organization is helping to take some of the burden off Parking Services.
Yvonne Cummings
James Larson/KANSAN
Roma Dove, graduate teaching assistant in visual arts education, stands in front of her students' art on display in Bailey Hall. Dove is a former Shawnee Mission School District grade school art teacher.
Teacher shows art can be elementary
By MICHAEL MERSCHEL
Staff writer
As a former elementary school teacher, Roma Dove is used to teaching cutting, pasting, drawing and painting. But her students this year might be a little out of practice.
Dove, a graduate teaching assistant in the department of visual arts education, now teaches 49 education majors Instructional Strategies in Art for Elementary Classroom Teachers.
The purpose of the class is simple. Dove's students will spend this semester learning art projects they can teach in their classrooms.
Dove's students will be painting with water colors, molding clay, and doing other simple art projects. The projects will help students learn art basics such as form, color, balance and texture.
The class' work has turned the east wing of the first floor of Bailey Hall into a sort of gallery for art that looks at it on be on a proud parent's refrigerator.
On display this week are cloth collages, grouped by "warm" or "cool" colors. Coming soon are students' self-portraits. Other projects will be up throughout the year.
Dove, who taught art classes in the Shawnee Mission School District from 1974 until this year, said the projects would especially help those who will teach in school districts without art programs.
Dove taught general elementary school classes for more than 20 years before switching to art education. Dove said there weren't as many between grade school students and college students as she had thought.
Equipment requests could be put on hold
Staff writer
By JENNIFER ROWLAND
The University of Kansas directly needs new and updated equipment, but a bill to provide financing for that equipment should not be allowed to jeopardize a plan to make Regents universities more competitive with other schools, a KU official said yesterday.
The state House Ways and Means committee now is considering bond issues of either $10 million, $25 million or $50 million for new and updated equipment for university libraries, classrooms and laboratories. The committee has asked Board President to submit equipment requests for money generated if the Legislature approves the bond issues.
Marlin Rein, associate director of business affairs, said the University could use the equipment, but the state's primary financing goal should be a proposed three-year Margin of Excellence program.
plan's goals include increasing financing for program maintenance and faculty salaries. The plan was endorsed by the Board of Regents in June and must be approved by the state Legislature.
The proposal, which would take effect in 1989, would increase budgets in state schools to levels comparable with peer institution budgets. The
Peer institutions are universities similar in size, mission and scope to Regents universities.
"Equipment funding is in short supply and we've got a significant backlog as a result of inadequate equipment funding over a number of years," Rein said.
Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said faculty salaries also were a concern in the Margin of Excellence proposal. He said that this seemed to be the most significant of the deficiencies addressed in the Margin of Excellence program.
Regents officials told the committee Wednesday that new or updated equipment was needed for classrooms and laboratories if Kansas universities were to compete with other states' universities.
"These are accumulated needs," Brinkman said.
Lawrence priest hears pope urge renewal of spirit, ideals
Krische says he was impressed by leadership, humility
By AMBER STENGER
Staff writer
The flags of several nations — including Poland, Spain, Haiti and the United States — filled the sky in Miami when Pope John Paul II arrived to celebrate Mass.
The Rev. of the St. Lawrence Catholic Center was among the thousands of people who were there.
The pope turned to a section of Haitians and began speaking in their language. The Haitians their flags, yellied and clapped.
Spanish flags waved back and forth when the pope addressed another section in Spanish.
And others cheered as the pope spoke in English.
"I had this feeling of what it meant to be a human being. We were all in the same place — when you get down to people, we really all the same," Krische said, struggling to find words to
describe his experience.
"You really saw him as a world leader," Krische said. "He really doesn't have the interest of one nation at heart. You get this feeling that there is hope; there is possibility."
Krische, along with the Rev. Tom Culhane of St. Ann's Parish in Mission, represented the diocese of Kansas City last week when the two went to Miami to hear the pope.
Four hundred priests gathered there Sept. 10 to hear the pope at St. Mary's Church Krische then traveled to New Orleans to hear the pope address issues concerning campus ministries and higher
Krische said the pope inspired him. When the pope addressed the priests in Miami, Krische said the pope tried to remind the priests of the high ideals they entered the priesthood to fulfill.
"A lot of what he was doing was
renewing that spirit," Krische said. "He also seemed to be very conscious of the difficulty priests experience. He tried to help us realize that we can't be everything."
"Itsaw him walk up the steps and all of these people were cheering and yelling and waving. And I thought, 'You know, if this were an ordinary human being, he would probably be conceited.' But the first thing he did, as he looked at all of these people, was give it all away. He praised God," Krische said.
Krische said he was impressed by the pope's humility.
Krische said he hoped to be able to use the pope's example at KU.
Another highlight of Krische's trip was touching the pope's robe, he said. He touched the pope in Miami as the pope left the congregation of priests.
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4
Friday, September 18, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Win some, lose some
First the good news.
South Africa's President Pieter W. Botha introduced legislation that would permit blocks to elect representatives to a proposed national council to begin negotiations on a new political system for South Africa.
If passed, the council would include at least 15 blacks among its 30 or so members. The council also would assume authority on an advisory basis over black affairs, pending agreement on a new constitution.
Now for the bad news.
Ideally, if the legislation were passed, blacks could take part in restructuring the South African government to include more rights for blacks and someday spell the death of apartheid.
This week the South African government implemented new press curbs that may spell pre-publication censorship. Unlike previous press regulations, a group of "experts" will undertake a "scientific evaluation" of newspaper copy. Newspapers印刷-government sentiments will be warned, with a possibility of a newspaper shutdown or of an in-house censor.
Blacks are skeptical of the council that they would share with whites, as they should be. South Africa's history is wrought with human rights violations against blacks.
So, maybe Botha can draft a constitution that guarantees the same freedoms to blacks that are available to whites.
Thus, while Botha moves to grant rights to some groups, he continues to take basic rights from others.
And maybe the constitution will give the press the freedom to report about it.
Entrance examined
Obtaining admission to the University of Kansas may not be such a trivial thing for Kansas residents anymore. Stanley Koplik, executive director of the Board of Regents, is advocating a selective admissions policy that requires more than just a high school diploma for a Kansas resident to be admitted to KU.
The criteria Koplik supports are an ACT score of at least 23 or fulfilling Regents recommended high school requirements or graduation in the top third of the high school class. Other Regents universities may approve selective admissions policies, but at least four schools will continue their open admissions standards.
Koplik's proposal makes sense. It allows for the problem of inadequate facilities at some small Kansas high schools while ensuring that the graduating student has a solid foundation with which to begin his higher education.
If KU is to retain its reputation as a high-quality institution, action needs to be taken immediately. Koplik may not have all the answers, but he is heading in the right direction.
Basic benefits
Job hunters know to include vital statistics on their resumes, such as professional experience and references. Most agree, however, that the job interview proves pivotal in obtaining a job.
Robert Half Inc., a consulting firm, surveyed 100 U.S. companies and compiled a list of special privileges, or "perks," demanded by some potential employees. The responses were published in the Christian Science Monitor.
One person interviewed requested an office equipped with a refrigerator, projection TV set, VCR and a microwave. Another was less materialistic and only asked for 100 percent payment of his wife's law school tuition
A job-seeker with a sensitive palate demanded an office within walking distance of both a Chinese and Italian restaurant.
Others wanted to keep their noses to the grindstone, asking for a large office with no windows - interesting views are distracting.
Imagine the boss who hears this demand: payment for any time spent thinking about work on weekends and evenings.
Perhaps these requests could be incorporated into assertiveness seminars — where the painfully timid learn to scold a cat when it tips over a vase. In this case, the timid would learn — as the bold should — a lesson in diplomacy and subtlety. And compromise.
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
News staff
Jennifer Benjamin ... Editor
Juli Warren ... Managing editor
John Benner ... News editor
Beth Copeland ... Editorial editor
Sally Streff ... Campus editor
Brian Kabelline ... Sports editor
Dian Ruettelmann ... Photo editor
Bill Skeet ... Graphics editor
Tom Elenb ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Bonnie J. Hardy...Business manager
Robert Hughes...Advertising manager
Kelly Scherer...Retail sales manager
Kurt Messersmith...Campus sales manager
Greg Knipp...Production manager
David Derffelt...National sales manager
Angela Gould...Classification
Ron Weems...Director of marketing
Jeanne Hines...Sales and marketing adviser
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Indecisive mind volleys views
Bork splits votes with strict interpretation of Constitution
Ever since Ronald Reagan nominated Robert H. Bork as the next associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, I've been debating with myself. The company has been interesting, but the results have been indifferent. It's been a pretty even match, and it's still in progress:
"The hearings on the nomination began Sept. 15, you know. The hour of decision approaches. Soon you'll have to fish or cut up the nominee. You'll have to grab a hand—and this on the other-hand that columns."
"You mean like this one? No, anything's better than this indecision. Let's go with our first instincts and come out against the nomination. It might be different if William Rehnquist and Antonin Scalia weren't already on the court, but two narrow-minded, right-wing ideologues are one more than enough."
"Wa-a趴 a minute. Wait an hour. Rehnquist may be a narrow-minded ideologue and Scalia a learned one, but have you read some of Judge Bork's more unexpected decisions? Look at how far he's come on freedom of the press. His decision in Ollman vs. Evans went further than many a so-called liberal judge he. Recognized that a freshening stream of libel actions, which often seem as much designed to punish writers and publications as to recover damages for real injuries, may threaten the public and constitutional interest in free, and frequently rough discussion. Those who step into areas of public dispute, who choose the pleasures and distractions of controversy, must be willing to bear criticism, disparagement and even wounding assessments. What newspaperman would disagree with that?"
"Since when is freedom of the press a special interest? It's not as though it belonged just to the press, you know. First Amendment freedoms belong to everybody. And if Judge Bork's words are those of a narrow, right-wing ideologue, then Hugo Black was a fascist. This decision of Judge Bork's fits right in with the kind of unfettered freedom of speech I thought we were for."
blogger will that. "Don't try to appeal to my special interest."
t
"Well, if Judge Bork has come a ways, remember how far back he started. There was a time around 1971 when he claimed in a piece for the Indiana Law Journal, that only 'explicitly political' speech was protected by the First Amendment. He's grown some since, under the prodding of various confirmation hearings, but as late as 1984 he was willing to grant only that the First Amendment might be stretched to include 'many exceptions' to his original scientific debate. It's not clear whether he would include artistic expression under its protections. There's still no danger of confusing any of his decisions with Milton's "Areoagapita." He apparently thinks freedom of expression can be divided into zones — political, moral, scientific, artistic — with some under the swear of the First
Paul Greenburg Syndicated Columnist
Amendment and others not. He reminds me of a police department deciding to patrol certain parts of town and neglecting others — with the usual unwholesome results. He doesn't understand that freedom is all of a piece."
"But surely the ideas of every jurist develop over time, and it's not fair to judge a nominee on what he thought in 71. Hug Black started out as a Klausman back in Alabama. Judge Bork has come a long way since he opposed the Civil Rights Act of 1964."
"Not far enough. He's finally realized that the 14th Amendment protects the rights of black folks but not the rest of us, specifically women or homosexuals or . . ."
'Every judicial appointment is a chance because the Constitution lives in the minds of men.'
"But he's being perfectly consistent with his own philosophy of original intent. If that post-Civil War amendment was intended to protect the rights of blacks, then we have no right to expand it to include the fashionable causes of the moment, however worthy or unworthy."
"Third, this is the perfect illustration of what's wrong with the doctrine of original intent as used, or rather abused, by the Borkians. They don't recognize that rights can grow or be discovered, that rights may be present in germinal form in law and develop with time and that if the Constitution didn't work that way, it would be a straitjacket instead of organic, developing law.
"First off, it wasn't the Civil War but the War Between the States. Second, blacks and women and all others not specifically excluded are entitled to the protections of the 14th Amendment; only Indians not taxed are singled out as violators; then only in regard to representation in Congress.
"Fourth: Do the Borkians really believe in original intent or just their intent? If so, why would they challenge the rights of women under the Fourteenth Amendment but not that of corporations? Neither is explicitly mentioned in the amendment."
'Fifth, even if original intent were the governing principle of constitutional law instead of just one of several, the Borkians haven't read the original very well. In defining the rights of citizens, the Fourteenth Amendment doesn't mention blacks or any other specific group but 'All persons,' and later, 'any person.'
"Okay, okay. Five good but not decisive points.
Of all justices, Robert Bork would be least likely to endanger the rights long and well established;
he is an advocate of judicial restraint . . . "
"Hold on. Don't conservatives have a right to nominate their kind of justice, too?"
"Sure. Just as the Senate has the right, indeed duty, to advise and consent — as well as advise and not consent. But is Robert Bork a conservative? His willingness and, more than that, his reflexive instinct to go all the way back to the roots of the law, and determine the original intent, or maybe just guess it at, makes him not a conservative but a radical."
"So was Hugo Black."
"Which is what worried some of us about Justice Black. Too often there was no inner constraint to his jurisprudence; he swallowed ideas the way the innocent do cherries, seeds and all. He was capable of following an idea right out the window, and taking American law with him. Judge Bork has the same sort of undiluted allegiance to ideas and the same innocence of history. Hugo Black and his colleague William O. Douglas used to be called 'absolutists' because they believed in following their reading of the Constitution absolutely — even if that meant overlooking details like the common law, historical background, and even the way language and therefore thought changes over the centuries. They were absolutist about the First Amendment but Robert Bork might prove absolutist about everything. Every court may need one radical who's always digging at the roots of the law, but this president already has appointed two and is trying for three. Soon it'll be like having a constitutional convention in permanent session."
"Doesn't the president's appointee deserve the benefit of the doubt?"
"You've got a point but not necessarily a good one. If we're going to give the benefit of the doubt in this case, let's give it to the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. Why take any chances with those?"
"Because it is unavoidable. Every judicial appointment is a chance because the Constitution lives in the minds of men. So it is incumbent upon us to find the best minds to interpret it, and no one doubts Robert Bork's intelligence, its sweep and power . . .
... and seductiveness.'
"That's just another way of saying he argues too well."
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
This interior debate has yet to reach a conclusion, or even a focus. With the confirmation hearings, it doubtless is To Be Continued.
I wholeheartedly support Phillip Huntingstar in his efforts to inform people about safe sex.
Support safe sex
Interestingly enough, Mr. Gantz managed to unwittingly support a safe sex practice in his call for sexual abstinence. He offered that "a normal monogamous marital relationship" provides a safe haven for sexual expression beyond abstinence. Safe sex practices do call for a limiting of one's sexual partners, and a mutually monogamous relationship does reduce one's risk of AIDS. Safe sex practices do not require sexual relationships to take place within marriage and are not limited to heterosexual relationships.
A letter by Steve Gantz in the Sept. 10 Kansan stated that "sexual abstinence is the only realistic answer to avoiding AIDS." While sexual abstinence is a possible answer for AIDS prevention, it will probably be even less effective than prohibition was in preventing alcoholism.
Chris Dallager, Lawrence graduate student
Priority of education
Maybe the first inklings of finding a way to link college accreditation with students' actual learned knowledge, suggested by secretary of education William Bennett, will become the awakening idea that education is not just "what ya do" because you're a kid or a young adult.
Education is for knowledge — from the beginning. But again I read, in the Journal-World, that a worldwide study revealed that American students scored less than their English and Japanese counterparts — this time in science.
How may more millions of dollars need to be spent on surveys that bear a resemblance of ignorance to each other, before we as a nation are convinced that our education system is in serious trouble? There are a multitude of facets to consider if we are really to improve our nations' schools, but we must start somewhere.
So before the editorial staff limits their vision to the practicality of simply an idea, why not
stretch and look beyond to see where notions of change may begin. I think a shift in priorities is more necessary than a post-graduate exam, but clearly — I hope — intelligence and understanding are vital to the future care and well-being of our global village.
Sky Westerlund, Lawrence sophomore
Add-drop problems
Though I appreciate your quick printing of my letter about the enrollment process, your shortening of it distorted my arguments and removed my concern about enrollment injustices to students. It is not really possible to consider the drop-add procedure apart from the problems of the whole system. So I'll just make three brief points: First, students who have a need for and interest in a course may be unable to get in, while others can if they add just after someone has dropped. Second, with insufficient knowledge of enrollment changes and likely class size, instructors cannot fairly use green cards to correct inequities. Third, University governance should do a thorough review of the whole enrollment process.
William O. Scott, professor of English.
MR.BADGER by A.D.Long
Look! Out in the harbor!
Is it a barge?
Is it a reflogged tanker??
NO! IT'S ... (theme music over)
M15510N: IMP0551BLE
In search of EXCELLENCE, the Regent's flagship university charts a course through perilous waters...
When was the last distress signal received?
9.987
1982, Capn.
HAYDEN
The helm's sluggish, sir
Must be all that new
building construction amidships.
Should we take on more
faculty for ballast?
We can't afford to pay the faculty we've already got!
Shall I switch to sonar, sir?
BLOOM COUNTY
FINALLY THEY
GIVE ME A SCRIPT...
WHERE ARE WE?
AH HERE WE GO...
9-18
by Berke Breathed
"OPUS IS THUMBING OUTSIDE OF VEGAS. SUDDENLY A CAR DRIVEN BY A CRIMINAL SOCIOPATH SCREECHES UP. OPUS HOPS IN..." SCREECH!
HOWWW-DEE !
THIS...
THIS IS
WHAT
HAPPENS
WHEN I MISS
ONE STORY
CONFERENCE!!
YEW KIN
SIT NEXT T'
ELVIRA
HERE...
THE FAR SIDE
University Daily Kansan / Friday, September 18, 1987
5
By GARY LARSON
9-18
©1967 Universal Press Syndicate
Campus/Area
"Well, it's cold again."
Freshmen sought for class coalition
By BRAD ADDINGTON Staff writer
The Board of Class Officers has been busy recruiting candidates and helping them form coalitions for this month's election of freshman class officers, said Jim Riggs, senior class vice president.
"I think you will see a competitive edge this year," Riggs said. "I think you will see three or more running and a lot of write-ins."
Riggs said that BOCO had been printing filers and running advertisements in the Kansan to encourage freshmen to participate in the elections.
Cliff Stubbs, senior class president, said, "We think that if more people know about this their freshman year and at least attempt to run, may there be will be more students by the time of their senior year."
Stubbs and Riggs were elected to the offices as members of Momentum, the only coalition that ran in last March's sophomore.
junior and senior elections.
"All the current officers are members of the same coalition," Riggs said, "which in turn makes it easier for all of us to get together and get things done." However, Riggs said he would still like to see more coaltions participate in the elections.
Candidates must submit filing applications by 5 p.m. today in Room 106 of the Burge Union. The application and 30 in the rotunda of Strong Hall.
Stubbs said that after the elections, BOCO would begin concentrating on selecting a recipient of this year's HOPE award. HOPE was honored to an Outstanding Progressive Award, which is presented by the senior class.
Seniors will have two weeks beginning Sept. 27 to nominate faculty members for the award. The seniors will vote for a number of semifinalists.
Senior class officers will select seniors to be on a committee that will interview the finalists.
KU student organizes Robertson supporters
By a Kansan reporter
Last Saturday, television evangelist Pat Robertson won the Iowa Republican Party's only official straw poll in Ames, Iowa, and some KU students are gearing up to support him.
Craig Campbell, Detroit, Mich., senior, will organize a student chapter of Americans for Robertson as soon as Robertson announces his candidacy, which he is expected to do Oct. 1, Campbell said.
Campbell said that one year ago Robertson, a fundamentalist, told supporters he would enter the race if he could collect 3 million signatures from supporters. He has collected the signatures, Campbell said.
Campbell helped collect signatures at the University of Kansas last semester by taking petitions to reside in halls and in front of Wescoe Hall.
Many of those interested in helping with the campaign are members of conservative and Christian organizations on campus, he said.
Campbell said he was only a little surprised that Robertson won the straw poll.
"He has probably the best organization of any of the candidates. Many of his supporters are very committed," Campbell said.
Brett Frazier, Pratt junior and chairman of the KU Dole for Presi
He has probably the best organization of any of the candidates. Many of his supporters are very committed.'
Craig Campbell Detroit senior
Detroit senior
dent campaign, said he didn't think Robertson's victory in the Iowa straw poll was significant.
"Straw polls are very ambiguous. He got organized for this one event. He got all of his supporters from a big radius and got them there to vote." Frazier said.
MON MENU LINE
864-4567
Find out the daily specials at the
Kansas and Burge Unions
FUN FILLED WEEK #1
chuck berg & friends SUA live jazz in the Kansas Union, before every home football
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time: 1½ hours before the game
dates: sept. 19, 26
oct. 3, 24, 31
nov. 14
DER ROSENKAVALIER
By Richard Strauss In English
Saturday, September 19, 8:00 p.m.
Monday, September 21, 8:00 p.m.
Wednesday, September 23, 7:30 p.m.
Friday, September 25, 8:00 p.m.
PHONE: 816/471-7344 FOR TICKETS
Single tickets priced from $5.00
Single tickets priced from $5.00
Student Rush 30 minutes prior to curtain - $3.00 with student ID.
Lyric Opera of Kansas City 11th and Central
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The Lyric Opera receives financial assistance from the Arts
The Missouri Amt Council
LAIR
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CHECKERS PIZZA WE CUT OUR PRICES, NOT OUR PIZZAS!
KANU 36th Anniversary Sponsors: Chesabh;
JL's Grocery; Maupinout; Admark, Inc;
Underwood Retail Liquors
Dan Crary virtuoso jazz pianist Makoto Oone, and the classical instrumental trio Salmigund will perform for you Sunday, September 27, from 1 to 4 p.m. during our FREE, LIVE birthday party concert/broadcast in South Park, 12th and Massachusetts, Lawrence. You'll also be treated to recorded birthday greetings from special guests.
KANU91.5FM
[Picture of a man]
**ah** - Join us Saturday, September 26, at 6 p.m. in Liberty Hall for our 35th Birthday Banquet Fundraiser. Noah Adams, former host of "All Things Considered", will join an all-star guest list from KANU's past. The cost is $40 a plate and seating is limited to 200, so call 864-5100 today to reserve your tickets. Ticket deadline is September 18.
An afternoon of great music—Bluegrass star
KANU
CELEBRATING 25 YEARS
**return to the GOLDEN AGE OF RADIO**—Don't miss the LIVE concert/broadcast of the Imagination Workshop, Saturday, September 19 at 8 p.m. in the Lawrence Arts Center Tickets are $3. Children und 12 are admitted free.
A special birthday bash—Join us Saturday, September 26, at 6 p.m. in
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6
Friday, September 18, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
FBI plucks terrorist from the sea
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A Lebanese man indicted for masterminding the 1985 bjacking of a Jordanian airliner with four U.S. citizens aboard was plucked from the Mediterranean Sea by FBI agents and returned to the United States yesterday to stand trial, the Justice Department announced.
Fawaz Younis, a Shiite Muslim, was being arraigned to a U.S. magitrate in Washington on charges of hostage-taking, conspiracy and destruction of an aircraft. If convicted, he could face life imprisonment, FBI and Justice Department sources said.
The arrest marked the first time U.S. law enforcement officials have brought an international terrorist to justice in the United States, Attorney General Edwin Meese III told a news
conference.
"This operation illustrates the intention and ability of the United States to invoke the rule of law in fighting terrorist lawlessness," Meese said. "It is the first such operation, but it will most certainly not be the last."
The hostage-taking statute, passed in 1984, provided long-arm jurisdiction over offenses committed outside the United States when U.S. nationals are among those taken hostages.
Younis was intercepted Sunday morning by the FBI on a small boat in the Mediterranean, transferred to the U.S. aircraft carrier Saratoga and then flown to Andrews Air Force Base outside Washington without touching down in a foreign country, said FBI, Justice Department and Defense department officials.
One administration source, who refused to say precisely where the FBI agents caught the suspect, said the man was transferred to the Saratoga in the north central Mediterranean near the island of Corsica. The carrier had steamed to that area after a port call in Naples, Italy, to participate in a NATO exercise, the source added.
case, the source of "The operation didn't involve any foreign territory. It was all done by the military in international waters or airspace," said a Pentagon official, who asked not to be identified.
In an indictment unsealed yesterday, Younis was accused of conspiring with others in the June 11, 1985, hijacking of the Alia Royal Jordanian Airlines plane, a Boeing 727 with 74 people aboard.
Pipe bomb explodes, damages vehicle at Lawrence motor lodge
By a Kansan reporter
A pipe bomb exploded early yesterday under the rear of a car parked at the Travelodge Motel, 801 Iowa St., Lawrence police reported.
Jean M. Noel, a 42-year-old investment manager from Hutchinson, told police that he was in his motel room for several hours before the explosion damaged his 1984 white Monte Carlo. Noel was not injured, but the damage to his car was estimated at $2,500.
Noel told the police that he had
taiked with his daughter Dia, a KU sophomore, finished some paperwork and watched television before the blast shook him about 2 a.m.
Noel said he got up to see where the noise came from and found his car on fire.
Dia Neel said her father came to Lawrence two to three times a month on business, but they did not know anyone who would have reason to bomb his car. Lawrence police are still investigating the incident.
From the KU Weather Service
Dia Noel said yesterday that after
talking to the police, her father thought the bombing was just coincidental.
The explosion ignited gasoline in the car's fuel tank, but firefighters put it out, according to the fire report.
Dia Neel lent her car to her father so he could return to Hutchinson.
WEATHER
Lawrence Forecast
WHEN YOU
ADVERTISE
IN THE
KANSAN!
Mostly Cloudy
HIGH: 74°
LOW: 52°
Today will be mostly cloudy with a slight chance of showers, which will end by tonight. Highs will be in the mid-70s and lows will be in the low-50s.
North Platte
67/41
Sunny
Omaha
70/47
Partly sunny
Goodland
68/45
Mostly sunny
Hays
72/48
Mostly cloudy
Salina
73/50
Showers
Topeka
74/51
Showers
Dodge City
71/51
Mostly cloudy
Wichita
74/52
Cloudy
Chanute
75/53
Showers
Kansas City
74/53
Mostly cloudy
Columbia
74/55
Mostly cloudy
St. Louis
77/58
Partly cloudy
Springfield
78/55
Mostly cloudy
Forecast by Kevin Darmofal and Alicea Mass.
Temperatures are today's high and tonight's overnight low.
Conditions are forecasted for this afternoon.
SAT
Sunny
75/50
HIGH LOW
SUN
Sunny
76/55
MON
Party cloudy
78/56
TUE
Party sunny
78/58
WED
Cloudy
78/57
DISCOUNT,
Man surrenders in death of Tosh
More questioned in deaths of reggae star, two others
The Associated Press
An arrest warrant had been issued Wednesday for Lobban, described as armed and dangerous. Lobban, 33, reportedly knew Tosh and had been to his house several times, officials said.
KINGSTON, Jamaica — An unemployed handyman considered a prime suspect in the shooting death of reggae music star Peter Tosh and two others turned himself into authorities yesterday, police said.
The suspect, Dennis Lobban, arrived at the offices of the Jamaica Council for Human Rights in downtown Kingston at 10:15 a.m. and said he wanted to hand himself over, according to police.
Atter surrendering, he was taken to police headquarters for processing.
Two other men were being interrogated yesterday in connection with the shooting but no charges had been filed against them, Police Commissioner Herman Ricketts said.
STUDENT GET A 28% GROUPS:
Ricketts said the two men had been detained Wednesday night but declined to identify them.
Tosh, 42, and Wilton "Doc" Brown died Friday after three gunmen forced their way into the musician's home demanding money. The men ordered the seven people in the house to lie on the floor while they ransacked the premises. When they didn't find any cash, they shot Tosh, Brown and the others.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, September 18, 1987
KU AND LAWRENCE EVENTS
CALENDAR
2:30 p.m. — "Biotechnology in the Industrial Organization," a microbiology lecture by Gene Fox, vice-president for development of biotechnology, of Miles Laboratories at. 6031 Haworth Hall. Also speaking will be Karl H. Voepe, executive vice-president for biotechnology, of Miles Laboratories.
11 a.m. - Study Abroad committee meeting at 109 Lippincott Hall.
3:30 p.m. — "Radio Days," an SUA film, at Woodruff auditorium in the Kansas Union, also at 7 and 9:30 p.m. on and on Saturday at 3:07 and 9:30 p.m.
Afternoon showings $1. Evening showings $2.
3:30 p.m. — "TGIF," at the St.
Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent
Drive, until 6:48.
3:30 p. m. — "Aerodynamics of Combat Aircraft," a department of airspace engineering colloquium by the Wright-Patterson aircraft designer, at 3140 Wescoe Hall
4 p.m. — “Mechanical Engineering
Party” the 4 p.m. of Leiden, Belgium
5 p.m. - Volleyball tournament with the University of Kansas, Southwest Missouri State, Sam Houston University and Michigan State at Allen Field House.
Also games at 7:30 p.m. and Saturday at 9 and 11:30 a.m., 5 and 7:30 p.m.
7 p.m. — "Opera Is My Hobby",
with James Seaver, will be broadcast on
KANI-91 5. FM.
7 p.m. — Organ rectal presented by Pa Oakley, an internationally known organist and church musician at Countryside United Methodist Church, 3212 W. Oakley. The Oakley will present a workshop on music and worship at 9 a.m. on Saturday.
7:30 p.m. m. " Gallipoli" at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
No charge.
7:30 p.m. — “Ferris Bueller's Day Off”, at St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Dr.
8 p.m. — "An Evening with Chicago" at Landon Arena in the Kansas Excentepe, Topeka. Part of Cider Days on Saturday and Sunday on the grounds
8 p.m. — KU International Folk Dance Club at St. John's Gymnasium, 12th and Kentucky streets.
9 p.m. — Observatory Open House (if the sky is clear) at Clyde W. Tombaugh Observatory, 500 Lindley Hall. Call 864-3166 for more information.
Saturday
8:30 a.m. — "Estate Planning: Disclaimers and QTIPS" and "Analyzing Theories of Lender Liability," legal education seminars offered by the School of Law and the division of continuing education, at Green Hall.
9 a. 9am. — "Ethics and the Design Profession," an architecture lecture by Patrick Sullivan, chairman of the department of architecture, California Polytechnic-Pomona, at the Commerce Bank auditorium, 911 Main St., Suite 1215, Kansas City, Mo. Panel discussion follows.
10 a.m. — "The Jazz Scene" with Dick Wright will be broadcast on KANU- 91.5 FM.
Noon — Chuck Berg Band will perform at the Kansas Union lobby until 1:15 p.m.
9 a.m. - Men's and Women's Jayhawk Invitational cross country meet at Rimrock Farm
9 a.m. — "The Vintage Jazz Show" with Michael Maher will be broadcast on KANU-91.5 FM.
1:30 p.m. — KU Football KU versus Kent State at Memorial Stadium Parents
5 p.m. — Lawrence Region Widowed Men and Women Apple Valley Farm dinner theater trip. Leave from Dillons Super Store, W. Sixth Street
8 p.m. — "Where Ripe Fruit Never Falls," a Lawrence Community Theatre presentation at 1501 New Hampshire St. Tickets are $2 for general public and $1 for season ticket holders. Sold at time of performance. Also on Sunday at 2:30 p.m.
Sunday
20
7 a.m. — Jayhawk Triathalon at Robinson Center. $10 entry fee.
1 p.m. — Exhibit opening of Roger Shimomura, performance rehearsals, at the Art and Design Building gallery. Will show through Saturday.
Show opening reception at the Art and Design Building gallery. Exhibit will show through Friday.
3 p.m. — The KU Concerts featuring the combined choir and University Symphony Orchestra on KANU-91.5 F.M.
2 p.m. — Graduate Art and Design
Monday
3:30 p. m. — "A Pawn of Diplomacy: H.M.S. Amethyst and Anglo-Chinese Relations" a history lecture by Malcolm Murfett, National University of Singapore, at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union
8 p.m. — "Photographing Your
Artwork" and "Matting and Framing," part of the Lawrence Art Guild's Speaker's Forum at the Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St.
8 p.m. — Society for Fantasy and Science Fiction, at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union.
21
4:30 p.m. —"Liberation Theology; The Gospel, Human Freedom and the People of God," a seminar, at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
5 p.m. — Troubles and Practice for the K.U. Men's Soccer Club at Shenk Complex, 23rd and Iowa streets. Also on Thursday at the same time.
11:30 a.m. — French Table at Patron C in the Kansas Union. Every Tuesday all semester except Tuesday before Thanksgiving.
Tuesday
Q
7 p.m. College Republicans meeting Atterson Auditorium in the union
7 p.m. — "Mental Health issues for Women in the '80s," a workshop by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center at the Pine Room in New York and additional "Pack meetings." For "Pack
7 p.m. — KU Students Against Hunger first meeting at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union.
of Lies" at the Lawrence Community Theatre 1501 New Hampshire St.
22
8 p.m. - Yo-Yo Ma, cellist, at Hoch
Auditorium. Tickets on sale at the Murphy Hall Box Office. Tickets are $7.50 for KU students with a current ID.
7:30 p.m. — "The Predicate Structure of Samarakai," a linguistics obeyed by Meryn Alleeve, University of the West Indies, at 207 Blake Hall.
at the Pine Room in N. Washington
7 p.m. — Open auditions for "Pack
23
Wednesday
11:40 a.m. "-" U.S. Constitution and Civil Liberties, "a University Forum by David Gottlieb, professor of law, at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. Call 843-4933 by Sept. 22 to make lunch reservations.
Home football games are great! We can't wait to enjoy a Saturday afternoon watching the Jayhawks. The excitement on the field and the fun in the stands makes Memorial Stadium a great place to be. We can make the stadium just as tough on its opponents as Allen Field House is on their opponents. All we need is you.
6:30 p.m. — Campus Christians meeting in the Daisy Hill Room at the Burge Union.
7 p.m. — KU Democrats meeting at Parlor C in the Kansas Union.
10 p.m. — The Verandas, a band from Kansas City, performing at the Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St.
for Thursday
7 p.m. — "The Philadelphia Story," an SUA film, at woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Tickets are $2.
Thursday
24
MEXICAN CABO
Q
6 p.m. — Latin American Solidarity Rice and Beans Dinner featuring a video about Ben Linder at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
GET EXCITED KANSAS 7
7:30 p.m. — "The Marriage of Bette and Bob," a University Theatre presentation, at Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall. Also to be presented Sep. 25-26 at 8 p.m. and Sept 27 at 2:30 p.m. Tickets on sale for $3 with a current KUID at the Murphy Hall Box Office.
7 p.m. — “Bring Up Baby,” an SUA film, in woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas Union. Tickets are $2.
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8
Friday, September 18, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
On the Record
Two KU students were attacked Wednesday night while walking in Marvin Grove just north of the Spencer Research Library, KU police reported.
phone reply.
The students, a 29-year-old female and a 22-year-old male, were walking along Memorial Drive to the parking lot adjacent to Memorial Stadium about 10:15 p.m. when two men accosted them, said Sgt. John Brothers, KU police spokesman.
KU police spokesman.
The students were pushed down, and their mouths were covered, said the police. The men demanded money from the couple.
After a struggle, the couple was able to scream and attract attention from others in the area.
The attackers fled. Brothers said the couple walked to Jayhawk Boulevard and flagged down a cab.
down a car.
The police are investigating the case.
KU police are investigating a driver who was involved in a car-bicycle accident that resulted in the death of the cyclist Sunday, District Attorney Jim Flory said yesterday.
yeštěhné Flory said he planned to file a traffic charge of failure to yield the right-of-way against the driver of the 1973 Volkswagen, Kristine Patti, 2011 Ohio St.
Kristine Fath, 2014.43.
Flory said he had decided not to ask for a charge of vehicular manslaughter because the driver was not driving recklessly.
The cyclist, Jeffery Mesenbrink. 29, 608 Kentucky St. .w was headed north on Ousdahl Road about 7:30 p.m. when he collided with Patti, who was traveling south on Ousdahl Road and attempting to turn left onto 32rd Street.
attempting to break then fell onto the hood of the car and into the windshield. Mesenbrink was not wearing any protective equipment, according to the police report.
the porter report.
A Douglas County Ambulance took Mesenbrink to Lawrence Memorial Hospital, where he was pronounced dead at 11:30 p.m.
Arts in Air to feature sunflowers
By JULIE McMAHON
Staff writer
acres.
There are such sunflowers in a field southeast of Lawrence. But unless admirers have an airplane, they can't get a good view.
This weekend, however, planloads of people can fly above the sunflower field sculpture during Arts in the Air.
Arts in the Air is part of the Air Extravaganza on Sunday at the Lawrence Municipal Airport. It will feature an opportunity to fly over a field sculpture called "Sunflower Still Life" by Lawrence artist Stan Herd. He is currently doing a field sculpture in connection with Farm Aid III in Lincoln. Neb
The Air Extravaganza is sponsored by the Lawrence Arts Center, the Lawrence Chamber
of Commerce, the Cultural Affairs Commission and the Transportation Commission.
"It's designed to highlight the new terminal building at the airport and give people a chance to see Stan Herd's work," said Debi Moore, director of small business and community affairs for the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce.
For $7 each, people can fly over the field in one of 12 private planes that will be used for the event. Also, antique planes will be on display, and a video of the sunflowers will be shown for those who want to see the field but have a fear of flying, she said.
Herd makes a living painting small works and murals around Kansas, but he takes donations to help cover his expenses for his field sculpture, his wife, Jan Herd, said.
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Fri. Sept. 18 Big Toe
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920 W. 23rd Lawrence, Kansas
Fri. Sept.18 from Minneapolis
(formerly the phones) on Pendulum Records
STICKMAN
呆呆呆
THE
Sat. Sept. 19
737 New Hampshire 843-9723
PLAIN JANE
Don't miss the funniest party band in the Midwest!
BOTTLENECK
Sun. Sept. 20 WILD SEEDS
ALL AGES SHOW
NEXT WED. SEPT. 23 DON'T MISS THE VERANDAS
KU
BOIL
KANSAS
JAYHAWK
University Daily Kansan / Friday, September 18, 1987
9
Jayhawk Wine and Dine
KU
ku
TELL THE TOWN-CALL THE KANSAN 864-4358
BUM STEER
DELIVERS
"HOT" BQF Fast (5-10 nightly)
841-SMOKE 2554 IOWA ST
Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner & Late Night!
MAKE THE Vista RUN
Great Food Great Service Vista RESTAURANTS
Lawrence
A 2020
hours:
Monday thru Thursday 6:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m.
Friday and Saturday 6:00 a.m-1:00 a.m.
Sunday 7:00 a.m-12:00 p.m.
COUPON
Vistaburger
BUY ONE-GET ONE
FREE
Limit 1 order per coupon,
one coupon per customer.
Not valid in combination
with any other offer. Offer
good 10:30 AM to close.
Vista RESTAURANTS
Expires 10/31/87
1527 West 6th • Lawrence
A BURGER
Vista RESTAURANTS
LIVE MUSIC Something for Everyone
It's Time... To Check out
The Jazzhaus
926 $ _{1/2} $ Massachusetts
THIS WEEKEND- Hot Rock N' Roll with The Bill Lynch Band
NEXT WEEK-
Wed. Sept. 23
Thurs. Sept. 24
The Novellas
Homestead Grays
Fri. Sept.25
Lonnie Ray's All Stars
Jazz and Blues Master Mose Allison
Mose Allison
OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
4:00 p.m.- 2:00 a.m.
Remember, when there's not a band on the stage. The Jazzhaus plays the BEST in recorded jazz, blues, reggae and rock.
The University Daily Kansan Appreciates Your Business!!
THE LIGHTHOUSE:
Your Guide to Good Times
With:
$1.00 Shots of Schnapps Everyday
Thursday: Ladies Night
Saturday: $1.25 Tequila Sunrises
Disc Jockey: 9:00 - 1:30 Saturday and Sunday open at 8 p.m. Open til 2:00
Metcalf 103 Shopping Center Overland Park, Ks.
(913) 381-5538
--per person
湖 南
THE YOU FAMILY'S
Hunan
湖 南
THE YOU FAMILY'S
Restaurant & Lounge
New Recommendation
Lunch Combination
Plates...$3.75
Served with crab ragoon, chicken and up wing, egg drop or hot and sour soup. fried rice and fortune cookie.
Special...$8.95
Parents' Day
Polynesian
Family
Drink...$2.95
Dinner ... $6.95
per person
Carry Out
843-8222 1516 W. 23rd St.
Your Customers Will Eat It Up, Place an ad on the Wine and Dine Page. For more info. call 864-4358
10
Friday, September 18, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
State/Local
Kansans may not get all of tax windfall Hayden also remains disappointed about failed special highway session
TOPEKA — Gov. Mike Hayden acknowledged yesterday he may not be able to achieve his goal of returning all of an income tax windfall to taxpayers, but said he will recommend that all taxpayers benefit from whatever can be returned.
"The opportunity to return all of the windfall is probably very remote in the coming fiscal year." Hayden told a news conference in his Capitol office. "I have said I prefer to give back part or all of the windfall, and I (still) hope I'll be in position to return all or part of the windfall."
Kansas will collect an estimated $120 million additional income tax revenue in the current tax year and $145 million in tax year 1988 as a result of the 1986 federal tax reform laws.
The state realized the extra revenue because taxpayers had their federal tax liability reduced under the 1986 changes. By not paying so much federal tax, they have less to deduct from their
taxable state income, and that increases their Kansas tax liability.
It was Hayden's first news conference since Sept. 5, when a special legislative session he called to consider a highway improvement initiative collapsed with nothing accomplished.
Questions about what Hayden plans to do with the income tax windfall and his feelings nearly two weeks later about the special session's failure dominated the news conference, after Hayden had opened his meeting with reporters by announcing appointment of a new state travel and tourism commission.
It was evident Hayden's disappointment over the special session had not dissipated. He still blamed House Democrats for the failure but said the six-day session had one positive effect: it provided legislators more information about the state's highway problems than they had ever had.
have as little as $7 million in new money from tax revenues to build into the Fiscal Year 1989 budget he will recommend to the 1988 Legislature in January, unless the state keeps a large portion of the income tax windfall.
State fiscal experts have projected Hayden may
And, the governor is under pressure to pump in more money for education, social programs and the state's effort to land the Superconducting Super Collider.
Hayden said the Tax Reform Task Force he appointed last spring is studying the issue of state tax reform and will recommend to him later this year much of the windfall can be returned to taxpayers.
He also said he would like to see a $160 million general fund balance at the end of FY 1989. Projections show that to accomplish that, the state either has to keep all the windfall or limit spending drastically.
Flory to conduct inquisition in woman's death
District Attorney Jim Flory will conduct an inquisition as a part of his investigation into the death of a Lawrence woman.
By a Kansan reporter
On Sept. 9, police found the decomposed body of 32-year-old Judy Kemp in a box in a shed adjacent to her trailer home at 101 Michigan St.
The discovery came after the woman's husband, 40-year-old Carl Kemp, called the police requesting that the man be taken to Police said the woman had been dead
for about a week.
Carl Kemp was charged last week with second-degree murder in connection with the death of his wife, but his six-day hospital stay for low blood pressure delayed the legal process, Flory said.
Flory said an inquisition is only to further the investigation of the case. He requested the inquisition from Judge Michael Malone to obtain documents and records and sworn testimony of witnesses.
Although witnesses usually are not
subpoenaed for inquisition, the district attorney may call some in, Flory said.
Douglas County Coroner Alan Sanders said he had not established a cause of death, but said he thought a special forensic pathologist would be called in as a witness.
Meanwhile, Carl Kemp appeared in Douglas County District Court yesterday morning. He was held for a court hearing after Douglas County jail yesterday afternoon.
A preliminary hearing is set for
9:30 a.m. Monday before district Judge Ralph King.
Second-degree murder is a class B felony. If convicted, Carl Kemp could face a minimum of five to 15 years maximum of 20 years to life in prison.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers.
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BEFORE YOU BUY, Check the KANSAN. Our advertisers might save you money.
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CITY DISTRICT STATE ZIP CODE
Quality Haircuts at Reasonable Prices Barbers
842-0384
the AUTO MEDIC inc.
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Video Player
Four Movies
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$9.95
(Higher Weekends)
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1447 W. 23rd
Open 9 a.m.-10 p.m. Daily
Commonwealth
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Cranada
DAILY 7:20, 9:35
BELIUSHI GOOSTE-T
Sat Sun 23:00, 5:00
THE PRINCIPAL
Fri 5:00
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PATRICK SHAZLE JUNIER GRAY
Dorothy Dancing
WILLIE
Fatal INTENTION Fri. 4:30
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Sat. Sun 2:00, 4:30
R
DAILY
5:00, 7:30, 9:40
Mat Sat. Sun. *1:25*
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STAKEOUT
“This is my wife. I love her sweet, little smile. Her rubber nose. Her dead hand. She knows exactly what puts a smile on my face. I think I’ll keep her.”
The little lady knows Frank wants the light beer with the first name in taste, Bud Light. Because after a hard day’s work of wiping out a small town in the Bavarian Alps, Frank won’t settle for less than the best. So while she keeps him in Bud Light he keeps her in stitches. That Frank, what a card!
Ask for Bud Light. Everything else is just a light.
University Daily Kansan / Friday, September 18, 1987
11
Nation/World
WWII internment amends passed
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The House commemorated the Constitution's 200th anniversary yesterday by approving apologies and reparations to right a 45-year-old wrong; the forced internment of Japanese-Americans during World War II.
An official apology, a $50 million public education fund and $1.2 billion in restitution were included in the Civil Liberties Act, which passed 243-143 after several hours of impassioned floor debate.
"This was the most appropriate way we could atone for what happened," said Rep. Robert Matsui, D-
Calif., who spent more than three years in an internment camp with his parents, starting when he was six months old.
"I don't know if you can remove scars, but I think scars can heal," Matsuki said after the vote. "I'm hopeful that we don't put this issue to that. That we just heal the wounds and make sure it doesn't happen again."
The bill authorized $1.2 billion for payments of $20,000 to people of Japanese ancestry who were relocated, confined, held in custody or otherwise deprived of liberty or property under the government's wartime internment program.
An additional $50 million was earmarked for educational programs dealing with the wartime internment.
The measure also apologized for the program, which a government commission recently concluded had been the result of "race prejudice, war hysteria and a failure of political leadership."
Also, it directs federal agencies to review criminal convictions related to violations of the internment law as well as applications for restitution of positions, status or other losses attributable to discriminatory actions.
House speaker says cease-fire in Central America closer now
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — House Speaker Jim Wright said yesterday that conversations with Central American leaders in the past week have led him to hope there may be a cease-fire in the region even before the Nov. 7 deadline established in a five-nation peace plan.
He also said there was broad agreement in the House to go along with a plan to continue humanitarian aid to Nicaragua's counter for at least 40 days past the Oct. 1 expiration date of the current aid allocation.
"There are powerful individuals and forces in Central America who are trying to work out a modus for putting a cease-fire into effect even before Nov. 7," Wright, D-Texas, told a reporter.
"I find on all sides in Central America a deep desire for peace and reconciliation," he said, adding that peace was achievable as long as the
process enabled all parties to preserve their dignity.
Wright declined to identify the two leaders of Central American countries with whom he had spoken in recent days, saying he did not want to jeopardize their efforts to achieve an early cease-fire. And he said he did not know how likely they were to be successful.
"I'm going to be content and joyous if I happen." Nov. 7th, or even Nov. 13th.
He said he expected most Democrats to support his deal with House Republican Leader Robert Michel of Illinois to provide some $3.5 million to buy food, uniforms and medical supplies for the contrasts through Nov. 10, a rate he said was in line with the current aid formula.
But Michel acknowledged that both he and Wright were meeting resistance to the deal. from Republicans who insisted on hiring ccrats who want less. And it remained
to be seen how the provision would be greeted in the Senate, where leaders were not closely involved in putting together the agreement.
House Democratic leaders said they went along with Michel's proposal — after cutting it from the $8 million originally sought and limiting it to humanitarian aid — in part to make sure he had cut off food and medicine to the contras fighting Nicaragua's leftist Sandinista government.
The money was to be folded into a bill approved yesterday by the House Appropriations Committee. The measure, designed to keep the government running while Congress works on appropriation bills for the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1, is expected to reach the House floor Wednesday.
The aid money will be added when the measure goes to the Rules Committee early next week.
ESQUIRE
ESQUIRE
BARBER SERVICE
FOR MEN
AND WOMEN
FOR APPTS. CALL
842-3699
Name of Lukas Jubli 1987
Lawrence Book
A. James Kavanagh, Ph.D.
Welcome to Lawrence!
If you need abortion or birth control services, we can help.
2323 RIDGE CT
C
Confidential pregnancy testing • Safe, affordable abortion services • Birth control • Tubal ligation • Gyn exams
Testing and treatment for sexually transmitted diseases.
Providing quality health care to women since 1974.
Insurance, VISA & MasterCard accepted.
For information and appointments (913) 345-1400
*oil Free (except KS)* 1-800-227-1918
TRAVEL BICYCLE
CLEARANCE SALE
Kansan Fact: 7,900 KU Students Spend Over $300 A Month!
FROM
$134^{95}
We're not waiting for cold weather to blow out our remaining inventory of 1987 bicycles.
Road Bicycle
$25^{00} free accessories with any new bike purchase.
Coach Val will review the previous game, show game films and preview the next game.
UPTOWN BICYCLES
A
1337 Mass. Open 7 Days 749-0636
--we encourage you to join with us and help build a NEW JAYHAWKER TRADITION... A Yearbook photographer will be setting up at your location... All you need to do is smile!! Below is the schedule, please place your date on your calendar. There will be a $1.00 sitting fee to have your picture in the yearbook. (This fee will be waived if you have purchased a Yearbook).
*Optional Lunch - $5.00 Soup and Sandwich Buffet
UNDERGRADUATES:
For the first time in KU. history, underclassman photographs will be allowed in the Jayhawker!! And what a great time to start a new tradition!! This is the Jayhawker's 100th edition. This year's theme "A step ahead-A glance back" emphasizes the type of hook it will be.
UNDERGRADUATES
YEARBOOK SCHEDULE
SEPT.20·SEPT.23
SEPT. 20 - SEPT. 23
SEPT. 28 - SEPT. 29
SEPT. 30
OCT. 1
OCT. 4 - OCT. 5
OCT. 6 - OCT. 7
MCCOLLUM HALJ
Place-Adams Center Summerfield Room
OCT.13-OCT.14
MCCOLLUM HALL
OLIVER HALL
J.R.P. HALL
TEMPLUN HALL
NAISMITH HALL
BATTENFELD HALL*
PEARSON HALL*
STEPHENSON HALL*
GRACE PEARSON*
DOUTHART HALL**
MILLER HALL**
SELLARS HALL**
DOUTHART HALL***
MILLER HALL***
SELLARDS HALL***
WATKINS HALL***
TIME: 4:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m.
TIME: 4:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m.
* Locaton of photographer will be at Stephenson Hall.
* Location of photographer will be at Miller Hall.
For more information contact the Jayhawker at 864-3728 or University Photography at 843-5279.
Off campus undergraduates go to most convenient location.
Date - Mondays during football season
KU
K. U. FACULTY/STAFF AND STUDENT QUARTERBACK CLUB
KU
You are invited to join football coach Bob Valesente for Monday noon Quarterback Club meetings.
Time - 12:00 (Noon) - 1:00 p.m.
Domino's Pizza Delivers Doubles
DOMINO'S
PIZZA
Two Pizzas for Only $5.99!
Now you can have two delicious, 10-pizza for the price of one. They're easy to prepare and the choice of lottings on each - they don't have to be the same! And we use only the freshest ingredients and our baking powder. You're not seeing double.
it's just our latest way to say that Domino's Pizza Delivers. *And we deliver at no additional charge in 30 minutes or less. That's Domino's Pizza guarantee.* No coupon necessary.
Call Us!
Lawrence
841-7900
1445 W. 23rd Street
841-8002
832 Iowa Street
Hours:
4pm-1am Sun - Thurs.
4pm-2am Fri - Sat.
PEPPERONI MUSHROOMS GROUND BEEF
DOMINO'S
PIZZA
Price do not include tax
Our drivers carry less
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Limited delivery area.
SAUSAGE
BLACK OLIVES
ONIONS
Menu
CHEESE . . . . .
HAM
GREEN PEPPERS GREEN CHILIES
- DELUXE — 3 items for the price of 4. Pepperoni, Sausage, Mushrooms, Onions & Green Peppers.
***VEGI* - 5 items for the
GEI of 4, Onions, Green
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JALAPENOS
EXTRATHICK CRUST
EXTRA CHEESE
TWO 10" 10" & 14" TWO 14"
5.99 7.99 8.99
6.94 9.24 10.39
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10.74 14.24 15.99
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- **EXTRAVAGANZZA2** - A special blend of 9 items for the price of $9. Bread-based, Ground Beef, Sausage Black Onions, Cream Cheese and Spinach.
© 1987 Dominos Pizza, Inc
12
Friday, September 18, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Hacker taps NATO, Air Force computers; causes damage
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — Federal investigators are wading through piles of printouts to assess damage caused by "Shadow Hawk," a teenage computer buff who used AT&T systems to tap into NATO and Air Force telephone networks, a prosecutor said yesterday.
Secret Service agents who raided the North Side home of the 17-year-old "hacker" confiscated three computers and software stolen through telephone company systems, said William J. Cook, an assistant U.S. attorney.
He would not speculate on any motive for the youth, who used "Shadow Hawk" as a code name, but said that some hackers like to see how far they can go with their machines.
A decision on whether to charge the youth will be made after the stolen materials are analyzed, Cook said.
after the store material is unpacked.
Agents have been working full-time since the Sept. 4
raid, printing out "the enormous quantity of material
stored in his computers." he said.
National security was not seriously jeopardized by the theft of material from an AT&T computer at NATO Maintenance and Supply Headquarters in Burlington, N.C. Cook said.
But he declined to comment on the nature of information taken from Robins Air Force Base in Georgia.
AT&T put the value of its stolen software, some of which is not yet on the market, at more than $1 million,
COOK SAID.
The youth also is suspected of revealing AT&T security devices over a computer network in Texas which is used as a kind of bulletin board for hackers, he said.
Cook said.
The network, called "Phreak Class-2600," exists only "to educate computer enthusiasts ... to penetrate industrial and government sector computer systems." Cook said.
Authorities said that they were led to the teen-age hacker partly through messages he left on the Texas network, where he bragged of having gained access to the AT&T computer files.
AT&T computer systems. Kathryn Clark, a spokeswoman for AT&T, said the company's security systems were triggered by Shadow Hawk's computer break-ins.
There was no physical break-in, Cook said. The computer programs and other information were obtained by tapping into systems by telephone, using another computer.
Shadow Hawk penetrated AT&T computers by disguising his own computer as a telephone company computer, he said.
"Once entering the system, he would have his computer talk to the phone company computers and cause the computer at some remote spot to transfer files to... Bell Labs in Naperville," a Chicago subsub. Cook said.
At Runza, we give frozen beef the cold
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Why does a Runza hamburger taste so darn good?
Because we use 100% American beef. Lean, tender, tasty.
Add what you like — crisp lettuce, vine-ripened tomatoes,
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Try a fresh Runza hamburger. Once you do, the taste of
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At Runza we start fresh so everything ends up good!
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2700 Iowa St.
LAWRENCE
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OPEN: 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Daily
Noon-11 p.m. Sundays
749-2666 BOON'S PRODUCE
YEAR ROUND
Fresh fruits & vegetables
Dry beans, honey, cider, rice
FALL HOURS M-F 7-5, Sat. 7-1
623 Locust N. Lawrence
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST - FREE DELIVERY
842-1212
1601 W 23rd
Southern Hills Mall
Mon - Thurs. 11 a.m.-2 a.m.
Fri - Sat. 11 a.m.-3 a.m.
Sunday - 11 a.m.-1 a.m.
MENU
WE FEATURE THE UNIVERSAL SIZE PIZZA
10 INCHES, 6 SUICES, FEEDS ONE TO TWO PEOPLE
1 PIZZA
Our Small
2 PIZZAS
Our Medium
3 PIZZAS
Our Large
STANDARD CHEESE
A HAND FASHIONED CRUST WITH A GENEROUS TOPPING OF TOMATO SAWKIE AND CHEESES THE STARTING POINT FOR YOUR FAVORITE COMBINATION
$400
$700
$900
EACH ADDITIONAL PIZZA $200
ALL TOPPINGS 50¢ PER TOPPING PER PIZZA
“NO COUPON SPECIALS”
Prime Time Special
3—Pizzas
1—Toppings
4—Cokes
$10.00
Everyday Two-Fers
2—Pizzas
2—Toppings
2—Cokes
$8.00
Sunday Super Special
2—Super Shuttles
2—Cokes
$10.00
WE ACCEPT CHECKS (25¢ Service Charge)
Valuable Coupons
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST - FREE DELIVERY
842-1212
$200 OFF
Any Three Pizzas
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST - FREE DELIVERY
842-1212
$100 OFF
Any Pizza Ordered
11 a.m. - 4 p.m.
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST - FREE DELIVERY
842-1212
50c OFF
Any Pizza
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPIRES 12-31-87
LIMITED DELIVERY AREA
WE DELIVER DURING LUNCH!
749-2666
BOON'S
PRODUCE
YEAR ROUND
Fresh fruits & vegetables
Dry beans, honey, cider, rice
FALL HOURS M-F 7-5, Sat. 7-1
623 Locust N. Lawrence
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST - FREE DELIVERY
842-1212
1601 W 23rd
Southern Hills Mall
Mon. - Thurs. 11 a.m.-2
Fri. - Sat. 11 a.m.-3 a
Sunday - 11 a.m.-1 a
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST + FREE DELIVERY
842-1212
1601 W 23rd
Southern Hills Mall
Mon. - Thurs. 11 a.m.-2 a.m.
Fri. - Sat. 11 a.m.-3 a.m.
Sunday - 11 a.m.-1 a.m.
MENU
WE FEATURE THE UNIVERSAL SIZE PIZZA
10 INCHES 6 Slices. FEEDS ONE TO TWO PEOPLE
1 PIZZA
Our Small
2 PIZZAS
Our Medium
3 PIZZAS
Our Large
STANDARD CHEESE
A HAND FASHIONED CRUST WITH A GENEROUS
TOPPING OF TOMATO SAUCE AND CHEESES. THE
STARTING POINT FOR YOUR FAVORITE
COMBINATION
$400
$700
$900
EACH ADDITIONAL PIZZA $200
MENU WE FEATURE THE UNIVERSAL SIZE PIZZA 10 INCHES. 6 Slices,FEEDS ONE TO TWO PEOPLE 1 PIZZA Our Small 2 PIZZAS Our Medium 3 PIZZAS Our Large
STANDARD CHEESE A HAND FASHIONED CRUST WITH A GENEROUS TOPPING OF TOMATO SAUCE AND CHEESES THE STARTING POINT FOR YOUR FAVORITE COMBINATION $400 $700 $900 EACH ADDITIONAL PIZZA $2^{20}
Prime Time
Special
3—Pizzas
1—Topping
4—Cokes
$10.00
Everyday
Two-Fers
2—Pizzas
2—Toppings
2—Cokes
$8.00
Sunday
Super Special
2—Super Shuttles
2—Cokes
$10.00
PIZZA
SHUTTER
FAT • MILK
DELIVERY
PUZZA
SPLYTHOR
BLAST + MULTIPLE
MEETINGS
PUZZA SHUTTLE
FREE TIME AND
DELIVERY
HUGE PICTURE & POSTER SALE Hundreds to Choose From
SUN
Last Day Today
8:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
Located in Kansas Union
Lobby Gallery
SACRED HAWK
Cars, Cities, Scenery and Travel Posters, etc.
Mabry Mill
LAST DAY TODAY
Art Nouveau Many new prints available!
Art Reproductions Laser Photo Art (frames available for Laser Photo Art
ONLY $6.00 each or 3 for $15.00
Pablo Picasso
Plastic bags available. Sponsored by SUA
Hundreds to choose from!
- M.C. Escher * Renoir
* Picasso * Seurat
* Van Gogh and
* Dali many more
JAYHAWKER
Senior Yearbook Portraits in Daisy Hill Room of BURGE UNION
Look for your appointment card in the mail
Sept.21-Oct.9
Walk-ins are welcome
($3 sitting fee is paid with the purchase of a 1988 Jayhawker)
For more information call 864-3728 or stop by 003A Jayhawker Towers
University Daily Kansan / Friday, September 18, 1987
Sports
13
KU football team meets Kent State in first home game
By CRAIG ANDERSON
Staff writer
Numbers seem to illustrate best the downward spiral that the Kansas football team has experienced during its current eight-game break, which spans over the past two seasons.
During the past eight games, the Jayhawks have been outscored by an average of 39-5. The Kansas offense hasn't scored a touchdown in its past 13 quarters. The defense has given up an average of 469 yards a game during the losing streak.
Some of the negative attitudes toward the football program could diminish somewhat if Kansas beats Kent State in the Jayhawks' home opener tomorrow at Memorial Stadium. Kansas coach Job Vallees said his team would have an important game against the Golden Flashes.
"It's critical for us to win this game," he said. "We need to start playing winning football again."
Junior center Jay Allen said that despite the losing streak and the scoring slump, the Jayhawks had kept a positive outlook this week in practice.
"We still are playing as hard as we can," he said. "Sure we want to score, but we want to win more than anything else. We have to come off the ball hard and hit someone."
Despite the Jayhawks' recent misfortunes, Kent State coach Glen Mason said:
"We look at Kansas like they looked at Auburn. Our kids look at it as a big challenge to go in and play a Big Eight team at their place. We think of size and talent that they will be up against."
The biggest size difference between the two teams will come in the offensive and defensive lines. Kent State's offensive linemen weigh an average of 239 pounds, while Kansas' defensive linemen weigh an average of 184 pounds. Kent State's defensive linemen outweigh Kent State's defensive linemen by an average of more than 27 pounds.
Kansas players and coaches, though, said the size difference was just that — a difference. They said whether or not it would be an advantage for them would be decided tomorrow.
"They're small but quick," said Kansas defensive coordinator Dave Dunkleberger. "I think one kind of balances out the other."
Kansas senior defensive tackle Von Lacey, who weighs 305 pounds, said the size factor
"I can take advantage of my size if I use it," he said. "The key to our defense is being aggressive."
could play into the Jayhawks' corner.
Valesente said he wanted the Jayhawks to jump on Kent State early, much as Auburn had done to his team last week. He said Kansas was eager to play.
Mason said he was concerned that the Jayhawks were going to use their size to control the line of scrimmage. He said, howev-
er, the Hawks are looking forward to going up against Kansas.
"The people in Lawrence are probably going to look at us Saturday and say, 'Oh my God, can these little guys play football?'" he said. "I told them we don't line up and ram it down the field on us."
Kent State might prove to be a team that won't get rattled. The team beat Akron (Ohio) 27-23 Saturday, despite losing their starting quarterback, Pat Young, to a hip injury late in the second quarter. Young, the 1986 Mid-American Conference freshman of the year, had run 51 yards for a touchdown before he left the game. He will miss tomorrow's game and likely is out for the season. Mason said yesterday.
Because of the loss of Young, the Golden Flashes probably will abandon most of the wishbone offense they had planned on using. With fewer players and more is a more passing quarterback than a runner.
Kansas graduate assistant coach Chip Gaber scouted the Akron-Kent State game and said Phillips did a good job of holding the Golden Flash offense together.
"They lost a little effectiveness when Young went out," he said. "“(Phillips) has been there before, though, and he helped them keep their lead."
The biggest weapon for the Kent State offense will be junior tailback Eric Wilkerson, Gaber said. Wilkerson rushed for 119 yards in 20 carries against Akron.
Wilkerson's counterpart at tailback for Kansas, junior Darryl Terrell, said the Jayhawks would be pumped up for their home opener. He was one of many working the team hard all week during practice.
"he's their best athlete," he said. "he's got a lot of natural ability and he makes great cuts when he's playing."
"We don't want to ever go through an experience like the game last week," Terrell
Game 2
ku
KENT
Kansas Jayhawks
Coach Bob Valesente
Record: 0-1
Last Week: The Jayhawks were defeated by the Auburn Tigers 49-0 in in Auburn.
Kent State Golden Flashes
Coach Glen Mason
Record: 1-0
Last Week: The Golden Flashes started the year with a 27-23 victory over Akron (Ohio) in Akron.
Probable Starters:
Offense:
WR — 2 Quintin Smith, 5-11, 175, So.
LT — 70 Jim Davis, 6-6, 260, Sr.
LG — 68 Jay Allen, 6-3, 255, Jr.
C — 51 Chip Buddie, 6-2, 260, Fr.
RG — 64 Steve Isham, 6-4, 265, Sr.
RT — 65 Bryan Howard, 6-5, 285, Sr.
TE — 68 John Baker, 6-4, 230, So.
GB — 14 Kelly Donohue, 5-11, 175, So.
TB — 28 Darryl Terrell, 5-11, 180, Jr.
FB — 24 Mike Rogers, 6-1, 195, Sr.
FL — 34 Ronnie Cadwell, 6-0, 180, Sr.
PK — 29 Louis Kemp, 5-10, 195, So.
Defense:
LE — 94 Eldridge Avery, 6-3, 265, Sr.
LT — 70 Van Lacey, 6-5, 305, Sr.
RT — 97 David White, 6-4, 285, Sr.
RE — 73 Teddy Newman, 6-4, 240, Sr.
LLB — 33 Rick Clayton, 6-3, 235, Jr.
MLB — 19 Curtis Moore, 6-1, 220, Fr.
RLB — 25 Rick Bredosan, 6-1, 230, Sr.
RCB — 16 Milt Garner, 6-1, 200, Sr.
LCB — 31 Mike Fisher, 5-9, 175, Sr.
FS — 8 Clint Normore, 6-1, 200, Sr.
SS — 32 Marvin Mattos, 6-4, 210, Sr.
P — 48 Rich Reith, 5-11, 180, Sr.
SE — 5 Eric Dye, 6-1, 171, Sr.
LT — 55 Brian Lynch, 6-3, 243, Jr.
LG — 75 Ben Stratton, 6-4, 247, Fr.
C — 58 Chick Curtis, 6-1, 245, Jr.
RG — 63 Jim Klohn, 6-2, 249, Jr.
RT — 65 Bryan Howard, 6-5, 285, Sr.
TE — 68 John Baker, 6-4, 230, So.
GB — 8 Tim Phillips, 5-11, 200, Sr.
TB — 40 Eric Wilkerson, 5-10, 179, Jr.
FB — 25 Robert Golden, 6-2, 219, Sr.
FL — 84 Fermin Olivera, 5-11, 188, Jr.
PK — 14 Larry Steinberg, 6-1, 181, So.
Series: This is the first meeting of the two schools in football. Kansas, however is 0-2 against opponents from the Mid-American Conference and Kent State is 0-5 against Big Eight Conference schools.
History: The Jayhawks have a career home opener record of 65-28-4. In last year's home opener, Kansas was shut out by the North Carolina Tar Heels 20-0. The game was also the first for the team under Coach Bob Valesente.
Coverage: The Kansas-Kent State game will be carried locally by the Kansas Jayhawk Network. The game can be heard in the Lawrence area on KLZR (106 FM) and KLWN (1320 AM). Kickoff is scheduled for 1:30 p.m. in Kansas' Memorial Stadium.
said.
Terrell was part of an offensive shuffle that moved him and sophomore wide receiver Quentin Smith into Kansas starting line-up, and junior Sophomore Arnold Snell and Will Vaughn, both juniors.
Senior tackle Bobby Pieper replaced in the starting line-up by Senior guard Steev Isham. The team played against the Grizzlies on Tuesday.
since the first week of practice. He suited up but didn't play in the Jayhawks' opening game against Auburn. Bryan Howard, senior guard, and Brian Isiah and Islam will assume the guard position.
KANSAN GRAPHIC
On the defensive side, senior Milt Garner will replace junior Johnny Granderson at cornerback. Senior Marvin Mattox will move into Garner's free safety position.
KU softball to play NU in tourney
By MIKE CONSIDINE
Staff writer
Kansas softball coach Kalum Haack will renew old acquaintances while sizing up the competition in this weekend's KU Invittual No. 2.
Haack, who was an assistant coach at Nebraska for two years, is thankful for the opportunity to do both at the same time when the Jayhawks, 2-2, play the defending Big Eight Conference champion Huskers.
"They're going to be the team to beat. We want our freshmen and our ballclub to see what they have to do to beat the best," Haack said.
Iowa State plays Nebraska in the first game at 3 p.m. tomorrow. Kansas meets Illinois State at 5 p.m.
Sunday, Illinois State plays Iowa State at 10 a.m. and Nebraska at noon. The tourney concludes with a Kansas doubleheader. The Jayhawks face Iowa State at 2 p.m. and Nebraska at 4 p.m.
Sophomore Roanna Brazier, who shut out Iowa State last Sunday, is the starting pitcher for tomorrow's game.
"I guess you could call her our ace," Haack said. "She has good control, a lot of movement and a little more speed than our other pitchers."
Sunday's pitching assignments haven't been determined.
Haack said he expected no changes in the starting lineup. However, he still plans to utilize as many players as possible.
"We want to get everybody some exposure." Haack said. "We're still trying to learn our weaknesses and get our best nine people on the field."
Senior infielder Cherie Wickham has been cleared to return as a pinch-hitter. Haack said he hoped to have her back for full-time duty in time for KU Invitational No. 3 on Oct. 3-4.
Wickham should bolster one of the team's strengths. Jayhawk pinch-hitters drove in three runs in last weekend's tournament and the team was batting 260.
KU volleyball holds tourney
By ROBERT WHITMAN
Staff writer
One of the signs of a big-time collegiate outlayball program could be:
Kansas, 4-3, is hosting Southwest Missouri State, Sam Houston and Michigan State in a four-team tournament tonight and tomorrow at Allen Field House. But on the cover of the volleyball team's guide, he says this year's tournament is the same as last weekend's — Kansas Tournament.
Southwest Missouri State, the No 1 seed, will play Sam Houston at 5 p.m., followed by Kansas against Michigan State at 7:30 p.m.
The losers of today's matches will play in the third place game tomon-
row at 5 p.m. The winners will play for the championship at 7:30 p.m.
At 9 a.m. tomorrow, the winner of the southwest Missouri State-Sam Houston match will play the loser of the Kansas-Michigan State match. The other two teams will play at 11:30 a.m., giving each team three matches for the weekend.
Southwest Missouri State is the top-seeded team in the tournament, in spite of Kansas' victory over the Bears on Sept. 4 at the Southwest Missouri State tournament. Albiz said the seedings were made in August before the Jayhawks first match.
Since Kansas was defeated at Southwest Missouri State in the Bears' own tournament, KU middle
blocker Tammy Hill said the Bears would probably be the team's toughest onponent.
The Jayhawks were soundly defeated in three games by Nebraska Tuesday, but Hill said she thought the team had rebounded from the loss.
"They're a very good team, they're Big Eight caliber." Hill said.
"I think we took it as a learning experience and we're going to work on the weaknesses we had," Hill said, to the team's blocking and hitting.
Women's soccer season begins;
Nebraska had 37 kills against the Jayhawks, but Kansas had no blocks. The Jayhawks had 24 kills but the Cornhuskers answered with 10 blocks.
By ROBERT WHITMAN
There may be no better way to open the fall season for the KU women's soccer team than playing Kansas State on Sunday in Manhattan.
"We can beat them. It'll boost our morale," Kansas defender Liz Roark BMG
The Jayhawks defeated the Wildcats twice last fall, but lost to them in the Big Eight Conference tournament in the spring.
"They beat us under the most noirie, unfavorable conditions." Ripper said.
The game was played on a hot day m Manhattan on Kansas State's main campus
The condition of this year's team.
though, is better than it was this time last year, she said.
"We're in better condition and we've had more skill preparation. We got started practicing earlier this year (Aug 31)." Roark said. "We have a lot of new people, a lot of students who are able to work well with them in practice. They've played a lot of soccer."
Roark said better organization this year by coach Kevin Conner had also helped.
"Last year was his first year with the club and he wasn't as organized as he is this year." she said.
Conner said 35 players were practicing with the team. He said he had a core of 10 players who would play in every game. The other 25 would play
"We're weaker on defense, I'll admit that," Conner said. "Midfield was what kind of slowed us down last season." He added, "good prospects at midfield this year."
Conner said the Jayhawks would use four defenders including a sweeper and stopper. Both positions were year by year by players who were graduated.
at least every other game.
The sweeper, who is the last defender in front of the goalkeeper, will be played by Colene Richert. Roark will be a defender in front of the sweeper.
"I was interested in the position and I told Kevin I wanted to try it," Roark said.
Royals beat Angels, 7-6 in 9th inning
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Danny Tartabull's two-out, bases-loaded single in the bottom of the ninth inning gave the Kansas City Royals a 7-6 victory over the California Angels last night.
Tartabull's hit off reliever Greg Minton, 4, came after Willie Wilson and Bill Pecota had both singled, and Brett was intentionally walked.
Kansas City made it 6-4 in the fifth when Willie Wilson doubled and moved around on two groundouts. Danny Tarttabull hit his 28th home run to lead off the sixth, pulling the Royals within one run.
Kansas City tied the game with a run in the bottom of the eighth when Kevin Seitzer doubled to lead off the innning and knock Angels starter Mike Witt out of the game. Seitzer scored on a single by Brett.
California scored four runs in the third inning to chase Kansas City starter Charlie Leibrandt and take a 6-3 lead.
John Davis, 4.2, got the victory with three innings of scoreless relief.
Devon White was intentionally walked, loading the bases, and reliever Steve Farr then walked Bob Bone to force in the fourth run of the game.
Johnson County falls to Kansas baseball team, 12-9
Dick Schofield and Wally Joyner singled and, after Brian Downing was intentionally walked, both scored on a double by Doug DeCinces. George Hendrick singled in Downing, and DeCinces was thrown out at the plate.
OAKLAND
Jayhawk outfitter Rocky Helm makes a hasty retreat to first base on a pick-off attempt. KU defeated the Johnson County College College Cavaliers 12-9 yesterday afternoon at Quigley Field.
Most of Kansas's runs were legitimate — like the four Troy Mentzer drove in with two home runs in a three-for-six performance — but others came as gifts from the coach of Cavalier walks and errors.
By DARRIN STINEMAN Staff writer
Although the Kansas baseball team scored more than enough runs to defeat the Johnson County Community College Cavaliers, 12-8 in a 15-inning game yesterday, the runs weren't necessarily the result of productive Jayhawk hitting.
"We're still not swinging the bat at this point." Kansas assistant coach Lee Ice said. "Offensively, we've got to see, a little more aggressiveness."
The game was broken into three five-inning segments. This allowed the teams to use three starting pitchers and their relief pitchers at the end of each game like they would in a nine-inning game.
The Jayhawks used the fall season format like it was intended to be used in the first segment of the game. Sophomore Steve Renko pitched the first four innings and reliever Craig Stoppel came on to pitch. He had three hits and four runs including a two-run homer, but Stoppel retired the side in order in the final inning of the first mini-game.
The Jayhawks scored the bulk of their first-segment runs in the four-run fourth inning behind singles by juniors Tom Buchanan, Jon Pattin, Jarrett Boesen, sophomore Pat Karlin, and junior
Steve Dowling
The two teams each scored four runs in the second five-inning segment. Mentzer supplied three of the Jayhawk runs with a three-run shot over the center field wall in the sixth innings. KU pitcher Steve McGinnis struggled with his right-handed four batters and hit three more. He surrendered all four of the Cavaliers' runs in the second segment before he was replaced by Stoppel with one out in the 10th.
The Jayhawks' best pitching performance came in the final five innings. Freshman Darin Harris went the distance and gave up only one hit.
— for the Cavs' only run in the final segment. Johnson County's John McClelland pitched equally to one unearned run and one hit.
McCelldan held the Jayahawks hitless and struck out six in a row during one stretch until Boeschen hit a line drive single to left in the final inning. The only run he allowed scored on an error after back-to-back walks in the 11th inning.
Although ice said he thought the Jayhawks lacked aggressiveness at the plate, he said he was encouraged by Harris' performance.
"I thought Darin did a real good job," he said. "I think he has come a long way since we first had him."
Kansas' next opponent will be Butler County Community College when they meet at 1 p.m. Sunday at Quigley Field.
14
Friday, September 18, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Sports
LA
James Larson/KANSAN
Steve Heffernan, Kearney, Neb., sophomore, left, and Craig Watke, South Bend, Ind., junior, prepare for cross country practice in Memorial Stadium.
Cross country meet will be a challenge as teams go for title
By MIKE CONSIDINE Staff writer
The men's and women's cross country teams are going for titles tomorrow at Jayhawk Invitational at Rim Rock Farm in Lawrence.
Both squads had modest goals at the start of the season but are well ahead of schedule after good efforts last weekend.
The Jayhawks' top individuals should be nomophone Steve Heffernan and junior Craig Watcke, who finished 1-2 in last Friday's 21-34 victory over Southern Illinois.
"I think we'll have another good meet," Heffernan said. "Every meet's good because we need more experience."
"The course is definitely the toughest I've ever run," Watchee said. "It should give us a psychological advantage."
The men have won the meet each of the past two years. The women were second at last year's Javhawk Invitational.
The men's field includes Oral Roberts University, Missouri-Kansas City, Park College, Emporia State, Rockhurst, Pittsburgh State, Texas-Arlington, Missouri-Rolla and North Texas State.
The women's field is the same as the men's excluding Rockhurst and Pittsburg State. The men's race starts at 10 a.m. The women's race begins at 11:30 a.m.
Men's student assistant Ben Welch said the Texas teams should give the Jayhaws their strongest challenge.
"We'll be keying on their lead runners," Welch said. "In our time trials a couple of weeks ago, we went out too fast. We want to go out more conservatively and try to finish stronger."
Both teams are coming off a tough week of training which should help prepare them for the season. It doesn't cost them too much strength.
"We just train through it." said women's coach Cliff Rovelto. "We don't back off in hopes of doing great things. I anticipate that we'll run well and place well."
The women finished second at the Nebraska Invitational last weekend.
"We've got new faces, and they really want to challenge themselves," he said. "I'm really in love about, here we've progressed so far."
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17
University Daily Kansan / Friday, September 18. 1987
15
Sports Briefs
Football parking won't change; traffic flow to follow set routes
Parking for Kansas football games will remain as it has in the past, but traffic may be a force that fans will have to contend with.
All parking lots adjacent to Memorial Stadium will be reserved on home game days for those attending the game. The parking lot behind Joseph R. Pearson Hall also will be reserved.
Sgt. John Brothers said Memorial Drive would be closed to through traffic because it will be used for parking as well. Parking will cost $3 for cars and $4 for campers and vans.
Jayhawk Boulevard will be closed to through traffic between Stetson and Pine Street. Road, but traffic will be called to flow normally before the game.
Scoreboard
National League
ma and Illinois streets will be closed at 11th street to southbound traffic. Police will direct traffic north to Ninth Street.
Cars may exit west on the arteries that will lead to Iowa Street, Brothers said.
Mississippi Street will be closed to north-bound traffic past 11th Street. Traffic may exit north on 11th Street. Fans who parked in the lots adjacent to the stadium may exit south past the intersection of Jayhawk Boulevard on Sunflower Road.
Cars that don't take those routes to exit the game will be routed in two lanes west on 11th Street, up to West Campus Road, past the Chi Omega Fountain to Crescent Road and south on Naisim Drive.
Baseball
San Diego 7, Atlanta 1
Philadelphia 4, Chicago 3 San Francisco 4, Houston 0 San Diego 4, Atlanta 1
American League
San Diego 1, Atlanta 1
Cincinnati 3, Los Angeles 2 (game
1)
Los Angeles 6, Cincinnati 3 (game 2)
New York 1, Montreal 4
Pittsburgh 1, St. Louis 0
New York 6, Toronto 5
Chicago 9, Seattle 8
Kansas City 7, California 6
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1978 X30XL Honda motorcycle. Good condition Call John at 841-5881.
Sublease-1 bedroom plus loft. Very unique.
Available immediately. Call 841-5797.
1883 26 1/2 foot Excel. 5th wheeler. Excellent condition.
Call to see his camber. 842-8017.
21" Anak and 23" Free-Spirit 10-speed bikes, $45 and 8.0; 41/2" Newtonian reflector telescope, excellent condition, 60'; men's power lined suede overcoat, 40', beautiful!! 811-686-688
ADDS Viewpoint Data Terminals, excellent for computer hobbyist. Assembling system. $150; 300 acoustic band. $50. Okidata M3 Printer. needs repair. $50. 841-961, leave message.
SUNRISE PLACE 9th & Michigan
An Absolutely Awesome Array of Antigues, vol. 1/2. A comprehensive 1/2 price paperback book, full time of new comic books in print, with a large collection.
Offering luxurious townhouses and apartment living.
Stop by to see our show unit at 9th and Michigan or call . . .
841-1287 for appointment.
Office hours are 1:5-5:0.
A great school bike-1800 Honda C7- 2650 actual mile perfect. Perfection $250. Bail #841-0207.
books, Playbies, Penthouse, etc., loads of antique, indian, and couture jewelry (giltter and good stuff), the right vintage clothes for any occasion, fine art prints, miniatures, fiesta, and the best selection of antique furniture in the area. Quantilla Florea Market, 11 New Hampshire, Open Sat, & Sun
Arkansas quartz crystals, wholesale prices. 749-4426
Bassett recinellers! We have just received a truckload of factory close-out recinellers. While 40 max size recinellers last-only $199 or terms. Hurry up to pick up your chance to board, 8th and New Hampshire, LAWS, KS.
BIC 235 WINDSURFER-$250 SPECIALIZED
BIC 236 WINDSURFER-$250 SPECIALIZED
CLIENT CONDITION NEW TIRES $198-198
SUZUKI 405 GSL, RUNS GOOD, $LEAVING
SUZUKI 405 GSL, RUNS GOOD, $79-1212
LEAVE_MESSAGE IF NO ANSWER
Brand new Samsung microwave $100, value for $80 at Colony Woods, apartment N17.
Electric guitar for advanced beginner or in-
intermediate musician; ELECTRA X 280 guitar with hardbass case, amplifier, and acoustic pickup
equipment, equipment, $351, 841-961, leave message
H. P. PROGRAMS. Five easy to use programs for the Hewlett Packard 11C calculator. Clearly presented step-by-step key-in instructions with plenty of visual aids, decimal to binary conversion, synthesis division and more. Send $2.10 (check m.o.) to: Wm.Kulmann, Dept. I, P.O. Box 1460, Rolla, Ml
MOW LLEAGE LIKE NEW 928 Yamaura Seca 550
m-o-m a weekdays 977-5944
p-m, m-a weekends 977-5944
i.m. or anytime weeksend. 597-5544
i.m. to 10-speed Schwinn, full set of golf clubs
i.m. to 10-speed Schwinn, full set of golf clubs
cursors
749-3347 early evelyng only. Keep trying.
**MOTHALL GOLD USED FURNITURE**
Monday 10:50 f. 10 p.m., Saturday 10:2 p.m.
512 E. 9th. 749-4961
Moving Saite: Queen foam and water bed. Swat Walkman with rechargeable cells. Yamaha turntable. Electric keyboard. My name is Laka. I live on the second floor. I'm selling carpet and much, much more. One year old carpet $50, fit dorm room. Dorm refrigerator with computer center stairs $125. 814-447 for delivery
*New Cordless Bell Phone* **Only**
60, retail $139. Call 814-6244 or 749-7279
Retail price $130. Call 841-6249-749-7207
Computer w/monitor, printer & modem
Computer w/ monitor, printer & modem
Programmable Technologies CD player. Brand new condition. Paid $250 will for $160 or best of.
Previously rental taxes, will sell as 3 piece ($35)
or separately. fau-8334 for more info. dress for
style or fun.
Racing bike 1887 Biancio 59cm. *440*. Ross 19-tech mountain bike 32cm. Both bikes in ex-
presents. **SIZE** M, **WEIGHT** 26.5 kg.
Records-Huge sale! One day only! Lawrence
records this sunny September 20
don't miss out!!
Sailboards: BIC 2005 Funboard with 57 foot boat and 110 liter titer 60 SZ sail, available boom hammers: 45 mm, 60 mm, 80 mm.
Sale: sofa sleeper and 10-speed at 739 Massachusetts, Miller Furniture.
Save rent money—own your own mobile home
Two bedrooms Comfortable and spacious
Sherwood ST016 A receiver and Panasonic turntable $100 The pair FIRM D40121 0421 over
Truckload dineet sale! Over a dozen styles to choose from with 4 or 6 chairs. Starting at 189 and 93 terms. Inspect at Mark & Quain Furniture Warehouse, 8th and New Hamphire, Lawrence,
Vacuums-Save big money. Reconditioned with 9 months guarantee. Price starts at $14.95 Lawrence Vacuum & Sewing Center, 916 Mass., 843-187
WATERBED -King complete plus sheets. $100.
Call 842-8929 at 3 p.m.
1972 Oldsmobile Cutlass. Runs super-very
nice, exhaust, exp. pre-dented. $400.00
Call 841-7631, 6-6 p.m. weekdays and weekends.
Ask for Teree.
AUTOSALES
1981 Chevy Citation: V-4. 6 speed, sunroof, hatchback, $140, 1479 Ford Torino; 341, 4-door, $800. Both cars very reliable. Call 842 1071 after 6:30 d.m. or weekend
1976 Super Heidelight convertible - new top, paint,
materials and trim
Complete restoration. $4250 8200 Call Dave at
820-330-6532
108 Delium pickup. Silver, 5-speed, A/C, Must-
have. Delium cassette stored and near new Tepower thrown in.
cassette stored and near new Tepower thrown in.
Buxal Regul 3 door; reliable, interior in box;
$750 for first car; $1250 for second,
$750 to best off. Call 644-8521 and ask for
1980 CJ7, 4-speed, high mileage, very clean.
$1000. Lenexa, 1-496-6532
Lost. 2 laddies rings; union restroom; September 9. Please call 749-311-0 or return to KU Police. Long hairlined black cat at 12th and Tennessee残留. Learned answers. AsShadow. Reward 824-2167.
1.80 Le Car, immaculate, surrouf, stereo; $105.
Also, a 1.80 Le Car rough, $45.84 / 760-880.
1.90 Le Car, smooth, surrouf; $210.30.
91 Flat 124 Spider CONVERTIBLE—must sell immediately. Best reasonable offer. NEW brakes, tires, battery, ally. 847 5202 5920
70 VW Beetle, excellent condition. No rust, heat
Radio, white. NW Lawrence. $750.
$750.
1982 Olds Fienora 4-floor, 4-speed A/C, Cruise
till-wheel, AM/FM stereo. $2200. 842-9076.
CAMAHO-1984-Burlinetta. Red. auto, AM/FM,
A/C, power steering, power brakes, cruise, tilt,
towover, V-4. Loaded, excellent condition.
$6,500 or make offer. Call 842-2136 after 6
p.m.
76 VW Bug, silver, excellent condition, AM-FM
cassette, 1950, cali 841-4272.
ORDER NEW 1985 CARS--TRUCKS-
ORDER NEW 1985 COST DELIVERY-
DARTMEN 863-449-340
DARTMEN 863-449-340
19. Toyota Celica. Manual standard features w/air-conditioning and large best offer. call 842-883-6500.
on leather van, air, cruise, tilt, AM/FM cassette stereo, C.B. radio, C.B. 58-9 low, mileage, excellent condition, $3500 or make offer. Call 842-6218 after 6 p.m.
74 VW Dasher, $90; needs little air. New tires,
shocks & brakes.. 842,3738
For Sale: 1890 Pontiac Sunburd A/C, subroof,
great gas mileage $2000/best offer. Phone
REWARD-For information leading to the recovery of a red 1984 Kawasaki NJNA 900 in front of 1428 Oldenburg between 11.15 a.m. and 11.30 a.m. Did anybody see anything? H码 1841-1551
CARS SELL for $155 (average!) Also jeeps,
trucks, etc. Now available 865-679-6000 Ext.
S-9758 for details.
Tune up your import car, $3. Parts and labor in-
satisfaction guaranteed. Call Aaron,
841-6298
HELP WANTED
Lost wire-rimmed eyeglasses in black case
Please call 842-3589. Reward offered.
$1 hour telemarketing Monday Thursday 5-9 and
saturday nights. Flexible scheduling. Lennex
location-carpool from Lawrence available.
For interview, call Mr. Lackey at 426-8490.
Lost; 2 ladies rings, union restroom; September
9. Please pick up at the airport.
ATTENTION: STUDENTS!! Nat'l firm prepare you to help your child qualify, cert, scholarships are awarded, internships are possible, & you may earn 3. 4, 5, or 6 credits per semester. Mim apply now! 345-971-3600
Apartment Leasing Agent, part-time position. office skills and leasing experience desired. Send resumes to 11 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS 60415
$10 660 Weekly /up mailing circles! Ruth self-addressed stamped envelopes! Opportunity: 9018 Wiburnshire, Box 226, Dept. Q, Beverly Hills, CA 92111
Checkers Pizza has an immediate opening for 10
checkers. Drivers must be 18 yrs or
older and have their own. Drivers may
$35/hr plus commission & tips to start. $60/hr
plus commission between 3:30-9:00 p.m. at Checkers Pizza, 221 W. 47th St.
LOST—FOUND
ATTENTION: Certified Aerobic Instructors needed for Fall/Spring semesters. Interview times at 151 Robinson: ENERGY 740-317
Editor, Weekly Unified Methodist Church regional newspaper. Part-time position. EOE. Member Project Equity. Submit resume and references to ksresearch@umich.edu 4187, Torkes, KS 66644, Council Department. Cited
Found: Brown pair of glasses found on Uniervial
screen! Identity / safety pin stuck in shirt
Wanted, students will need little extra cash. Join the fun of working on the turpentine! Harde's now accepting applications for all shifts. Good pay, flexible hours, neal discounts, free tolls and a pleasant atmosphere can all be achieved with applications accepted anytime. Call 843-8230.
Found - casette case and cassettet. Identify them to claim. Call 842.8117
AELP WANTED in the landscaping department and the retail nursery. Apply at Pence Garden Center, 15th and New York.
Help wanted, part-time day shift hours. Apply in person. Burger King, 1107 West 6th street.
HRINGI Government jobs-your area
15,500-48,000 Call (602) 838-887, Extens 495
Looking for mature female student to live with elderly man (Perfect health). Request cooking of dinner or meal on request. Prepare board. Separate bedroom, bath laundry privileges, single car garage. Lives in a flat/apartment. Applicants must be
Needed: Handyman, flexible schedule available.
Call 842-8546.
Recreation Services for intramural football. No experience necessary. Attend the meet Tuesday through Friday at Munchers Bakery. Pretier graduate students. One sales cleaner. Contact Jennifer G. at (212) 374-8000.
PART-TIME JOBS. Sports officials are needed at Recreation Services for intramural football. No experience necessary. Attend the Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. in room 154 Robinson Center
proximately 8 a.m. $4.25 hour after trained. Apply between 10 a.m. and noon weekdays morning. Part-time legal secretary wanted. Experience desired, not required. Clerical computer, typing, word processing.
RESORT HOTELS, Cruisesites, Airlines, Amusement Parks, and accepting applications for our summer program. For more information and an application; write National College Reception Service: P.O. Box 7085
Student needed for breakfast preparation.
m a. m. Monday-Friday $5/hour. Contact
842-744-6000
Student Programmer (Using Dase II Plus,
"Genifer", and "Documenter") must love Dase
and accept design challenges. Work will involve
training with the industry, developing new
forts, and research of newly released software
packages and hardware enhancements. 20-30
weeks/week. $40.00/hour. flexible work schedule.
Work from 10am to 5pm. 260. Physical Plant
Building (Facilities Office before 8:30
September 25, 1987.)
There are a few openings left for evening and weekdays at Naimah Hall cafeteria. You can take an air-cash, harry in to Naimah Hall lodge, diskay in to Naimah Hall for a part-time position. EOE:MMPHAA
Vista Restaura is now taking applications for the pond and grill help. Apply in person at 1527 W.
Want your own business? Now the time to start earning an earn as an Representative. Call Julate at 212-785-4040.
Work Steady- clinical work in medical office.
Must be available some afternoons. Accurate
typing (Secretarial and姬姬istrict) activities. App-
partment, 112 W. Flushing, 6th Suite 286. References
required.
MISCELLANEOUS
JESUS SAYS, "Whoever shall seek to save his life shall lose it; and whoever shall lose his life shall preserve it." For God so loved the world, he gave it; for He would save those who believe in Him not perish, but have everlasting life. For God sent him not his Son to condemn the world; but that the world to endure
$10-$360 Weekly/Up. mailing circulators! $407aquos/bosses. Information: RUSH self-addressed address CM/NA CDQ POLB 7730, Rockford II. 61136.
SKI KEYSTONE for Thanksgiving, November
25- 29. Low package prices, include air/luxe/ski
rental/transfers/lift tickets. Call 843-5698.
Package available without air.
Small established foreign car repair shop for sale in Lawrence. Inquiries: 841-5496
Pregnant cat needs home immediately. Can’t afford to keep her, will be put to sleep if I need help.
HEADACHE, BACKACH, ARM PAIN, LEGP
*PAIN* STUDENT and most insurance accepted.
For complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Mark
Johnson 843-8975
Jimmy and Timmie, Partners in Rhyme: you've seen them at the Up & Under; see them on your party. Classic to contemporary party music. It's big fun. 841-696-7500
*** THE DVERY ***
THE DYE!
Shirts in sunburst,
spiral, and 5 color
kaleidoscope patterns.
LAWRENCE'S
FINEST
SELECTION OF
RECORDED MUSIC
HOURS
★★★★★☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
Naimishn contracts for sale. Will pay $160 security deposit. Contact Frank at 749-238. Pregnant and need help? Call Birright at 4821. Confidential help/free pregnancy
ERIN, one year...it's been the best one of my life and I hope it isn't the last. You are my light, my smile, my love, I Love You. George.
Jerry: Happy Birthday, you big stud. I hope we've never been far from you. You were waiting so long. I'm here for you. We'll be waiting soon too. I'm very proud of you.
Ski Winter Park, $19.99 *night admission* trips
Thursday night on sleepover bus. *Stay in Snow*
Basement balconies 2 nights. Also, 2 days
lift tickets. For information call:
843-4158
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
JS-1 loved the letter. PLEASE write again
Jules, ORH MY GOD! *Happy birthday!* here is
our special treat. Let’s celebrate right tonight and all week long, but do Mimi a favor and stay away from those
things that make you miserable.
PERSONAL
Meet me for a good time at the Rock Chalk Bar-
All night!
Sunflower Mt. Mike Workshops help to how to repair & adjust your Mt.ike- Thursday evening, 6:4 p.m., begins September 17, **85**.04 Massachusetts, Lawrence, 933-5000.
PENNYLINE
Kitten: AYE! AYE! AYE! Matie. Want to come aboard? Paco Bear .
THE ETC SHOP is open Sunday from 11-4. New shipment of cotton sweaters. 732 Massachusetts.
Weekend Record: Bonnie Raitt on CD. $12.99 Pennellane Records. 844 Massachusetts.
Kip, you've made my life very special this year and I am very happy that we've spent it together. Happy 1st Anniversary! May we have many more! ...va loa Joy天门。
SERVICES OFFERED
Bike Workshops—Our mechanic will teach you how to change flats, run wheels, maintain brakes and handlebar grips. We also have sions $5 each, Saturday, 10 a.m., begins September 19. Sunflower, 54 Massachusetts,
Capture that golden tan with a boudoir portrait from Photos Plus. Call Mia or Grace at 748-706-3025.
SCOTT-Camping without a tent, drawing with no
suit, staying on the sidelines - old-supplies
my place. I love you. Yvonne
BUS. PERSONAL
DRIVER EDUCATION offered midwinter
daily classes to new drivers. No
driver license obtainable, transportation
required.
COMPUTER CONSULTING - Tutoring and programming for elementary computer science students in engineering, projects and other works in engineering, projects or prices for individuals and groups Call 815-296-0237
"CRIMSON SUN PHOTO" is looking for young women interested in developing a modeling portfolio. 15% over cost. Call 841-8899
OPERATION SPARKLE - Let us make your paint
skimple. Complete car detail—wash, wax, buff,
clean interior, clean motor—will do one or all. Ph.
9149 1904 308 East 22rd
FLASHBACK PHOTO fast and dependable party picture service. Call 843-8700 to book your next party.
JAM FAVORS for all your party favor needs. Hats, socks, paddles, glasses. If you have a unique favor idea, call us and we'll find it for you. 843 6770
GRAF / A Scientific and statistical illustration,
based on the authors' aid, and also water-
acrylic (copy). Phone 841-562-3092.
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ektachrome
services within 24 hours. Complete B-W services.
PASSPORT $40.00 Art & Design Building,
Room 206, 864-4767
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $8/hr, 843-9032 (p.m.).
MUSIC*...MUSIC*...MUSIC*
Rose House Audio-Mobile Party Music, Band rtc
P.A. and Lights, Maximum Audio Wizard.
Call Rd47 1295.
Now in Lawrence: inexpensive 4-track demos,
dJ light and sound, private guitar and bass lessons. Basic Productions: 842-4234.
PRIVATE OFFICE: 644-8424, American Sound
A. N. Ayerson
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence 841-5716
QUALITY Tutoring, Statistics, Economics, and Management preparation, or general review. MA with 7 years teaching experience. Call Demis at 842-1053. SEWING-AUTERATIONS-love to sew for others. Mail resume to Demis Sewing-Autersports Seamstress. All ladies' dresses can be made here in town. You choose your favorite designs or patterns. Attend any of our magazines, I will make them for you. Call Demis to make them for you. **SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL** Get your sunflower driving school training.
UNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided 41-2316.
Graystone Athletic Club
Special Student Membership
$150 per semester
Racquetball, Tanning
Exercise Equipment
2500 W. 6th Street 841-7230
me saver's-Affordable and professional cleaning for those students who need to spend more mounding and less time cleaning. Call 748-796-9037 "free installation!"
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing. Judy. 842-7945 or Lisa. 841-1915.
TYPING
cressing on letter quality printer. 845-7643.
2 Smart Word Processing, Spelling Corrected.
Very Reasonable. Call Foster 749-2740.
A1-1 reliable professional typing. Term papers, Resumes, etc. of Reasonable IBM Electronics.
1-Der woman word processing. Former editor will transform your scribiles into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct paper-quality type. Maturate 846 300 cups or
1 plus Typing: Letters, resumes, thesis, law typing,
etc. 13 years experience. Call Terry 842-4754 or
843-2671 occasions and weekends.
24 hour typing service. Professional word processing on letter quality printer. 843-7643.
2 Smart Word Processing. Spelling Corrected.
ACT NOW: PAPERS - THESES - RESUMES
WRITING LIFELINE 841-3469
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS
MOMMY'S TYING is back from Australia !!
842.3378 before 9 pm, please
AABalbously Fast Tapping It Is Stuck! Dependable.
Reasonable Rates. Late Night T typing Available
Kathy 841-240 days, 749-528 eve.
Experienced editing. Theses-dissertations. Our specialty is foreign students. Call 841-3229.
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term papers, theses, dissertations, letters
resumes, applications, mailing lists, Letter quality
printing, spelling corrected. 842.7247
KU SECRETARY Typing and word processing,
fast, accurate. Fastly, spelling corrected,
letter quality. Pickup on campus Monica
81-8246. Evenings weekdays.
For professional typing/word processing, call Myra 841-6900.保价全 $2.10/page, double price.
Pickup delivery available. 843-0247
Quality training, are used processing for these
PROFESSIONAL TYPING 842-4868 before 10 p.m.
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing, manuscripts, resumes, theses, letter quality printing, etc. 843-5062
WRIGHT'S TYPING SERVICE. Term papers, theses, miscellaneous, IBM Selectric. Spelling
Quality typing or word processing for theses,
dissertations, resumes, term papers, applications.
Professional editing, composition available. Have M.S. Degree.
WANTED
BOSTON TICKETS WANTED (2) . Good seats,
will pay! ! Call Steve-Bard-5493.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Female roommate wanted to share nice two bedroom apartment. West campus, all utilities included.
Female roommate need to share two bedroom house. Female roommate needs 1/65/month + 1/2 utilities. Call 947-948. Female roommate needed $140/month plus 1/2 room apartment, apartment, room on room, on route.路 749-4379
路 749-4379
Liberal roommate wanted for 2 br house close to campus $150 plus 1/2 utilities Call after 5.
Male or female grad student, or mature
undergrad to share a new 2 br apartment 2 blocks
from the Union. $180 plus 1/2 utilities. Call
841-4705.
Need money? Sell me your all sports ticket. Ask for Jenni at 864-6947. Please call!
- Policy
Roommate wanted for 2 bedroom house near campus. Fully furnished except bedroom. Big backyard, dog or cat okay. $160/month plus half of utilities. Call 841-2550
Tutors All subjects $# individuals $# group.
classes and tutoring times $# classes and tutoring times. Supportive Educa-
tion.
Wanted: All Sports Ticket. Will pay well for it!!
Call us 730-790-6107
Classified Information Mail-In Form
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising.
Blind box ads-please add $4.00 service charge.
Tearsheets are NOT provided for classified advertisements. Found ads are free for three days, no more than 15 words.
Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Daily Kansas.
Deadlines
Deadline is on Monday at 4:00pm 2 days prior to publication.
Words 1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 days 15 days 1 month
0.15 2.85 4.20 6.00 10.00 14.95 18.90
16.20 3.35 5.00 7.05 11.30 16.55 20.75
21.25 3.90 5.80 8.10 12.60 18.10 22.60
26.30 4.40 6.55 9.15 13.90 19.70 24.40
31.35 4.95 7.35 10.20 15.25 21.25 26.25
001 announcements 300 for sale 500 help waited 800 services offered
100 entertainment 310 auto sales 700 personal 900 tipping
100 training 320 veterinary 800 general
Classified Mail Order Form
Please print your ad one word per box.
ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Date ad begins.
Today date in paper.
Amount paid.
Classification
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
Lawrence, KS 66045
---
16
Friday, September 18, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Computer for loans to save paperwork
Staff writer
Next week the University of Kansas' financial aid office will kiss paperwork for Guaranteed Student Loans goodbye and say hello to automation.
Tuesday, the office will begin regularly transmitting loan data by phone into the computer at the Higher Education Assistance Foundation in St. Paul, Minn. Fewer than 10 schools transmit data directly.
Guaranteed Student Loans are low-interest loans given by private lenders, usually a bank, and guaranteed through the federal government. You may be repay the loan until after they graduate or are no longer a student.
The office has been express mailing GSL computer tapes since June 28, and before then all the information went by regular mail.
Jeff Weinberg, KU associate director of financial aid, said the new system would save students paperwork and save his staff the time and money it took to mail each GSL letter to HEAF.
Under the new system, a student fills out the ACT—Family Financial Statement in order to be considered for all types of financial aid, and sends it to the processing center in Iowa City, Iowa. Students who want to apply for a GSL make a check in the appropriate box on the ACT form.
Then ACT electronically transmits the student's financial analysis by phone to a computer at KU. KU decides whether to give students accesses them by mail. If a student accepts the GU, a form is returned to KU.
If the student's loan is guaranteed by HEAF, as are 80 percent of the GSLs at KU, the financial aid office transmits the necessary data by phone to HEAF, and the same day promotes a promissory note to the student.
The student signs the promissory note and sends it either to HEAF or to his bank, depending on instructions. The student also checks a check to KU's financial aid office.
Weinberg said that under the old system, students had to fill out a separate GSL form, and that everything between KU and HEAF was done by mail. Under the new system, most of the work is done automatical-
lv bv a computer.
Joan Weaver, KU GSL clerk, said,
"It's faster from everyone's perspective, as long as students follow directions."
She said students couldn't expect to get their checks on time if they didn't follow the directions. She said most delays were because students failed to tell KU about an address change. All GSL mail must go to a student's permanent address, usually a parent's address.
Weinberg said that when a student's permanent address changed and KU wasn't notified, the award or the promissory note went to the wrong address and could be stuck in the mail for weeks.
Weinberg said the financial aid office requested delayed fee payment for 589 students this fall because of late financial aid. He said that most of the students probably had GSLs or Pell Grants. Pell Grants are grants from the federal government and don't have to be repaid.
Mary Hershberger, vice president of lender and school services at HEAF, said that HEAF started offering electronic transmitting about two and a half years ago, and now had about 10 schools on the program.
Kansas State University is one of the schools on the program. Christine Crenshaw, associate director of student financial assistance at K-State, said some checks were delayed this fall because of a HEAF computer glitch. Some students put inaccurate information on their applications, which were followed with implication in the HEAF computer. The applications should have been rejected but instead got stuck in the computer system.
Hershberger said that K-State sent a duplicate list of applicants, which he sent to the U.S. State Department and sent the applications again last week, and HEAF solved the problem.
Weinberg said KU students wouldn't have that problem because the University designed a computer system that catches almost all applications and mistake the system couldn't catch when a student had a previous GSL that he failed to repay and he didn't tell the financial aid office.
PRE-GAME COFFEE & DON
THE BEACH HOUSE
GIFTS & ACCESSORIES
OPEN 9:00 A.M.
SHOP EAST 8TH
9 EAST 8TH
LAWRENCE,KS 68044 913/749-0334
NEW EDITION-FINEST FILM COLLECTION EVER ASSEMBLED
THE REST OF
PRAIRIE PATCHES
Handcrafted
Country Gifts
11 EAST 8th 749-4565
♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥
STARTREK
PLUS ALL THE BLOOPERS AND MORE
STARFIGHTER
THE MAKING OF STAR TREES IV "THE VOYAGE HOME" CLIPS OF THE STARS IN CLASSIC BLASTER BEFORE STAR TREES VI CLIPS OF THE STARS IN CLASSIC BLASTER BEFORE STAR TREES VII
Not Available on Video Tape, Never Shown on TV or Cable
University of Kansas
Dyche Auditorium
Thursday and Friday, Sept. 17-18
7 p.m. and 9 p.m. each night
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
miyata Mountain Bikes
Go anywhere. Explore Kansas!
Miyata mountain bikes will take you there in style. From the affordable STREETWINDER, with its alloy rims and 18 gears to the chrome-plated, indexed PATHWINDER, the Miyata fat tire bicycles are built tough. All Myia bicycles come with a lifetime warranty, are a safety feature on each with
18
gears
alloy
tims
assembled, and come with a free tuneup after a month of riding. Test ride a Miyata today at
The Miyata Streetwinder—only $ ^{s}269.95$
RICK'S BIKE SHOP
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday September 21,1987 Vol.98,No.21
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Administrators want to test new core-curriculum
Staff writer
By JENNIFER ROWLAND
KU administrators are working to find ways to test how the new liberal arts and sciences core-curriculum is prepared for freshmen and transfer students.
A College Curriculum Evaluation Advisory Committee was formed this summer to evaluate the new curriculum, which went into effect this fall, and to find ways to measure its impact on students.
Susan Twombly, assistant professor of educational policy and administration and chairman of the committee, said different departments within the college might be asked to come up with assessment methods.
Those might include evaluating skills or giving standardized tests.
The college adopted the new curriculum in part under the assumption that students were putting off math until later in their schooling, she said.
"We want to look at people at the sophomore level now, and we want to look at people under the records of the new curriculum." Twombly said.
"We want to see if the pattern of course-taking changes."
Under the new requirements, students:
- must enroll in freshmen-level English courses and remain enrolled until they successfully complete English 102 or 105.
- must enroll in an introductory math course by their second semester and remain enrolled until they successfully complete Math 101 or 102. Enrollment by the second semester in a second-level math course exempts students from this requirement.
- must postpone Western Civilization courses until they successfully complete English 102, unless they are eligible for honors sections.
- must satisfy the foreign language requirement with four semesters of one language instead of two semesters of two languages.
- must take a non-western culture class.
- can no longer use a logic course to satisfy the math requirement. Logic now will satisfy the oral communications requirement, however.
The new curriculum also limits the number of courses that satisfy the freshman/sophomore distribution requirements.
The requirements apply to students who entered KU this fall or transferred with fewer than 25 credit hours. Students failing to meet the requirements will be placed on academic probation.
The committee will meet weekly for the next two months. It plans to submit a proposal of assessment methods to Robert Lineberry, dean of liberal arts and sciences, by mid-October.
"We want students to understand that this shouldn't be a punishment to students. What we're concerned about is the quality of education and that the students get what they pay for." Twombly said.
Howard J. Baumgartel, associate dean of liberal arts and sciences, said the decision to examine the curriculum's impact on students stemmed from concerns about the skyrocketing costs of higher education and a growing sentiment that colleges were not doing enough to educate students.
"If we gather information, we can figure out in what ways we're doing a good job, in what ways we're doing a job and how we can improve," he said.
Baumgartel said universities previously had been evaluated on the basis of how much was invested in their programs — such criteria as degrees held by faculty and salaries paid to them.
Also, he said, the KU administration and the state Board of Regents wanted to know what Kansas was like and the effectiveness of higher education.
"This is a shift of evaluating institutions on the basis of inputs to outputs — how much students know when they graduate." Baumgartel said.
MY OFFSPRING IS
A MARCHING
JAYHAWK
MY OFFSPRING IS
A MARCHING
JAYHAWK
Even though it was Parents' Day, Wendell and Belva Hicks of Wellsville didn't get to watch the KU-Kent State football game with their son, Don, Wellsville sophomore. But they did watch him and the rest of the KU Marching Jayhawks during the halftime show Saturday.
Band fans
Group against faculty union
By NOEL GERDES Staff writer
KU faculty and administrators should be colleagues, not management and labor, said Marion Bickford, professor of geology.
Faculty members will vote Nov. 17 and 18 whether to form a union. The three choices on the ballot will be for representation by the KU chapter of the National Education Association, representation by the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors, or no representation
"It's ironic," Bickford said. "In order not to be organized, you have to form an organization."
Bickford said he wanted to use campus mail to persuade people to vote against a union, and to use the campus to form a registered campus organization.
He said he was against a union because it would not benefit the faculty economically and would creep in with universityary divisions within the University.
"I believe the University of Kansas needs better salaries, better support and better facilities," Bickford said. "I am not about that. However, the union route is an adversarial relationship. The desired route is a collegial relationship.
"I've always thought of the dean, the vice chancellor and the chancellor of the school. We should work together as colleagues, not as management and labor."
Bickford said that he had heard no comment from the administration about the KU Independent Faculty, and that it would be inappropriate for
See Union, p. 6, col. 6
Cellist enjoys playing at universities
BY KERSH MOEL
Arts/entertainment editor
Bv KIERSTI MOFN
When famous cellist Yo-Yo Ma goes on stage at Hoch Auditorium tomorrow, it will be to play for some of his students — a university students and faculty.
"It's some of the best audiences," he said Thursday in a telephone interview from his home in Winchester, Mass.
"That's one of the greatest attractions of coming to Lawrence. It's nice to play for people that are interested and enthusiastic.
HUANG
It's kind of a very honest reaction. If they like something, they get excited. It's great. I just love that.'
Yo-Yo Ma
"It's kind of a very honest reaction If they like something, they get excited. It's great. I just love that."
In addition to performing live around the world, both solo and in ensembles, Ma has made several recordings, which have received four Grammy Awards during the last four years. At age 23, he received the prestigious Avery Fisher Prize in 1978.
Ma's concert at 8 p.m. tomorrow opens the University of Kansas' 1987-88 Concert and Chamber Music Series. For Ma, the concert will be the second in a tour of North America, which opens in Iowa City, Iowa, tonight and includes performances in Baltimore, Chicago and Toronto.
Issaac Stern, virtuoso of violin and musical politics, plays with Ma occasionally and has called him "one of greatest instrumental talents alive."
Music reviewers use phrases such as "silky beauty," "impeccable technique" and "electrifying virtuosity" to describe the 31-year-old cellist's prepare him to cello masters Pablo Casals and Mstislav Rostropovich.
traveling with a string trio that performed in Romania and Italy, among other places.
Next April, he will visit the Soviet Union for the first time, and in October, he will travel to China, Japan and Hong Kong.
Ma returned last week from Europe, where he spent three weeks
Although he plays in music capitals around the world, he still tries to find room to visit smaller cities, such as Lawrence.
"I love to travel," he explained. "It's great to go to different places. You're always surprised at what you see and what kinds of people you meet. For me, it's the greatest education.
Andy Pavich/KANSAN
"Every year, I try to go somewhere. I haven't been before, so that by the time I die, I can look at a map and say, 'This was great!'"
For the Lawrence concert, Ma will play a cello sonata by Beethoven, one by Bach and one by Hindemith. He will also play a Brahms violin sonata, which Ma himself transcribed for the piano. Patrist Pictat Zander will accompany him, as she has for several years.
Yo-Yo Ma
Ma gave his first public performance as a 5-year-old and studied under Leonard Rose at the Juilliard School of Music. When he was 7, his family moved to New York, where Ma's music education continued. He attended many degrees from art and sciences from Harvard University.
Ma has played Bach sonatas since, as a 4-year-old, he learned to play them two measures at a time on a 16-size cello. His father, a music teacher who emigrated in the 1930s from China to Paris, instructed him.
Although Bach sonatas have been on Ma's repertoire for 27 years, he never tires of them, he said.
One reason is Bach's messages, which may be universal truths about life and humanity, taking the view that God is at the center of the universe. Ma said.
When he plays, Ma tries to bring the composer's message to the audience. He compared the process to a composer and listens: composer, artist and listener.
"The description of the other-worldliness — it's amazing, and it's also incredibly joyous."
"Without one of the three elements.
it's impossible," he said. "The circle is complete when I feel something—be connected to somebody else, when it there's, it's absolutely magic."
"It's possible to reach out to someone who speaks of sham 'em, up," he said, laughing.
Tickets for Ma's concert are on sale in advance at the Murphv Hall
box office, or after 7 p.m. tomorrow
at the Hoch Auditorium box office.
The concert is sponsored by money from the National Endowment for the Arts, distributed through the Kansas Arts Commission; the KU University Faculty Society; and the Kansas University Endowment Association.
Artist's work blooms on a 17-acre canvas
Margaret Dixon had driven by the 17-acre field in eastern Douglas County many times but had never made her suspect it was a piece of art.
All she ever saw were patches of cover and alfalfa, rows of soybeans and corn.
Staff writer
By MICHAEL HORAK
Yesterday her impression of that field changed forever.
Monday Morning
What Dixon saw were three enormous blooming sunflowers in an ornate flower vase. The image, which stretches over several acres of farmland near Eudora, was created by Lawrence artist Stan Herd.
"It was just beautiful," she said after circling the field in an airplane. "You could see details so clearly. I had no idea it would look like that."
Organizers said they had to turn
their own property because of the
unexpected high turnout.
Herd was at the terminal to greet visitors before and after flights and to answer questions about his art. He returned to Lawrence just before the final trip on another flaid image in Lincoln, Neb., for the Farm Aid III concert.
Dixon and about 400 other people took advantage of Sunday's sunny, mid-70s weather and went to the Lawrence Municipal Airport for Art from the Air, an all-day event sponsored by the Lawrence Arts Center and the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce. Throughout the day, pilots in 12 planes took curious onlookers for a bird's eye view of the field.
"What I do is really crop sculpture," he said. "I plow the ground in a certain pattern and plant crops to show color and texture." The field near Eudora includes areas of alfalfa, clover, sunflowers and soybeans.
husband wanted to go, too. He's up there now."
See Sunflowers, p. 6, col. 1
NBC fares well at Emmys
The Associated Press
PASADENA, Calif. — Bruce Willis of "Moonlighting" and Sharon Gless of "Cagney and Lacey" yesterday womemys for acting, and "Promise," a stark drama about mental illness, won four awards.
James Woods, who portrayed the schizophrenic brother on the CBS Hallmark Hall of Fame" presentation, beating out co-star Jamar Garner.
Gena Rowlands is honored as best actress in a dramatic special for *The Voice*.
"Promise" also yielded awards for director Glenn Jordan, supporting actress Piper Laurie and writers Christopher Jackson and Jennifer Flowers and Blackwell.
Sticking out his tongue and then staging a swaggering filbuster, Willis thanked everyone associated with the show, his mother and her inspirations: Al Pacino's performance in "The Godfather" and the Three Stooges.
Gloss won her second consecutive award; her partner, Tyne Dale, had been a close friend.
"It is lovely the second time around," said Gless, who said she became teary-eyed on stage because of her mother's kindness of her father, who is hospitalized.
The creators of NBC's "L.A. Law," Steven Bocho and Terry Louise Fisher, won for writing and Gregory Hobbit was honored for directing the show's pilot. Alfre Woodward won an Emmy as best guest performer for her portrayal of a rape victim in the pilot.
---
John Larroque of NBC's "Night Court" won his third Emmy for his role in导致 other NBC winners include Bonne Bartlett of "St. Elsewhere."
2
Monday, September 21, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Iraqi planes hit Kharg Island ship after Iran attacks Saudi oil tanker
MANAMA, Bahrain — Iraqi warplanes raided a ship off Iran's Kharg Island oil terminal in the northern Persian Gulf yesterday as speedboats attacked a Saudi Arabian tanker in the Strait of Hormuz.
Iraiqi fighter raided a "large maritime target," military terminology for a ship, a military spokesman said.
Filipino rebels say U.S. in on leftist's death
Earlier yesterday, Iranians in a speedboat approached the 39.915 ton tanker Petroship B and sprayed it with machine-gun fire in Iran's first attack on shipping in 10 days.
Arab leaders meanwhile set a November summit yesterday to discuss whether to break ties with Iran if it continues to ignore peace calls.
MANILA, Philippines — Communist rebels charged yesterday that the ambush killing of prominent leftist Lean Alejandro was part of a U.S. plot to reimpose military rule and ensure the future of U.S. bases in the country.
In a prepared statement, the communist-dominated Central Luzon command of the Nation!
Democratic Front charged that the death of Alejandro, 27, secretary-general of the New Patriotic Union, put a plot by the "U.S. Aauine regime."
"Behind this plot is U.S. imperialism and the efforts to protect its strategic interests in the country," the command said.
Hess' suicide provokes varied reactions
FRANKFURT, West Germany — The suicide of Rudolf Hess provoked a flood of letters to newspapers and magazines expressing feelings ranging from condemnation of the former Hitler deputy to descriptions of him as a national hero.
Many letters denounced the Allies for not releasing the 99-year-old Hess when his health began to fail after nearly five decades behind bars. Others noted that Hess had never repudiated his Nazi past and therefore deserved no mercy.
Approaching equinox marks summer's end
WASHINGTON — The twice-a day year of equal light and darkness will occur at 7:45 a.m. Wednesday. The autumnal and vernal equinoxes are the only days, some believe, that an egg can be stood on its end.
The equinox is the supposed
moment of balance when the forces of the solar system become equal. It will occur as the sun crosses the equator on its annual trek south. The equinox marks the end of summer in this hemisphere as calculated by calendar makers.
Elizabeth Taylor denies wedding rumors
BEDMISTER, N.J. — Magazine publisher and motorcycle enthusiast Malcolm Forbes gave actress Elizabeth Taylor a custom-painted purple motorcycle yesterday, and the two denied wedding rumors before riding
away on it together.
"The only engagement we have to take this for a spin." Taylor said of the gift, a 1988 Harley Davidson 883 "Huger," which she described as "super."
Arms pact hurdles remain
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Despite an agreement in principle on a nuclear arms pact, the United States and the Soviet Union remain divided on two important provisions and are sending their experts back to the bargaining table.
After three days of talks, President Reagan announced on Friday that he and Soviet General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev were committed to signing the treaty at a summit meeting in the United States this year, but details must still be worked out.
Yet to be resolved are differences over the timetable for withdrawal of the intermediate-range nuclear missiles covered by the agreement and a set of rules to prevent violations of the treaty.
From The Associated Press.
The meat of the agreement is a pledge by the superpowers to
remove the nuclear warheads from all ground-launched missiles in the 300-mile to 3,400-mile range and destroy the launching tubes. The United States has 332 of these weapons, and the Soviet Union has about 680 of them.
The Soviets want to remove the nuclear payloads and the guidance systems from all the missiles within a year of agreement and then proceed at a more leisurely pace to destroy the launchers; two years for the shorter-range weapons and two years for the longer-range missiles.
Five years is needed, the Russians said, to mitigate the environmental problem created by te burning of natural gas in a rocket packet launchers.
Under the U.S. proposal, the shorter-range rockets would be destroyed in one year and the longer-range weapons would be
gone in three years.
Also, the United States wants to remove the missiles regiment-by-regiment, getting rid of warheads and launchers at the same time. That would leave some operational missiles in Europe up to the very end of the withdrawal timetable. The Soviets want to get rid of all the warheads first and then go to work on the tubes.
The United States has charged often in recent years that the Soviets are violating arms control agreements, and last week the Reagan administration proposed a lengthy list of measures it believes are necessary to insure Soviet compliance with this pact.
In general, the Soviets have agreed to a U.S. demand for onsite inspection.
Verification to prevent cheating is an even larger task.
Senators say 1972 pact must stand
The Associated Press
in a long-running fight between President Reagan and congressional Democrats over the 1972 pact, which limits the variety and type of defenses that each super-power can deploy.
WASHINGTON — The Reagan administration incorrectly claims it can unilaterally reinterpret the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty to allow expanded U.S. "Star Wars" testing, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee said yesterday.
At issue in the battle is development of Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative.
The attempt by the Republican administration to change the U.S. view of the 15-year-old treaty could affect Senate consideration of a possible treaty on intermediate nuclear武器, the Democratic-controlled committee said in a 106-page report.
The report was the latest round
Pope visits subarctic Indians Pontiff speaks in support of aborigines
The Associated Press
FORT SIMPSON, Northwest Territories — Welcome with a drum song and a sacred fire, Pope John Paul II yesterday kept a promise by visiting this subarctic outpost, where he spoke in support of native rights and warned Indians not to let "instability" undermine their society.
"Once again, I affirm your rights to a 'just and equitable measure of self-governing' along with a land base and adequate resources necessary for developing a viable economy
for present and future generations," the pontiff said.
The pope hugged babies, blessed women and reached into the crowd to shake hands.
An estimated 4,000 Dene Indians huddled under white plastic raincoats in front of a 55-foot tepee, which had been erected three years ago for a papal address and had not been dismantled.
John Paul had scheduled a stop here during a Canadian tour in September 1894 but could not land
because of thick fog.
"I pray that the Holy Spirit will help you all to find the just way so that Canada may be a model for the world in upholding the dignity of the aboriginal peoples." John Paul said.
because of the lack in
In a 20-minute address delivered
before Mass, the pope reaffirmed the
church's support for native rights
and prayed for a just agreement with
the Canadian government on protection
for those rights in the Constitution.
Bork still faces key testimony
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — After the first week of his confirmation hearings, Robert H. Bork's chance of becoming a Supreme Court justice remains as uncertain as the effect his five days of testimony packs for future nomination fights.
As the Senate Judiciary Committee prepares to hear from Bork's backers and detractors in the hearings' second phase, key questions are
—Will the impressions Bork created in his bid to win approval by a majority of the committee's 14 riders or eroded as the hearings continue?
—What effect will the committee's vote, still weeks off, have when the nomination reaches the full Senate?
—Has the Senate now established beyond a doubt the propriety of asking a Supreme Court nominee about his or her judicial ideology and political beliefs and then voting based on those views?
-Has Bork's willingness to provide answers to such queries, a break from recent precedent, set the model for future nominees?
Among the committee's eight Democrats and six Republicans, Bork appears likely to win the support of the Democratic opposition, negative votes from five Democrats.
Bork's fate in the committee then would be determined by three Democrats and one Republican still claiming to be on the fence. They are Democrats, Pennis DeConciini of Arizona, Howell Heflin of Alabama and Republican Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania.
Three prominent Bork supporters, retired Chief Justice Warren E. Burger, former presidential counsel Lloyd Cutler and Illinois Gov. Jim Thompson, are scheduled to testify when the committee reconvenes today.
Representatives of the American Bar Association also are to testify. They are expected to be pepered with questions about the ABA's 10-5 vote finding Bork qualified to serve on the court.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, September 21, 1987
3
Campus/Area
On the Record
TKE member flung from car, treated for cuts
A member of the Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity was taken early Sunday morning to Lawrence Memorial Hospital after he was flung from the hood of a car during an apparent alteration between fraternity members and passengers in the car.
Lawrence police are investigating the accident but had no information available last night.
Scott Moore, Overland Park senior, was taken to the hospital around 1:30 a.m. and later admitted for lacerations to his head. He was listed in fair condition last night.
Glenn Martin, Birmingham, Ala., junior and member of the fraternity, 1911 Stewart Ave., said fraternity members were returning home from a party on a double-decker bus when a car began to follow them. Fraternity members on the bus exchanged obscene words and signs with the people in the car, he said.
After members got off the bus at the fraternity's parking lot, they surrounded the car and continued mount those in the car, Martin said.
Jeff Shippers, Hoxie senier, said Moore was in front of the car when the driver accelerated. Moore said he tried to avoid being hit, Shippers said.
With Moore still on the hood, the car drove rapidly from the scene, Shippers said. As the driver drove east on Stewart Avenue, Moore fell to the ground.
Fraternity mascot survives accident
An accident involving a four-legged pedestrian and a car resulted in a one-day visit to the dog and a dog and a ticket for the driver.
Brewster, mascot of the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity house, 1602 W. 15th St., was hit about 6 p.m. Thursday by a car that left the scene, house residents told KU police.
The mixed-breed dog was in the street when he was struck by the car. The driver stopped momentarily then drove on, the report
The driver, Jack Porter, Lawrence resident, called KU police and said he saw fraternity members on the street but didn't realize he'd hit the dog until he reached the top of a hill. Porter told police he迪亚n know what to do. He called police after returning home.
Brewster was unconscious when
maternity members took him to
the vet. He was treated overnight and
From staff and wire reports.
Rock, pop sells at convention
It was wall-to-wall records at the first Mid-America Record Convention yesterday at the Lawrence Holidome.
By MARK TILFORD
Staff writer
Walls. though. got more attention.
While collectors from various parts of the Midwest displayed boxes of albums and musical memorabilia, most of those who came flocked to a display of rock music posters in a corner of one of the hotel's ballrooms.
Terrence Moore and his wife, Joyce, were the center of attention as buyers and browsers searched for a favorite or hard-to-find poster.
"Do you have any jazz?" a young man in a red T-shirt asked Terrence.
He didn't, but plenty of other requests were met favorably.
hurt everybody.
"I like this one." Joyce said as she handed a Prince poster to a young man. "This is so cute."
Although the Moores have more than 60,000 usd records at Dirt Cheap Recycled Sounds, their Omaha, Neb., used record store, they mastersthe because they sell well in a sea of records.
"I like to bring posters, because everyone else is so heavy into records," Terrence Moore said.
Forty-one of the forty-five collectors who reserved spaces showed up for the one-day convention, according to organizer Dave Schenk.
He was right.
Schenk, from Kansas City, Mo., said he bought the convention to Lawrence because of the rarity of such conventions in Lawrence and Topeka.
"There was a show like this in Topeka a few years ago, but other than that there has been a very limited collectible records market outside Kansas City." Schenk said.
About 450 people were expected to attend the show, although Schenk said he was hoping for a smaller audience.
Schenk also was promoter for the show, passing out fliers on campus.
Schenk will be back at the Holidome for a Jan. 31 show.
"We want to get the word out to students and the Lawrence community," he said. "I think that at the first show, people don't really know what to expect."
Perry Alexander, Platte City, Mo., graduate student, was looking for something to play on his recently purchased stereo system.
"I was looking for compact discs, but I'm not finding many," Alexander said. "I didn't buy a turntable, but I may have to."
What students could expect, Schenk said,
were thousands of album choices at reasonable price.
There were plenty of other memorable items besides albums.
They ranged from the classy – a December 1980 issue of Time magazine with a cover story about the murder of Beatle John Lennon with the title, "When the Music Died" – to the national Enquirer issue with the same story but a large picture of the murdered Lennon.
Also present were the unusual — a full-color 45 RPM by the Rolling Stones in the shape of the band's famed lips-and-tongue emblem — and a Danny and the Osmonds lunch box.
he had accumulated over years "15,000 to 20,000 records," he estimated.
"This was a hobby of mine that turned into a monster," said George Eklund of Lee's Summit, Mo. Eklund was selling boxes of 45 RPM he had accumulated over the years.
Anythin
THE NEW SINGLE
DIRT CHEAP
THE LEE
FRANKIE GOES TO HOLLYWOOD
liverpool
Joyce Moore of Omaha, Neb., displays a collection of records, tapes and posters at the First Mid-America Record Convention. The convention, which took place yesterday at the Holiday Inn Holdome, featured music memorabilia of every kind.
Indians hear pope speak
Bv AMBER STENGER
Staff writer
Terry Tuckwin walked slowly toward the front of the coliseum, trying to dodge security guards. After crawling over several rows of chairs, she waited for Pope John Paul II to walk by.
"He shook my hand and looked into my eyes," said Tuckwin, an adviser at the Haskell Catholic Campus Center. "It was truly awake and amazed me, shaking, and I thought I was going to faint."
Tuckinw, three other adults and ten Haskell students traveled Sept. 12 to Phoenix, Ariz., to see the pope and to participate in the Tekawikah Conference, an annual event for American Indian Catholics. More than 90 tribes from all United States and Canada attended the conference.
The pope spoke Sept. 14 to American Indian Catholics at the Veterans Memorial Coliseum. The Haskell students said they were encouraged by what he said.
Thomas Cummins, Haskell freshman, said the emphasis of the pope's speech was to tell American Indians that they did not have to give up their cultural heritage to be Catholic. Cummins said it was reassuring to hear the pope say that the two traditions were compatible.
The Rev. John Cousins of the Haskell Catholic Campus Center said, "He dealt with renewing that respect for culture and cultural values so that others can value values in our lives so that others may know."
Cousins said that a medicine man blessed the pope at the coliseum. An eagle feather, a sacred sign for many tribes, was then presented to the pope.
The pope's presence unified the group of more than 10,000 people, Cousins said.
"He was a symbol and a builder of unity. He really reimigrated the community of people he
The Haskell students did not know one another well before the Phoenix trip, Gladys Hill, Haskell sophomore, said. Now there is a chance that someone had the experience they had together, she said.
All the students said the three-day event seemed more like a week because so much had happened. Hill said that although she may forget some details of the trip, she would never forget how satisfying and special it was for her to see the pope.
Cousins estimated that about 20 percent of Haskell's 756 students were Catholics.
Hoch roof repairs to start again
Workers to fix leaks when auditorium is empty
Staff writer
By JORN E. KAALSTAD
expected to be finished at the end of this month. Porter said.
Maintenance work on the roof of Hoch Auditorium will start again later this week. Work was stopped last week because the noise disturbed lectures in the auditorium, said Robert Porter, associate director for physical plant maintenance.
Stevenson Company, Inc., a Topeka roofing company, is replacing a portion of the roof above the stage area because of water leakage.
The company signed a $46,800 contract with the office of facilities planning June 2. The work started in mid-June and is
Charles A. Reynolds, professor of chemistry, who teaches a chemistry 184 class at noon Mondays, wednesdays and Fridays in the auditorium, said he complained about the noise last week because it had become intolerable.
"They were hammering on the roof so you couldn't hear your thought." Reveal.
Stevenson Company, Inc. will continue work after it devises a schedule that won't interfere with classes. Porter said.
The maintenance work will not interfere
with evening performances, such as Tuesdav's by cellist Yo-Yo Ma, he said.
Porter said the department of facilities operations had neither the personnel nor the time to do the kind of repairs needed at Hoch.
He said the department concentrated on gaining revenue by doing paid work for other departments at the University. That money, which amounts to 50 percent of the department's budget, is used for day-to-day campus maintenance work, he said.
Porter said the department planned to replace the majority of the roof and to improve lighting in the building.
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Monday, September 21, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Imagine smoking without the smoke.
Smoke-out
Imagine smoking without the smoke. R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. is on the brink of introducing a new cigarette in which the tobacco does not burn, thereby producing much less "sidestream smoke," the smoke emitted from the end of the cigarette. The company is trying to reduce the negative health effects of smoking, decrease the current stigma attached to smoking and increase the number of smokers.
to smoking and increase the risk. The idea of a smokeless cigarette is a good one, but the actual product has a long way to go. The irritating sidestream smoke will be reduced, but the smoke exhaled by the smoker still has as much nicotine and carbon monoxide as regular cigarettes. The cigarettes only offer about 10 puffs, and the first few still produce harmful sidestream smoke. Also, taste tests indicate the product to be less than satisfactory.
to be resented.
There is little chance of the new cigarette being accepted by smokers. It is an insult to smokers to think they will settle for an unsatisfactory product. Also, the marketing of this cigarette masks the inherent harms of smoking.
makes one to accept a cigarette that does not have harmful side effects is ideal, but the new R. J. Reynolds cigarette misses the mark. Neither smokers nor non-smokers will be pacified by this poor-tasting, almost smokeless cigarette, nor should they be.
Dan Rather would rather see news than tennis on television. Others would rather see tennis than news. Friday, the public got neither. Just six minutes of a blank screen.
The men's U.S. Open tennis tournament was projected to run over into the time allotted for the second edition of the "CBS Evening News." This upset anchorman Dan Rather, so he walked off the set. The time alloted for the first edition of the news had already been used for the tournament.
Out of place
dead an email enclosed.
Newcasters are subject to the scheduling decisions of network administrators and to programming priorities. Rather, too, is subject to these decisions. And he acted irresponsible.
After a compromise was reached and only a few minutes of the news broadcast were needed to wrap up the tennis coverage, the network cut to Miami, Fla., where Rather and CBS were covering the Pope's visit. But Rather was not in the studio. By the time he was located and readied for broadcast, six minutes of dead air had elapsed.
Only prima donnas and spoiled brats "pick up their toys and go home" when others refuse to play by their rules. Dan Rather has been an exemplary U.S. newsman. He should stick to his past professionalism and resist the temptation to expect undeserved clout in network decisions based on his prestige.
Equal opportunity is apparently still more equal for some than for others.
for others.
Recent reports from around the Midwest indicate a glaring shortage of blacks in managerial and faculty positions. Various reasons are cited for the white dominance in upper-echelon positions. But the fact remains that this is a serious problem that must not be dodged.
No excuse
Grow up, Dan.
A special legislative committee of the Missouri House of Representatives last week reported that although black employment in lower-level jobs roughly reflected the ethnic balance of the state, the door to management jobs was still generally closed to blacks.
We at the University of Kansas should be prompted by the recent problems experienced in Missouri and at KSU to take a close and honest look at our own minority employment situation as well. We are not immune to many of the problems that have grown to such great proportions elsewhere.
This response does not explain the overwhelming preponderance of whites who find the pay adequate. Moreover, it underscores the fact that in many instances institutions are more eager to deflect blame than to redress the racial imbalance itself.
Kansas State University has also come under severe criticism for the low proportion of blacks among its faculty, especially in tenured positions. Assistant to the president of KSU, Charles Reagan, maintains that the reason for such a conspicuous shortage of blacks is because faculty positions in general pay poorly.
Perhaps attention to the situation now will help KU unequivocally establish that it has more than excuses to offer minorities.
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
News staff
Jennifer Benjamin ... Editor
Juli Warren ... Managing editor
John Benner ... News editor
Beth Copeland ... Editorial editor
Sally Streff ... Campus editor
Brian Kablerine ... Sports editor
Dan Rüettelmann ... Photo editor
Bill Sket ... Graphics editor
Tom Eblen ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Bonnie J. Hardy ... Business manager
Robert Hughes ... Advertising manager
Kelly Scherer ... Retail sales manager
Kurt Messersmith ... Campus sales manager
Greg Knipp ... Production manager
David Derfert ... National sales
Angela Clark ... Classified manager
Ron Weems ... Director of marketing
Jeanne Hines ... Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and less than 200 words and must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University of Kansas, please include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
Guest shots should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
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can be mailed or brought to the
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POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
MIXLEY Chicago Inhome
LEFT BRANCH OF THE OL' CRANKY
I'll TELL YOU, TEDDY,... THE TROUBLE WITH BORK IS HE'S NOT OUT HERE IN THE MAINSTREAM OF AMERICAN POLITICAL THOUGHT.
BIDEN MY TIME
Student lobbying can help KU
We feel the impact of that dwindling state commitment to our universities every day. Outstanding professors are leaving KU because we are unable to offer competitive salaries. Our laboratories do not have essential state-of-the-art equipment and our libraries are falling behind in acquisitions. Then there is everyone's favorite — closed, canceled and overcrowded classes.
The state of Kansas has built an excellent system of public universities with wide program choices, top faculty, nationally-renowned departments and reasonable tuition rates balanced by adequate financial aid.
Onunatay, yuris. writes
Two simple statistics tell the whole story.
During the past five years, inflation has risen 30.1
percent. During that same period, state general
appropriations for higher education have
increased only 17.6 percent. That means that
state financing actually has decreased dramatically.
Unfortunately times are changing.
The reason students had to stand in the add / drop line at Strong Hall for three hours is that our university simply does not have enoughmoney to offer the classes students want and need. Classes that should have an enrollment of only 25 students are hard to find, especially from bad to worse, with no relief in sight. If the trend is allowed to continue, KU will no longer be one of the finest public universities in the country.
Martie
Aaron
Guest Shot
BARRY HAYES
We'll just drift into mediocrity.
we if it just drift into mecledry.
OK, so we've defined the problem. Now, what
can we do to solve it:
"No, don't do anything. I'm just a student."
"I can't do anything. I'm just a student."
Wrong. You can make a difference. No, not the person sitting to your left - you, the one reading this article. If things are going to change around here, you're going to have to be the one to do something about it.
If the plan is adopted by the governor and the Kansas Legislature, we would see its positive impact almost immediately.
The administration and the Board of Regents realize what's happening. They can see that higher education is on the verge of taking a nose dive. In response, they've devised the "Margin of Excellence" proposal. The Margin is a strategy to raise state financial aid for poor peer institutions over the next three years. The plan provides more money for instructors, program support and equipment.
Notice the "if" in the last sentence. That's a big "if." And that's where you come in. As students, we have to convince our elected officials that we desperately need help. The only way we can do that is by making our voices heard.
We know that legislators listen to students. We proved that last year. Our efforts played a big role in getting the fee release money that precluded them from paying all but canceled. And we've got to do it again.
You need to be a H.E.R.O. The Higher Education Rescue Operation is a grassroots student lobbying campaign led by the student government associations at five other Regents schools.
The Jayhawks are joining the Wildcats, the Tigers, the Shockers, the Gorillas and the Hornetis in defending the quality of Kansas high education at building support for the Margin of Excellence.
We need you to get involved by writing the governor and members of the Legislature, by contacting parents and alumni and asking them to get involved, and by going to Topeka to meet with key decision-makers. No one else is going to do the job if you don't. Watch for H.E.R.O. activities and get involved. You need to do your part. You'll make the difference.
Martie Aaron, campus director of the Associated Students of Kansas, is a Wichita first-year law student
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Blatant bribery
Take the Iran-contra affair; for example. The City Paper of Washington quoted a recent study by Edward Roeder of political contributors from PACs (political action committees). Statistics reported in the July-August issue of Palestine Perspective indicate that the pro-Israel PAC had given $280,000 to members of select committees investigating the Iran-contra affair, including the two chairmen, Sen. Daniel Inouye and Rep. Lee Hamilton.
As Americans, we need to take a good, hard look at the people we have elected to represent in Washington. It seems that they have fallen prey to a trap of greed and sub-standard values.
The newspaper said these two Congressmen "negotiated secret agreements in closed-door meetings with Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir that essentially allowed the government of Israel to conduct Congress' investigation into Israel's role. Under the agreements, which have never been made public, the select committees cannot subpoena any Israeli documents or citizens, nor interview any Israeli officials involved."
In. Innoye received more than $48,000 from the pro-Irael lobby, and Hamilton got more than $14,000. And the Roeder report quotes that pro-Iraael PACs "demand strict loyalty from the candidates they support financially."$^{14}$
In my opinion, this blatant form of bribery is reprehensible. Shall we condone serving the interests of another country above doing justice to our own?
I think our representatives in Washington are most sorrowfully forgetting the principles on which our country was founded. It seems such a shame, this being the 200th anniversary of the Constitution.
Beth Mahmoud, Council Grove graduate student.
Harmful column
I suppose that staff columnist Brad Taylor is not the least bit aware of how his article on advising (Sept. 9) maligned the department of African and American Studies.
Dorothy Pennington, associate professor of African Studies.
katz
IT IS A GOOD IDEA TO PUT BIRD
REPELLANT ON CAMPUS BUILDINGS.
© 1987 W. J. K. Thompson
© 1987 9/21 K.L. Thomson
BUT WHERE WILL THE BIRDS GO NOW?
k.l. thorman
BUT WHERE WILL THE BIRDS GO NOW?
HELP!
HELP!
BLOOM COUNTY
GOODBYE!
THANKS FOR THE LIFT.
ZSA ZSA! SAY HELLO
TO EVA FOR ME!
VROOOM!
by Berke Breathed
a 1983 Washington Post Co
NOW THIS IS WHAT'S GOING ON: ZSA ZSA HAS DROPPED ME HERE AT CAESAR'S PALACE. NEXT, I'LL GO UP TO THE 'SINATRA SUITE' FOR A SHMOZ MASSAGE BY JULIE ANDREWS.
SEZ IT ALL RIGHT HERE IN THE .ER..
9-21
WHERE'S THE
SCRIPT ?
THIS ISN'T VEGAS.
WHERE'S THE
SCRIPT ?
BACK IN THE CAR.
(1)
THE FAR SIDE
University Daily Kansan / Monday, September 21, 1987
By GARY LARSON
1983 University Press Co.
©1987 Universal Press Syndicate
BE RNIE THE BELL MAKEN
9-21
Campus/Area
"Here are the blueprints. Now look: This is going to be the Liberty Bell, so we obviously expect that it be forged with great diligence and skill."
On the Record
An antique brass cash register valued at $700 was taken between Thursday and Friday from a residence in the 900 block of Tennessee Street, Lawrence police reported.
A student's compact disc player, earphones and a diskette valued together at $300 were taken between 10 p.m. Tuesday and 10 a.m. Wednesday from the McCollum Hall lobby, KU police reported.
A trailer valued at $700 was taken between 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. Saturday from a business in the 500 block of 22nd Street, Lawrence police reported.
- Ten pairs of jeans valued together at $250 were taken Wednesday from a dryer at an apartment building in the Lawrence Drive. Lawrence police reported.
A forged check valued at $376.20 was discovered at 3.p.m. at Sept. 9 a business in the 900 block of Massachusetts Street, Lawrence police reported.
A yard trimmer valued at $225 was taken between Sept. 12 and Saturday from a residence in the 1100 block of East 19th St., Lawrence police reported.
Don Johnson to receive award from KU theater organization
By BRIAN BARESCH
Staff writer
Don Johnson, star of "Miami Vice," will receive the first Buddy award given by the KU division of communication and theater.
Johnson, who attended the University of Kansas from 1967 to 1968, will receive the award Oct. 24 in a ceremony at Crafton-Preyer Theater in Murphy Hall. The ceremony, a benefit for the department of theater and media arts, also will feature films and videos starring Johnson and Charles "Buddy" Rogers, for whom the award is named.
The award pays tribute to Rogers and recognizes a nationally known entertainer connected with KU, said Mike Robe, chairman of the KU Theater and Media Arts Professional
Advisory Committee
He received a Distinguished Service Citation from KU last spring.
Johnson's selection was announced Friday by Charla Jenkins, director of public relations for KU performing arts, after the committee's fall meeting. The volunteer committee, composed of actors, writers, producers and teachers, advises the department on seminars, fund-raising, internships and planning.
Actor Johnson appeared in KU theater productions of "Macbeth," "Gypsy" and "The Stylian Shore" before leaving to join the American Conservatory Theatre in San Francisco, where the Miami Vice." he has co-starred in a television made a cable special and recorded a music album, "Heartbeat."
Rogers attended KU in the 1920s before leaving in 1925 to join the Paramount Studios School of Acting. Rogers appeared in 53 films, including "Wings," which won the Best Picture Oscar in 1928. Rogers also received an Oscar for his role in that film.
Rogers received the first Lifetime Achievement Award from the Kanaas Film Institute in 1984 and was
awarded an Oscar representing the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award in 1985 for special contributions to the country.
Tickets for the awards ceremony,
$10 and $8, will go on sale Oct. 12 at
the Murphy Hall box office.
K.U. FACULTY/STAFF AND STUDENT QUARTERBACK CLUB
ku
You are invited to join football coach Bob Valesente for Monday noon Quarterback Club meetings.
KU
Date - Mondays during football season
Time - 12:00 (Noon) - 1:00 p.m.
Place - Adams Center Summerfield Room
*Optional Lunch - $5.00 Soup and Sandwich Buffet
Coach Val will review the previous game, show game films and preview the next game.
JAYHAWKER
Senior Yearbook Portraits
in
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of
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Look for your appointment card in the mail
Sept.21-Oct.9
For more information call 864-3728 or stop by 003A Jayhawker Towers
Walk-ins are welcome
($3 sitting fee is paid with the purchase of a 1988 Jayhawker)
THE SAVINGS ARE ON US!
THE SAVINGS ARE ON US!
Bucky's 26th Anniversary Celebration
A Continuing KU Tradition
OLD FASHIONED DAYS
Bocky's 26th
OLD FASHIONED DAYS
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A Continuing KU Tradition
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September 21 and 22, 1987
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• Double Cheeseburgers
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• Ice Cream Sundae
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We use only the freshest products from All Star Dairy
NO FILLERS!
Bucky's Drive-In has always used 100% Kansas Beef from "Harwoods Meat Company"
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2120 WEST NINTH come as you are... hungry
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VISIT OUR DRIVE-THRU SERVICE
ONLY THE BEST SALAD DRESSING & FRENCH FRIES FROM KRAFT FOODS
THE SAVINGS ARE ON US!
Bucky's 26th Anniversary Celebration
A Continuing KU Tradition
ersary
ion
Sandwich layers start here
Sosame bun
Shredded lettuce Tomato onion pickle
Secret sauce Not just meat but chopped beefsteak
45¢ CHEESEBURGERS
Sandwich lovers start here
Sesame bun
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BUCKY'S
NO FILLERS!
Bucky's Drive-In has always used 100% Kansas Beef from "Harwoods Meat Company"
Wa buy only the freshest Breads from Buttercrust We use only the freshest products from All Star Dairy
We buy only the freshest Breads from Buttercrust We use only the freshest products from All Star Dairy
Bocky's
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2120 WEST NINTH come as you are ... hungry
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6
Monday, September 21, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Freshmen can fill Senate seats
By a Kansan reporter
Although holding Student Senate elections last spring made the election of current freshmen impossible, freshmen may apply now to fill vacancies in the Senate.
Twelve Senate vacancies need to be filled, Steve Dixon, chairman of the Senate elections committee, said at last week's Senate meeting.
And Stephanie Quincy, student body vice president, said the dismissal of some students from the Senate because of absenteeism could create even more vacancies.
Senators are suspended if they
have two unexcused absences or four absences of any kind. Senators may appeal the suspensions, but if they are not reinstated after the appeal, they are dismissed. Six absences of any kind is grounds for automatic dismissal without a chance to appeal, according to Senate rules.
access. On Oct. 7, the Student Senate Executive Committee will consider the appeals of senators who have been suspended. That same night, the Senate will give final approval to people who have applied for Senate vacancies.
at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the Trail Room of the Kansas Union to begin the process of filling vacancies.
According to Senate rules, the chairman of a committee is responsible for formulating an application in case of a vacancy. Then, for 10 school days, the chairman must accept applications to fill the vacancy.
Explosion rocks town
From the KU Weather Service
The Associated Press
INDEPENDENCE — An explosion that "shook the whole town" leveled one building and damaged others yesterday, showering debris over the main street.
The chairman reviews the applications for one week. If there is more than one applicant for a vacancy, the chairman and other members of the committee will interview the applicants. Nominees must then receive approval by a majority of the Senate.
The explosion occurred shortly after noon at a meat market. No one was inside the building at the time of the blast.
The roof of a furniture store adjacent to the market was caved in, and its walls were heavily damaged,
Independence Police Lt. Michael Hight said. The front of a beauty shop was also blown in.
was also shown. Independence Police Officer Keith Rather was treated and released at Mercy Hospital, according to a spokeswoman. Rather was working as a dispatcher at City Hall, across the street from the market, when he was cut by flying glass.
Independence Police Chief Lee Bynum said the cause of the blast had not been determined.
On Campus
"A Pawn of Diplomacy: H.M.S. Amethyst and Anglo-Chinese Relations," a history lecture by Malcolm Murfett of the National University of Singapore, is scheduled at 3:30 p.m. today at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union.
The first meeting of the Retirees Club computer club is scheduled at 3:30 p.m. today at Adam Lounge in the Adams Alumni Center.
- The Society for Fantasy and Science Fiction is scheduled to meet at 8 p.m. today at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union.
WEATHER
TODAY
ecast
Cloudy 68' 47'
Today expect partly cloudy skies and cool temperatures. The high will be in the upper 60's and the low will be in the lower 40's.
5-DAY
TUE
Partly sunny
72 / 49
HIGH LOW
WED
Mostly sunny
79/51
THU
Mostly sunny
82/58
FRI
Mostly cloudy
74/55
SAT
Mostly cloudy
72/52
H North Platte
67/42
Mostly sunny
Omaha
64/46
Partly cloudy
Rain T-Storms Snow Flurries Ice
Goodland
67/43
Mostly sunny
Hays
68/45
Partly sunny
Salina
69/49
Partly cloudy
Topeka
67/48
Partly cloudy
Kansas City
68/48
Partly cloudy
Columbia
67/47
Mostly cloudy
St. Louis
69/51
Cloudy
Dodge City
71/49
Mostly sunny
Wichita
73/50
Partly sunny
Chanute
71/51
Partly cloudy
Springfield
72/50
Partly cloudy
Forecast by Jamie Zahara.
Temperatures are today's high and tonight's overnight low.
Conditions are forecasted for this afternoon.
Tulsa
76/53
Partly cloudy
Mostly cloudy
H
Sunflowers
Continued from p.1
A good part of the 17 acres was plowed to give the green and yellow crops a deep brown background.
Field images that Herd has created in the Midwest over the last few years have gained considerable national attention. Herd has been the subject of a profile by Charles Kuralt of CBS News and of articles by several newspapers around the country.
"It evolved out of some cucumbers and tomatoes a farmer gave me after I asked him if I could use his field," Herd said.
Herd. For months ago the Lawrence Arts Center asked Herd about a public showing of his work. They chose yesterday because Herd predicted the sunflowers that he used in the design would be in full bloom then. But Herd said his prediction was a week off.
Sunflowers in a field.
"They were at their peak last week," he said.
A field of sunflowers created by Lawrence artist Stan Herd was the highpoint of Art from the Air, an event sponsored by the Lawrence Arts Center and the
Union
Continued from p. 1
Lawrence Chamber of Commerce. Twelve planes took off yesterday from Lawrence Municipal Airport.
"I think they are really restrained by the law from getting involved," he said.
the administration to make any comment.
said.
Bickford said a union could either lobby or strike to get what it wanted. He said he thought that the state Legislature would not be swayed more by a union than by individual faculty members and that strikes would be unfair to students.
would be unhappy.
Philip McKnight, professor of curriculum and instruction and secretary of KU Independent Faculty, said the group would try to run a low-key campaign. The group will send newsletters to faculty and speak in forums about unions, similar to campaigns by the KU chapter of NEA and the KU chapter of AAPU, he said.
Bickford said that the group would ask for donations to help pay for newsletters but that it wouldn't need more than a few hundred dollars. He said he hoped the campaign would be friendly.
"I'm confident that we're going to win but not so confident that I'm not going to work for it," Bickford said.
going to be.
He said he thought most faculty members were against a union. But their opinions won't keep the faculty from forming a union, unless they vote against it in November, he said.
Sub & Stuff
Sandwich Shop
5 p.m.-Midnight
We Deliver!
841-DELI
Sub&Stuff
Sandwich Shop
for your home. fields 712 MASS • 842-7187
GODFATHER'S PIZZA NOW PRESENTS . . .
DOUBLE COUPONS!
711 West 23rd (Malls Shopping Center)
843-6282
DOUBLE COUPON
$2.00 OFF Any Large Pizza
DOUBLE COUPON VALUE
if used between 11 AM and
4 PM!
Dine-in, Carry-on, or Delivery.
On Sunday, your choice: either use the coupon code **BUY2DAY** for a free drink offer. can only choose one. Not valid with refeitiles or other promotional offers. Limited delivery
GODS
THEIRS
WHAT ARE YOU DOING PAST
PIZZA
Order any large Pizza Between 11AM and 4PM and we'll Double Your Discount From $2 to $4
Offer Expires 9/30/87 KU
HOT SLICE 2 for $2
Monday-Friday
11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.
Dine-in or Carryout
Valid only at participating Godfather's Pizza restaurants.
No coupon necessary.
Receive 2 Hot Slice Pizza by the Slice for $2.00.
GOOD OTHERS
HOT Slices
PIZZA
DOUBLE COUPON
Offer Expires 9/30/87 KU
$2.00 OFF Any Large Pizza
DOUBLE COUPON VALUE
if used Monday-Tuesday-
Wednesday!
Dine-in, Carryout, or Delivery.
On Sunday, your choice: either use this coupon or take advantage of the other offer. Sorry, can only choose one. Not valid with reaffiliate or other pro-ware offer. Limited delivery area.
Get two medium special pizzas (the Super Pepperoni or the Four Topper) fer just $12!
2 fer $12
Offer Expires 9/30/87 KU
GODFATHERS
WHAT ARE YOU BUILDING FOR?
PIZZA
Dine-in, Carry-out, or Delivery.
Not valid with other promotional
notices. Valid only at
participating Godfather's Pizza
restaurants. Limited delivery
area. Add $1 for delivery.
Offer Expires 9/30/87 KU
GODF*THERS
WHAT ARE YOU AND WHAT DOYE
PIZZA
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KU
KUBookstores Kansas Union Burge Union
- 12.
University Daliv Kansan / Mondav September 21, 1987
7
Campus/Area
KU Med Center has talent show
By AMBER STENGER
Staff writer
While some University of Kansas Medical Center employees cared for the sick Saturday afternoon, others danced, sang, clapped and cheered in one of the Center's auditoriums.
Twelve employees and some of their friends pouled their non-medical abilities for colleagues, families and employees. The Employee Amateur Talent Show.
The African-American History Month 1988 planning committee organized the event, the first of its kind at the Med Center. The acts were in four categories: vocal music, drama, and drama, which included comedy.
About 120 people were there to see the show. Tickets cost $2, and proceeds were used to pay for the costs of the event. The two new prizes. Most prizes were donated.
Melvin Williams, chairman of the planning committee and director of the Med Center's affirmative action office, said the purpose of the talent show was to provide a social activity for employees. He said he was pleased with the outcome of the show.
Brenda Clark, an occupational therapist at the Med Center, performed a magic act. A week before
the show, Clark said she was a little nervous.
"I don't know what to expect. Every now and then I think, 'I can't believe you're doing this,'" she said.
After an uncomfortable pause, laighter filled the auditorium. But by the end of the night, Clark was magically in one piece. Clark's apparent error was part of her act.
But Clark's act went well, even though the audience thought she had made a mistake during her performance.
To demonstrate a rope trick, Clark called on a volunteer from the audience. She had the volunteer, a medical student, sit in a chair while she tied a rope around his neck. As she was cutting the ends of the rope to prepare for the trick, she cut off the student's tie.
Milton Butler, who works in the Med Center's purchasing department, and his band won the overall performer prize, which was accommodations for two at the Hyatt Regency Hotel for one night. They played "Jungle Love" and "Casanova."
Black writers saluted
By a Kansan reporter
The festival, from Sept. 25 to 27,
The Genesis School is an independent and alternative high school for grades 9-12.
If you need abortion or birth
will feature performances, lectures,
films, workshops and speeches by local
and national artists emphasizing
the African-American cultural gift
and its Kansas City tradition.
UHURT
Commercial pregnancy testing • Safe, affordable abortion
• Birth control • Tubaligation • Gyn exams
mental pregnancy testing services *Birth control* *Tuba Testing and treatment for sexually transmitted diseases.* Providing quality health care to women since 1974. Insurance, VISA & MasterCard accepted.
Health for women
4001 West 109th (135-425) Orland Park, Kansas
(973) 315-1400
Comprehensive Health for Women
Toll Free (except KS) 1-800-227-1918
DON'S AUTOMOTIVE CENTER, Inc.
SERVICE QUALITY
"COMPLETE SERVICE AND PARTS SALES"
"FOR MOST FOREIGN CARS"
- VOLVO
- SUBARU - MG
BOSCH
AUTOMOTIVE
- DATSUN - MAZDA
- TOYOTA - HONDA
BOSCH
www.secure.com
Machine Shop Service Available
841-4833
1008 E. 12TH
VISA
Classified Ads
ANNOUNCEMENTS
BIDEN FOR PRESIDENT Campus Chapter of students for Biden forming now. Call John at 841-4066.
Heading home for the holidays? FLY CHEAP
Call us now. Carportent Travel. 843-5698.
LIBRERTYHAT
"*****"
Bill Hams, At The Movies
7:30 & 9:30
THIS WEEK
NO SHOW
WED. OR SAT.
THE
BIG
Easy
R
Members of Delta Sigma Phi on KU campus
please contact Dave Brayles, 843-3865.
ENTERTAINMENT
ILYAYA
At your request is Lawrence's Best and Most Afordable D.J. Sound and Lighting for Any Occasion. 841-1405
metropolis
mobile sound
1 DJ Service in Lawrence
Experienced Club a Radio DJ's
Music for all Occasions
Sound Board and Microphone
DJ Ravel Vazquez - 8417083-
D. J Rav Velasquez-8417083-
No-it's not the "Hard Rake Cafe," it "the aArd-wark Cafe." Don't miss it - Friday night from 9 to 1 in the Kansas Room of the Union. Great D.J. from Metropolis Sound.
Don't blow your cool! Hoodoo Gurus from Australia are comin' to town. Tickets at SUA and CATS $9/10.
reent a hot tub for your next party. Call Tub-to-go.
841-2691.
ULTIMATE ENTERTAINMENT
ULITATE ENTERTAINMENT
DJ System for All Occasions
Phil at 80-3280
FORRENT
SUNFLOWER HOUSE. Rooms available as members graduate in September. Low rates, great location. 749-6871, ask for Ann, Deb, or Tom.
Space available at Naimshim Girl's only.
Contact Johanna at 842-7451.
BRAND NEW completely furnished 4 bedroom
apts available immediately. On the bus route and
in walking distance of KU. Call 749-4256 or
***BRAND NEW FURNISHING MANAGEMENT***
Large basement bedroom $150. Utilities paid.
SHARE Kitchen, bath, & living room. Call Maury at 843-8334.
Sublease-1 bedroom plus loft. Very unique.
Available immediately. Call 841-5797.
HOUSE FOR RENT Share large 5 bath/2 bath house CLOSE TO CAMPUS with LAUNDRY IN BASEMENT and 10 bath or study. Two unit apart (guy) needs 2-4 more people to share rent and坐 at 14th and Kentucky. Contact Darryl at Toeko. Wakeau KS 67214. 1217 N. Toekoia. Wakeau KS 67214
Furnished 2 bedroom apt, some utilities paid, off-street parking. 1 block from Noisy. No pet.
Furnished two bedroom apt. one block from the University with off-street parking. No pets.
satisfied with where you're living? Naimish Hall has one female space available for interment and also provides individual lease liability, excellent "AL-U-CAN-Eat" meals, paid utilities, weekly maid service, medical care, and other amenities. Best housing options at KU! For more info, call or come by Naimish Hall, 1803 Naimish Drive.
out subst 2 bedroom apartment $13/month
out subst 3 bedroom apartment $14/month
on bus route 81-869. Low utilities.
on bus route 81-869. Low utilities.
APPLE 'LAST' APTS 'Contemporary' slimte
available at Apple Lake, AK. Empty
applicant parking lot, water and
paid cable. $28.00 per month. Call 843-4300 for
appointment to see.
2 Bedroom apartment-burro route $295
Call 749-4156. Call in the morning or evening
M
FOR SALE
switching pedal. 3 year old. $250, $480-6115.
nRhDHung. Motorycle (B749). Perfect condition.
1978 360XL Honda motorcycle. Good condition.
Call John at 841-581.
130 WATT amplifier Peavey Special 130 Channel
Cable, ages 4-12. #890, #892, #893
Call John at 841-5881.
1983 26 1/2 foot. Excel, 3rd wheeler. Excellent con-
trol.
and sanddusters. Must be call or email.
19 "Axiat and 22" Free Spirits is special service, $45
19 "Axiat and 22" Free Spirits is special service, excellent condition, BOI, our fur lined duvet cover over coat, 40 beautiful! 841-666-666
1978 350XL Honda motorcycle. Good condition.
Must sell!! Call 864-6418.
1978 350XL Honda motorcycle. Good condition.
A great school bike--1800 Honda C-70 250-600 miles. Perfect condition. Call 841-6007.
Arkansas quartz crystals, wholesale prices.
794406.
BIC 216 WINDSUFFER-$220 SPECIALIZED
ROCKOPPER MOUNTAIN BIKE EXEC
HARVEY ROLLING BOAT EXEC
SUZUKI 400 GSL, RUNS GOOD, 400 LEAVING
LEAVE MESSAGE IF NO ANSWER
LEAVE MESSAGE IF NO ANSWER
laccett recens们! We have just received a rauckland factory close-out recens们. While 40 size recensters last-only $19 or terms. Hurry o Mark & paint Furniture Warehouses b and h
For Sale: Qu'est-ce qui se passe? text and workbook for 20k French. Also, E.langer. Will sell for price paid; use $40. Cal 611 8937 or leave message in Spanish Department for Lort
SUNRISE PLACE 9th & Michigan
dition. Call to see this camper. 842-8017.
1884 Honda Nighthawk S. 3,000 km, 2 helmets,
and ladderback. Must sell. Call 841-6762
Offering luxurious townhomes
and apartment living.
Stop by to see our
show at unit
9th and Michigan
or call . . .
841-1287
for an appointment.
Office 1, 5-F.
Brand new Samsung microwave $100, value for
$89.00 ColorWoods, interior NITZ, 127
Sunrise Apartment
i. P. PROGRAMS. Five easy to use programs for the Hewlett Packard 1C calculator. Clearly presented step-by-step key in instruction; by 3 matrix, decimal to binary conversion, synthetic division and增收 $2.10 (check/m.) to: Wm. Mullenn, Dept. I, P.O. Box 1460, Rolla, Mo.
LOW MILEAGE LIKE NEW 82 Yamaha Se50
only 170 miles. $190 or best Offer Call after 6 p.
m. or any time weeks. 597-5504
10 miles 1-speed Schwinn, full set of golf clubs
749-3437 early evenings only. Keep trying.
***** MOTHBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE.
Monday: Friday 10-15 p.m. on Saturday 10-2 p.m.
512 E.9th, 879 - 749 691
Moving Sale. Queen foam and water bed, Sesu Walkman with rechargeable cells, Yamaha tape 10, table speed bike, records, cassette, 841 7838 Naismith contracts for sale. Will pay $12 charge.
Programmable Technologies CD player. Brand new 250 Will sell for $160 best of 164 Call 81-2899 Cal 81-2899
*****New Cordless Bell Phone****** Overstocked and must be sold by the *Only* phone number 972-760-9270
Racing bike 186 Biancio 59 cm, 440. Ross
Racing bike 186 Biancio 59 cm, 440. Ross in
excited condition. Call 843-7537.
Sailboards; BIC 200S Funbound with 5.7 foot
sail-$210; VTA 320S, 115.0 liter m6 S2帆, adjustable boom*-$480 or will separate, 1-642-8228.
Sale: saepper sleeper a10-speed at 798
truckload dinette sale! Over a dozen styles to choose from with 4 of 6 chairs. Starting at $18 or terms. Inspect at Mark & Quail Furniture Warehouse, 6th and New Hampshire, Lawrence
Vaccum-Save big money. Reconditioned with 3 months guarantee. Prices start at $14.96. Lawrence Vacuum & Sewing Center, 916 Mass., 845-1267
WATERBED-King complete plus sheets. $100.
Call 842-8920 after 3 p.m.
AUTO SALES
1976 Super Beetle convertible - new top, paint,
color, interior. $2450 +40% Call Dave at
complete restoration. $4250 +40% Call Dave at
1972 Oldsmobile Cullors Runes super-new
1973 Oldsmobile Cullors Runes super-new
Call 841-7653, 6:3 p.m. weekdays and weekends
Call 841-7653, 6:3 p.m. weekdays and weekends
Adams Alumun Center is accepting employment applications for waiters, waitresses, bartenders, and dishwashers able to work day and week in the department. Apply in person 8-19, 1000 Eagle Dr., Boston, MA 02105. ORD
1979 Buck Regal, super condition, air, AM/FM
catheter, very clean, new sex covers $2600
1980 CJ7, 4-speed, high mileage, very clean
$3000. Lenexa, 1-469 6532.
1983 Le Car, immaculate, sunproof, stereo, $165.
Also, a 1980 Le Car, rough, $495. 864-7580 or
845-2740.
1989 Datsun pickup: Silver, 5-speed, A/C. Must sell! Price below book value, with new AM/FM cassette stereo and near new Topper throw in 842-4286.
Apartment Leasing Agent, part-time position, office skills and leasing experience desired. Send resumes to 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS, 60045.
ATTENTION: STUDENTS! !Nat fIrm prepare-
ments, faculty, mentors, equivs, qual-
ty, corp. scholarships are awarded, in-
ternships are possible, & you may earn 2, 3, 4
or 5 years of semester. Must apply now!
$967.01- $978.01
70 VW Beetle; excellent condition. No rust, heat works, radio, white. NW Lawrence. $750.
749-1837.
CAHS SELL for $155 (average)! Also jeeps, trucks, etc. Now available 805-687-6000 Ext. S-9758 for details.
ORDER NEW 1988 CARS--TRUCKS-
D.VARIAS-$250-450 OVER COST, DELBERT B.
THOMAS 8D-840
For Sale: 1980 Pontiac Subnird, A/C, sunroof,
great gas mileage. $2000/best offer. Phone
746-1716
Bertone X19/ 9,189. burton.com
leather interior, power window, NEW stereo amplifier, tires and more. Looks great! Must sell $31, KIKG $41, 84-169库存 day 30/472
44
17 Honda Civic: runs, needs engine and body work. Call 841-742-4892 at 4. p.m. and 7. p.m.
17 Toyota Celica. Manual standard features w/air-conditioning, stereo, etc. Good condition.
$2,500.
ATTENTION: Certified Aerobic Instructors
attend all NABI events times at 151 Robion. ENERGIZE: 749-3176
Tune up your import car, $25. Parts and labor included, satisfaction guaranteed. Call Aaron,
841-4629.
Baby sitters needed for four-year-old in our home. Call 811-427-3601. All scheduled cases. Call 811-447-3601.
Editor, Weekly Updated Methodism Church regional newspaper. Part-time position. EOE, Member Project Equality. Submit resume and references by September 25 to P-0 Box 4147, Tuka, NSW
Found: Brown pair of glasses found on University Street. Seal with safety pin stuck in back.
FOUND Set of keys with VW car keys. Last Friday on Massachusetts Street. Call 843-7277 or
HELP WANTED in the landscaping department and the retail nursery. Apply at Pence Garden
LOST-FOUND
REWARD-Dor information leading to the recovery of a red 168 Kawasaki NIKA 900. A pair of these were in 422 Olsen between 11:15 a.m. and 11:45 a.m. Did anybody see anything? Call 841-1651.
Abbott, Attorneys $12,500. Director
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16,940-$19,230 yr. Now.
Call: 853-875-6000 Ext. R-9758 for current
federal list.
Help wanted, part-time day shift hours. Apply in person.
Burger King, 1107 W. 5th street
HIRING! Government jobs-your area
113.000.000.000 Cav. 619/807. EXT 405
FOUND: long-haired, blue eye, black and white cat, has eared toes. Found in 27th St. Terri and
Looking for mature female student to live with elderly man (Perfect health). Request cooking of meals, breakfast, lunch and board. Separate bedroom, bath, laundry privileges, single car garage. Lives in the city. Contact via phone or email.
Found-cassette case and cassettes. identify them in claim. Call 842.8117
Lost wire-rimmed eyeglasses in black case.
Please call 842-359. Reward offered.
HELP WANTED
them to claim. Call 842-8117.
Lost: 2 ladies rings; union restroom; September
B10-660 Weekly/ww mailing circulators* Rush self-stamped addressed stamped envelope* Opportunity, 8010 Wishville Box, 226, Dept. Q, Beverly Hills, CA 90211
9. Please call 749-3118 or return to KU Police.
Left: long haired black cat at 12th and Tennessee
Declawed. Answers to Shadow. Reward.
842-2167.
MORNING EDITION HOST: KANU. The University of Kansas, seeks experienced broadcast-production staff with experience in information magazine-produce interview segments and speeches and extension work. One job will require a graduate degree of performance is required. Applicant must possess a pleasant speaking voice and the ability to communicate effectively.
Saturday telemarketing, Monday Tuesday 9-5 and Saturday mornings. Friendly schedule. Lincoln location-carpool from Lawrence available. For interview, call Mc Lackey at 784-4929.
OFFICE MANAGER /PURCHASER Professional to manage office operations & purchasing for one of areas leading computer sales. Must be able, organized, creative & have coordination skills. Salary competition September 21 to: FORENSIGHT Solutions, Inc., New Hampshire St., Lawrence, KS 60441
ner. Previous public radio experience is preferred, though not required. Salary competitive for position offered. Req. three current references to: Jim McLean, News Director, KANI Radio, Broadcasting Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 6654-2872. Application deadline is October 7th, 2018. KA
PART-TIME JOBS Sports officials are needed at Recreation Services for intramural football. No experience necessary. Attend the meeting Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. in Room 156 Robinson Center
PART-TIME help app at Munchen Bakersky
PART-TIME help app at Munchen Bakersky
o a m ern $4/hour after trained
app at Munchen Bakersky
promaximely 8 a.m. or 9 a.m. to apply between 10 a.m. and noon weekdays part-time legal secretary wanted Experienced, computer skills required. transcribing skills required. 842-1135
art-time housekeepers wanted 8-10 hour
days. Please visit the website of the
Galway Palace is interested in your talents. Must
have a Bachelor's degree in Hospitality.
Please visit the website of the
Galway Palace is interested in your talents. Must have a Bachelor's degree in Hospitality.
RESOURCE HOTELS. Cruises, Airlines, Amusement Parks. NOW accepting applications for summer internships in international and informational applications; write National Collegiate Recreation Service (P. O. Box 1307).
Needed: Handyman, flexible schedule available.
Call 426-8592
Student need for breakfast preparation.
m. Monday-Friday $5/hour Contact
847-759-609
Student Programmer (Using Dbase IIplus)
Students work on the design and accept design challenges. Work will involve maintenance of existing programs, new design efforts, and research of newly released software packages. Students will work week/week, $4.00/hour, Flexible work schedule. Build facilities (Facilities Operations) before 4:30 p.m.
Vista Restaurant is now taking applications for time point location and grill help. In person in
Want your own business? Now is the time to start earning as an Avon representative. Call Julie at (800) 255-3764.
We have openings in carpentry, electrical and mechanical areas. We also direct directions and can work at least two shifts of either 8:12 or 1:5, M-F. we would like you to apply to Housing Maintenance Shop. 2903 West 115th Street,
Wear Stadi-Clinical in medical office. Must be available some afternoons. Accurately secure; Secretarial/Receptional applications. 111w, 114w, 4th, Nate 2002. Referees required.
MISCELLANEOUS
BID-8600 Weekly up. mailing circular to
BID-7932 Up. mailing circular to
address envelope. CM/NA-DQP DOLF 7730.
DOLF 7730.
Pregnant cat needs home immediately. Can't af-
tract it until it is safe to sleep if not help.
Please call 426-8082
SKI KEYSTONE for Thanksgiving, November
13th. Tickets available at:
transfer/rift/lift tickets Call 843-690-9867
We have a new store that you can get cash on almost anything of value. Also, good buys on cameras, jewelry, sturdy furniture (auto & outdoor) and lighting equipment for Pawn & Jewelry, 1084 W. 6th, 79-1191.
Don't steal 'em from Uncle Ed!
Vintage Sunglasses are Choice! Assorted color frames and lenses..
PERSONAL
A. L., good luck on your B-240. Your "Hick Friend," Tim.
J-I loved the letter. PLEASE write again.
Julie K. and Michelle B.- Happy 215th year!
the meat can be in Wisha legally! Love Mocha, Jean.
Xuan-kan that the last week has been heck for you. Just remember that I love ya and that I'm here for you. Diana.
Find your style at
The Etc. Shop
DELIVERY
Pizza Hut
MONDAY MYSTERY
OFFER NIGHT
Call
Sunflower Mt. Bike Workshop - Learn how to ride a bike on a sunny day! 8 p.m. begin September 17, $89.00
6 p.m. begin September 17, $89.00
Good on
843-2211
Offer changes weekly
732
Massachusetts
843-0611
delivery only
BUS. PERSONAL
**Wake Up Workshops:** Our mechanic will teach you how to change flats, true wheel alignment and/or tire pressure on or for 5 sesions. $5 each. Saturday, 10 a.m., begins September 19. Sunflower, 504 Massachusetts,
HEADACHE, BACKACH, ARM PAIN, LEG
PAIN Student and most insurance accepted.
For complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Mark
Johnson 843-9379.
SERVICES OFFERED
Capture that golden tan with a boudoir portrait from Photos Plus. Call Mike or Gracie at 749-3706 evenings or weekends.
75% OFF
SALE
AFRICAN
ADORNED
for unusual jewelry
5 E. 7th
842-1376
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-8421. Confidential help/free pregnancy
The ETC SHOI is open Sunday from 11-4. New
increment of cotton wear. 732 Massachusetts.
Jimmy and Tummy, in Hyderabad, you've got to be a party. Classic to contemporary party music it's all you need.
SRI FREE AT VAIL/BEAVER CREEK! 4 days
and do free skiing. Add extra night. just $150
and do free skiing. Add extra night. just $150
COMPUTER CONSULTING: Tutoring and programming, elearning, math, computer science and advance civil engineering, projects and other works. Price for individuals and groups: $189-$259.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered to midWester Driving School, served K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749
JAM FAVORO for all your party favor needs.
Hats, shirts, gliders, glasses. If you have a unique favor idea, call us and we'll find it for you.
843-8770
FLASHBACK PHOTO fast and dependable party picture service. Call 943-8770 to book your next party.
KU PHOTOGRAPHICAL SERVICES: Eakthronate
services within 24 hours. Complete B/W services.
PASSORT $8.00. Art & Design Building,
Room 206. 844-7677.
Gravstone Athletic Club
Graystone Athletic Club
Special Student Membership
$150 per semester
Racquetball, Tanning
Exercise Equipment
2500 W. 6th Street
841-7230
2500 W. 6th Street 841-7230
QUALITY Tutoring, Statistics, Economics, and Math All levels. Homework assistance, test preparation, or general review. MA with 7 years teaching experience. Call Demis at 842-1055.
MATH TUOR since 1976, M.A., 88/hr, 84-9032
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PRIVATE OBJECT ObGyn and Berger Ser-
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rompt contraception and abortion services in
awrence. 841-7516
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. MJ-2318
Time availes-Affordable and professional cleaning for those students who need to spend more time studying and less time cleaning. Call 749-3926. Free estimates!!
TYPING
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing. B82: 749-254 or Jiai, B84: 191-195
1- Der woman word processing. Former editor will transform your scribbles into accurately spelled and puttuted, grammatically correct or qualitatively quality type. May be used for evening.
24 hour typing service. Professional word processing on letter quality printer . 843-7643.
1 plus Typing: Letters, resumes, thesis, law typing, etc. 13 years experience. Call Terry 842-4754 or 842-2671 and weeks.end.
cessing on letter quality printer. 842-7643
A1 a reliable professional typing; Term papers.
Theses, Resumes, etc. Reasonable. IBM Electronic Trimmer. 842-3246
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Quality Typing includes excellent spelling, punctuation, grammar, editing. Fast reliable service. Pickup/ delivery available. 843-6247
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Term papers, letters, thesis, dissertations, letters,
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For professional typing/word processing, call Myra. 841-4980. Fall special $1.20/page, double-space nica
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS,
MOMMY'S TYPING is back from Australia !!
842 3738 at 9 pm, please.
PROFESSIONAL TYPING. 842-4868 before 10 p.m.
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing, manuscripts, resumes, theses, letter quality printing, etc. 843-5062
KU SECRETARY. Typing and word processing.
affordable, fast; accurate. Spelling corrected,
letter quality. Pickup on campus. Monica
841-8246. Evenings-weekends
typing or word processing for leses, dissertations, resumes, term papers, applications. Professional editing, composition available. Have M.S. Degree.
WRIGHT'S TYPING SERVICE: Term papers, theses, miscellaneous, IBM Selectric. Spelling corrected. 84-9544
WANTED
BOSTON TICKETS WANTED (2). Good seats,
will护航! Call Steve-Bl-481-5900.
Feminine Holidays:
1. $165 room plus 1/2 utilities. Call 892-4742.
2. $300 room plus 1/2 utilities. Call 1400-month plus 1/2 utilities.
3. Nice apartment, own room, on bus line. Call 749-4379.
Female roommate wanted to share nine two bedroom apartment. West campus; all utilities paid, rent negotiated. Call Victoria at 841-978. Female roommate needed to share two bedroom
Male or female grad student or mature
graduate in the school. Call
from the University, $180 plus 1/2 utilities. Call
(877) 353-8496
Roommate wanted for 2 bedroom house near new
home. Fully furnishedeco bedroom. big backyard or dog or cat ok $160 month plus half
utilities. Phone:841-2500.
Sell me two GREAT floor tickets to Boston concert!
Mark. 814-0236
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
BETTY
- Policy
K.U. Women's Ultimate Team, "Betty",
1987 National College Champions, is looking for women interested in learning a fun & challenging sport. T & TH: 5:00,
Sat & Sun-11:00,
23rd & Iowa or call 749-5855, 841-2332.
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8
Monday, September 21. 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Rice, beans show Latin-American club's solidarity
By VIRGINIA McGRATH
Staff writer
Members of the Latin American Solidarity club meet once a week to eat rice and beans and learn about ways to stop U.S. domination in Latin America.
The rice and beans are on the menu for a symbolic reason, said Rhonda Neugebauer, a co-founder of the group.
"We serve only what they (the people of Central America) eat." Neugebaur said. "Sometimes they eat that three times a day. They survive on it. So this is our symbol of solidarity with them."
'W.
SP
We only what they (the people of Central America) eat."
— Rhonda Neugebauer club co-founder
Lisa Jones/KANSAN
The group, which usually meets Thursday evenings at Ecumenical Christain Ministries, 1294 Oread Ave., has two goals: to educate the KU and Lawrence communities about the situation in Latin America and to invite them to take some action, usually in the form of fund-raising.
Money raised by the group is given to two national organizations, Medical Aid to El Salvador, in Los Angeles, and Medical Aid to Nicaragua, in Washington D.C.
Richard Kersenbaum, Lawrence resident, and Sylvia Suarez and her son, Evan, also of Lawrence, help themselves to a dinner of rice and beans. The three attended the dinner Thursday it is sponsored weekly by the Latin American Solidarity group
Latin American Solidarity was formed in 1978.
Neugebauer said. "We saw a real need to educate people in KU and Lawrence about what was happening in Latin America," she said. "Nicaragua wasn't an issue then, but U.S. domination was. We didn't like the economic penetration that sometimes robbed the people of their right to make their own decisions."
Neugebauer spent a year and a half in Costa Rica from 1976-77 as an exchange student and visited Nicaragua several times while she was there. She has been back twice since the Sandinistas came to power in 1979, and she thinks the changes since then have been for the better.
"I noticed a word of difference," she said. "In addition to eating rice and beans, menus have eggs, milk, brownies, cookies, physician, spoke Thursday. She has worked in child and maternal health care, nutrition and family planning for a Protestant relief agency in Nicaragua since October 1986."
Cookson said that conditions in Nicaragua were hard and that U.S. financing of the contras must stop because the contras were destabilizing the region and were perpetuating the poverty and other problems of that area.
Neuebauer said guest speakers gave legitimacy to the organization. "We talk about these things," he said.
Clark H. Coan, Lawrence resident, said he liked the meetings because they were informative. "They don't do a lot in terms of actual organizing, but there are great speakers and films," he said.
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- Rental Furniture available from Thompson-Crawley.
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TELL THE TOWN-CALL THE KANSAN 864-4358
...one of world's greatest cellists
Yo-Yo Ma
He's worked a lifetime to bring you 90-minutes of pleasure...
presented by the University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert and Chamber Music Series
8:00 p.m.
Tuesday, September 22, 1987
Hoch Auditorium
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved/For reservations, call 913/864-3982
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Kids K12 Students: $7.50 & $6.50
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Funded, in part, by the Kansas Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts, additional funding provided by the KU Student Activity Fee. Swarthout Society and the KU Endowment Association.
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(2)
V
The Arts
Sports
University Daily Kansan / Monday, September 21, 1987
9
Willie Vaughn's TD helped Jayhawks but wasn't enough
By ANNE LUSCOMBE
Associate sports editor
Associate sports editor
Willie Vaughn sprinted down field, outdistancing the strong safety from Kent State. He was open, and the end zone loomed in front of him. The ball came spiraling toward him. He caught it and ran past the goal line. Touchdown.
Vaughn's second-quarter 69-yard pass reception, the lonest of his career, ended the 14-quarter scoreless draught the Jayhawks had been caught in. It gave Vaughn the opportunity to take a bow, and it gave the fans something to cheer about.
"Obviously, he was one of the highlights of the ball game, but when the team doesn't win. . . . I love his effort coming off the bench after we had made some changes in the team as coach Bob Valentece of the junior wide receiver. "He's a winner. He tried to turn it around for us."
But, it didn't win the game. Kansas fell to Kent State. 31-17.
Vaughn, the only Kansas player to receive All-Big Eight Conference first team honors last season, was
moved to second string after the Auburn game because of dropped passes. Sophomore Quintin Smith, who lost a year of eligibility last season as a Proposition 48 casualty, started the game at wide receiver.
Vaughn had 156 yards in inceptions for the game — more than half of the 276 net yards gained by the entire team. He moved up four spaces to ninth on the Jayhawks' all-time receiving chart with 938 yards.
"Records are a personal goal, and that fine, but there's nothing to be happy about," Vaughn said of the game. "I plan to have a good game, but I'm also pumped to have a win. I'm happy about the good game, but I'm sad about the loss.
KANSAS 78 52
"I'd rather win anytime. I feel personally that I had a good day, but we didn't do it as a team. We didn't try to lose. He answered, we should have hammered them, but they came out and played their hearts out. It feels as bad losing to Kent State as it does losing to Oklahoma. They all count the same. You don't practice all week to go out and lose on Saturday. It feels really bad."
Tony Vourax/KANSAN
Darryl Terrell. Kansas bandack, is brought down by a group of Kent State defenders in the Jayhawks' 31-10 loss Saturday at Memorial Stadium.
Fred Sadowski/KANSAN
16
Mistakes haunt Kansas in 31-17 loss to Kent State
Kansas corner back Milt Garner goes after the football. In one sign of the problems of the KU special teams, Garner returned two punts for a total of only four vards in Saturday's game against Kent State.
By CRAIG ANDERSON
Staff writer
The ghosts of Kansas football games past came back to haunt the Jayhawks Saturday in their 31-17 loss to Kent State in Memorial Stadium.
The most evil of the goblins was probably the one of the special teams' breakdowns. Last week a 69 yard punt return by Auburn's Freddy Weygand had chilled the Kansas punt coverage unit. In a span of 19 seconds midway through the third quarter in this Saturday's game, the Jayhawk special teams self-destructed once again.
The biggest blow came when Kent State's Eric Wilkerson returned a Louis Klemk kickoff 88 yards for a touchdown. Kansas coach Bob Valentele called it the turning point of the game.
Klemp had just kicked a goal field to cut the Kent State lead to 14-10. There was almost a quarter and a half left for the Jayhawks to make a comeback and end their eight-game losing streak. Members of the Kansas kick coverage team were waving their helmets as they moved involved in the game. It seemed to be working. Then disaster struck.
Wilkerson ran the kickoff back, barely having to shift directions against the oncoming kick coverage. Any momentum that the Jawhawk
had vanished at that point.
The special teams' breakdown wasn't over, however. On the ensuing kickoff, Kansas freshman running back Frank Hatchett fumbled the ball and Kent State recovered on its own 35-yard run. But Larry Steinberg kicked a 37-yard field goal, building the Golden Flash lead to 24-10.
"The kickoff return really broke our backs," Valesette said. "We do work on special teams. It was some tough, dangerous game and this one that hurt us."
The field goal prompted the fans in Memorial Stadium to begin leaving en masse. There were still almost four minutes left in the third quarter.
But the fumble of the kickoff also hurt the Kansas running game. Hatchett suffered a contusion on his back and did not return to the game.
Hatchett had been a spark for the Jayhawks' other dismal running game. He and fellow freshman running back Maurice Hooks started the second half in the backfield together and seemed to give the offensive unit a little lift. Hatchett gained 24 yards in his first four carries, equalling the entire Kansas team rushing total in the first half.
"Everytime I touch the ball, I'm thinking touchdown," said the 5-foot-10, 185-pound Hatchett. "I want to play and contribute."
Valesante said he was impressed with the freshman speedster. As a junior at El Dorado High School, Hattchell won the 100 and 400-meter dash titles at the Kansas Class 5A state track meet.
"Hatchtie showed some wheels today." "Valesente said." He can flat
The ghost of Jayhawk slow starts of games past was also probably flying around Saturday at Memorial Stadium. Against Auburn, Kansas was five touchdowns behind after the first 15 minutes of the game. He missed the wack that he hoped his Kansas team would jump on, Kent State.
What unfolded, though, was something that looked frighteningly similar to the Jayhawks' season opener. In fact, Kent State scored its first touchdown against Kansas quicker than Auburn had done the previous week. The Golden Flashes took a little more than two minutes to drive 76 yards in seven plays on the opening drive of the game.
The first three plays of the game seemed to be straight out of the script for a football game horror movie. On the first play from scrimmage, Kent State freshman Terry Foley cuts through a screen pass, benefited from a couple of Jayhawk missed tackles, and gained 12 yards. On the second play of the game,
tailback Eric Wilkerson ran a sweep around the right end and 43 yards later was arm-tacked by Kansas cornerback Mill Garner. The third and final play of the opening barrage proved to be the shortest gain — an 11-vard gain by the Kent State fullback on a dive play up the middle of the Javhawk defense.
"It was a lousy, pathetic effort for us," Valesente said. "I don't feel good about the job I've done getting the team ready to play. I must find the secret."
Landons honored at game
The Associated Press
The University of Kansas paid tribute to Alf M. Landon and his family during a brief ceremony prior to Saturday's KU-Kent State football game.
Landon, who observed his 100th birthday on Sept. 9; his wife, Theo Landon; their daughter, U.S. Sen. Nancy Landey Kassebaum; and three of Landon's grandchildren. He is landy's family's recognition on Parents' Day at the university. Landon and Sen. Kassebaum are KU graduates.
Ennacillor Gene A. Budig presented Landon, Sen. Kasebaum and the three grandchildren small bronzed statues of the KU mascot, the mythical Jayhawk. The grandchildren住家 Mills, both KU graduates, and B凯Kasebaum, presently a KU law student.
Landon waved to the applauding crowd, sang along as the KU band played the national anthem before the game, then was driven slowly around the track of Memorial Stadium before returning to Topeka.
Oakland completes sweep by defeating Royals again
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — They're still $3\frac{1}{2}$ games behind Minnesota in the American League West race, but the Oakland Athletics are feeling much better about themselves nevertheless.
A 7-6 victory over Kansas City Sunday — after leading 7-0 — gave the A's a three-game sweep of the Royals as they completed the second leg of a three-city road trip. Now it's on to Cleveland for three games, hoping all the while the Twins will encounter trouble when they meet the Royals in six of their last nine games.
"When we came in here, we figured we had to win the series," said
Seattle fullback excels in victory over Chiefs
"It was a tough deficit to come back from," Royals Manager John Wathan said of the 7-0 hole. "We spotted them too many runs early in the game. That's the way it's been lately. On the positive side is the fact that we battled back again and didn't quit."
Oakland Manager Tony LaRussa.
"But to sweep the series, any series,
when you're on the road is something
you wouldn't dare dream of. It's quite an accomplishment."
The loss was the fifth in six games for the Royals, who walked nine batters and dropped deeper into third place West, East, six games behind Minnesota.
The Associated Press
SEATTLE — John L Williams understands his role for the Seattle Seahawks.
"I'm supposed to block for Curt Warner because he's our premier running back," the second-year fullback said with a smile Sunday. "Of course, if I get my opportunity..."
Williams, Seattle's 1986 first-round draft choice, carried the ball 15 times for 112 yards, including his first game in a season as a one-yard run in the third quarter.
Williams, a 5-foot-11, 22-pounder from the University of Florida, got his opportunity against the Kansas City Chiefs, recording the first 100-yard rushing game of his NFL career in a 43-14 victory.
"This was really a great thrill."
Williams said. "It's been a long time
since I had a 100-yard rushing game."
At Florida, Williams was the school's third all-time leading rusher with 2,409 yards. He had seven 100-yard rushing games.
"We wanted to give him a lot of work today," Seattle Coach Chuck Knox.
While Williams was having his biggest day in the NFL, Kansas City rookie Christian Okeye was suffering a turnaround from his debut last week.
"You have off days and on days," the 253-pound Okoye said after he was held to 30 yards on 11 carries after rushing for 105 yards in the Chiefs' opening win over San Diego. "Today, Williams was on and I was off."
Williams had a 48-yard run and
"That meant a lot to me." Williams said of his touchdown opportunity. "I was nervous about that."
carried all four times in Seattle's drive for a touchdown that made the score 34-7 in the third quarter.
Dave Krieg passed for three touchdowns for Seattle, and Kansas City's offense turned over the ball five times, four on fumbles.
Norm Johnson kicked a team-record five field goals, from 34, 25, 46, 27 and 49 yards for Seattle, 1-1. Johnson also missed a 39-yarder.
"I never even did that at UCLA," said Johnson.
The Chiffs fumbled three times in the third quarter, and the Seahawks scored 20 points to break open the game after leading 17-7 at halftime.
Krieg had touchdown passes of
17 and 17 vards to Daryl Turner in
the second quarter and also passed two yards to tight end Mike Tice for a score in the third quarter.
first-year Kansas City Coach Frank Ganzs brought in nine-year veteran quarterback Bill Kenney in place of starting quarterback Todd Blackledge in long passing situations.
Blackbleck passed 10 yards to Carlos Carson for Kansas City's touchdown in the second quarter. Kenney threw a fourth-quarter interception for Kansas City's fifth turnover of the day. Kenney passed 10 yards to Carson for a touchdown with 1:07 to go.
"Kenny was throwing the ball very well in practice." explained Gansz. "Todd has more mobility, but when we want to throw the ball, we get the guy in that can do that best."
Softball team drops three in tourney, has 2-5 record
By a Kansan reporter
Sometimes, for every step forward a young team takes, it slides two back.
After finishing second in KU Invitational No. 1 a week earlier, the Kansas softball team took a nose dive in KU Invitational No. 2 Saturday and Sunday. The Jayhawks lost three games by a combined score of 16-2
Tournament champion Nebraska broke a scoreless tie with three third-inning runs. Two of the scores came on an error by freshman center fielder Missy Bond. The Cornhuskers, whom Haack expects to be ranked in the top 10 nationally, added another unearned run in the fifth.
KU, 2-5 for the year, lost 3-0 to Illinois State on Saturday and suffered back-to-back losses Sunday to Iowa State, 11-1, and Nebraska, 4-1
"We didn't play very well, and we
didn't do much statistic." Coach
Kohm Hankel said.
Sophomore pitcher Roanna Brazer singled-in freshman left-felder Jessica Hennig, scoring Kansas' only run in the sixth inning.
"We would have liked to have come in undefeated, then take whatever happened," Haack said after the Nebraska game.
"The girls saw teams that were stronger than we are and we didn't improve very much," Haack said. "Now they realize they have to get better each weekend in order to compete."
Hennig went 3-for-9 on the weekend and was the only player to hit in all three games. KU produced just eight hits as a team.
The Iowa State loss demonstrated the contrast between the two tournaments. KU shut out the Cyclones 5-0 in Invitational No. 1.
kansas teams have frustrating weekend
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — To non-football fans, it was a gorgeous Indian Summer weekend in Kansas. But followers of the Kansas State Wildcats and the Kansas Jayhawks probably saw nothing but dark, angry storm clouds gathering over their proram.
The Big Eight Conference's two entries from the Sunflower State dropped to a collective 0-4 with rather embarrassing losses at home. Kansas, a week after losing 49-0 at Auburn, bowed to Kent State 31-17.
Kansas State got bombed 41-14 by an Army team which had looked very beatable after losing its opener to Holy Cross. Combined with the opening punch, Kansas State played Poytie the whipping by Army left a lot of K-State fans feeling discouraged.
Otherwise, it was another good weekend for the big game with glamour teams Oklahoma and Nebraska taking a rest. Missouri and Oklahoma State remained unbeaten and Colorado upended Stanford 31-17
to square its mark at 1-1 and guarantee there will be no repeat of last season's horrible start.
Iowa State, home against state rival Iowa, proved that Coach Jim Walden was right when he said the Cyclones lacked the talent to beat the Hawkeyes. The final score of Iowa 48, Iowa State 9 gave Walden's first Cycle team an 0-2 record identical to Kansas and Kansas State.
Thurman Thomas continued his climb up the Heisman ballot with 193 rushing yards for Oklahoma State and Rod Smith recovered three turnovers. Each team scored 19 points in the frantic fourth period.
Missouri is riding its first two-game winning streak since 1983 after beating Northwestern 28-3 at home. The Cardinals beat a wild 45-28 win against Wyoming.
lowa has outscored Iowa State 258-50 in five straight victories since the series was resumed. But Hawkeye Coach Hayden Fry said he was impressed with the signs of progress under Walden.
"I truly feel like Jim Wilden will do a super job here, if people just don't get impatient." Fry said. "There is room in the state of Iowa for two good teams. I think they both have potential."
have pooled
Walden's first Iowa State team
opened the week before with a 25-12
loss at Tulane.
"I don't know if we could beat Iowa," Walden said. "I know we can't beat them if we turn the ball over on our side of the field."
The Hawkeyes led only 10-6 midway through the second quarter when interceptions by Kerry Burt and Sean Ridley off Derek DeGennaro put the rout in motion. Iowa tailback Kevin Harmon ran for a career-best 179 yards.
Colorado, like Kansas State and Kansas, spent much of the day making mistakes. But the Buffs made up for it by a nearly 2-to-1 advantage in total offense and time of possession. Colorado's ground-oriented offense rushed for 413 yards, including 119 by freshman Eric Bieniemy. Backup
quarterback Rick Wheeler, replacing the injured Mank Hatcher, scored two short-yardage touchdowns in the second half for the Buffs
When Missouri halfback Robert Delpino sped 82 yards with 14:03 left to give the Tigers a 21-3 lead, an Orange came flying out of the stands onto Faurot Field. The Tigers增值 a recent loss to Northwestern as Missouri got off to its best start since 1982.
One more victory, and Missouri will have matched its total of last year. Two more victories and the Tigers will have matched their victory total in Woody Widenhofer's first two years as head coach.
"This football team is different," Widenhofer said. "They look forward to Saturdays. They're having fun on Saturdays. You work hard all week and then you get a paycheck. This was their paycheck today."
Kansas State tied a school record with 14 penalties for 115 yards against Army.
---
10
Monday, September 21, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
SportsMonday
Athletes compete in Jayhawk triathlon
By DARRIN STINEMAN Staff writer
For most people, a 600-meter swim would be difficult, a 10-mile bike ride would be tiring, and a three-mile run would be grueling. But to do those things consecutively, for most people, would border on the insane.
Triathletes, however, are not like most people.
Fifty-four such athletes competed in the Jayhawk Triathlon yesterday. The event started with a 600-meter swim in Robinson Gymnastium's west pool, followed by a 10-mile bicycle ride that wound its way out to Wakarua Drive and then back to Allen Field House. A 2.8 mile run, the final leg of the triathlon, followed the same route as the bike ride, except the runners turned around at 21st Street and followed the same path back to the field house.
The swimming leg of the triathlon was done in three heats, the first of which began swimming at 8 a.m. Lanes one and eight each had three swimmers separated by 10 second intervals, and lanes two through seven had two swimmers. After the swim, the participants put on shoes, got on their bikes at the Robinson tennis courts, and embarked on the second leg. Locker rooms were available for the athletes to change clothes after the swim, but several saved time by going directly from the water to their bikes.
The coordinator of the Jayhawk Triathlon, Rick Cameron, said well over half of the entrants were first-time triathon participants.
One rookie triathlete, Brian Turley, Overland Park senior, said he
was curious about the event and entered on one week's training.
I'd never entered one before and I thought I'd try my luck," he said. "It was quite a challenge."
Andrés Cavielier, Bogota, Colombia sophomore, said triathlons were very popular in his country and have been in other Latin American countries.
"Triathlons became popular in Colombia because of cycling," he said. "It (cycling) got popular and people started to run triathlons."
K-State, Wichita St. beat KU 169-163
Cavieler said Colombia had 20 to 30 triathlons each year, and they were longer than the ones in the United States. He said the typical triathlon circuit肌肉 consisted of a one-mile swim, 40 runs of biking and a 10-mile run.
The coordinators of the Jayhawk Triathlon tried to stay away from longer distances in order to attract people to the event.
The triathlon had three divisions for both men and women. The winner of the men's open division was Mike Bannister of Leawood with a time of 56 minutes and 40 seconds. The women's open winner was Ann Weber of Warren with a time of 59 seconds. The men's winner was Dan Breedlove, Naperville, Ill., sophomore, and the women's student winner was Christine McMinn-Jackson, Albuquerque N.M., senior.
The winners in the faculty/staff division were Stanley Lombardo, associate professor and chairman of classes, and Brenda Jo Brueggemann, graduate teaching assistant. Lombardo and Brueggemann were the only KU faculty or staff members to enter the trialathon.
Former Shocker scores 30 points, leads combined team to victory over Hawks
9
8
TOPEKA — Former KU guard, Carl Henry, shoots to the hoop over alumni from Kansas State. Henry and other KU all-stars played last night in the Kansas Alumni All-Star Classic at Landon arena in Topeka.
Fred Sadowski/KANSAN
By ANNE LUSCOMBE Associate sports editor
TOPEKA — the colors looked right on the players, but the mixing of eras gave Kansas State an advantage it hasn't enjoyed for some time over Kansas. The former Wildcats scored a 169-163 victory over the ex-Jayhawks in the Kansas Alumni All-Star Classic in the Landon Arena.
Kansas State borrowed inside powerhouse Cliff Levington, a former Wichita State star who is currently with the Atlanta Hawks. Levington was a key player in bringing the final seconds of the game, which ran into overtime tied at 148.
"Cliff really made the difference and helped them out," said former Kansas player Ron Kellogg. "If he wasn't on their team, we would have won. We were trying to win, but they had that inside game."
Kellogg popped in 39 points, including a spectacular three-pointer from well outside the professional three-point line. It was another Kellogg three-point shot that tied the game with five seconds on the clock and throwing it into overtime.
The players started off the game relaxed, with a lot of laughter flowing between the teams and the referees. But by the second half, things heated up. The play became more physical, and old rivalries surfaced.
Kellogg hit five three-point shots and was the game's high scorer. Ex-Wildcat Norris Coleman came closest to Kellogg with 32 points.
"One thing about ball players is that off the court we may be great friends, but once we're on the court the old rivalries come out," said former Kansas All-American Jo Jo White.
One of the college battles that remained brewing was that of Coleman and Kansas' Calvin Thompson.
The two of them fought for every ball, showing the physical side of game.
"Yeah, it was getting rough out there, but me and Calvin, we were just having fun," Coleman said laughing.
Thompson struggled with his inside shoot, making only three-for-15, but outside he scored 15 points, going five-for-nine from the three-point
But it was White who ran the game for Kansas. White, who was a two-time All-American at Kansas, played professionally for the Boston Celtics.
On the bench, he was yelling instructions, hollering plays and wringing a towel as his teammates fought for leads and then lost them.
On the court, White was all over the floor, directing the play, motivating the team and showing the younger players what it takes to be a living legend. He led the team in assists with nine and was the second leading team scorer with 23 points.
At 40, White is still in excellent condition, and except for a cramp he got in the back of his leg late in the game, he easily kept up with the rest of the team, many of whom were 15 years his junior.
"I enjoy playing." White said. "I've always prided myself on being in great condition. I play about four or five times a week, but now I get to play for the love of the game, not because my contract says I have to. Now I'm in a position where I can hand down my expertise."
White represents athletes of several sports and works out with many of the younger professional basketball players.
Scoreboard
Baseball American League
American League
Oakland 7, Kansas City 6
Texas 2, California 1
Chicago 6, Seattle 1
Baltimore 4
Boston 6, Baltimore 3
Toronto 6, New York 2
Milwaukee 11, Detroit 4
Minnesota 3, Cleveland 2
NFL
National League
St. Louis 10, Chicago 8
Pittsburgh 9, New York 8
Philadelphia 4, Montreal 1
Los Angeles 6, San Francisco 6
Houston 3, San Diego 2
Los Angeles 5, Atlanta 3
seattle 43, Kansas City 14
San Diego 28, St. Louis 24
Cleveland 34, Pittsburgh 10
Miami 23, Indianapolis 10
L.A. Raiders 27, Detroit 7
Minnesota 21, L.A. Rams 16
San Francisco 27, Cincinnati 26
Buffalo 34, Houston 30
Dallas 16, New York 14
Chicago 20, Tampa Bay 3
Atlanta 21, Washington 20
Denver 17, Green Bay 17
Quarterback Club will meet today
KU volleyball team loses own tourney
The Kansas Quarterback Club will meet at noon today in the Summerfield Room of the Adams Alumni Center. At the meeting, Kansas Coach Bob Valesette will review the Kent State game and discuss the Jayhawks' upcoming game against Louisiana Tech.
All KU students, faculty and staff are invited to come. An optional, $5 soup and salad lunch will be served.
Staff writer
By ROBERT WHITMAN
Three straight losses Friday and Saturday extended the KU volleyball team's losing streak to four matches. The losses resulted in a last-pace finish in their own four-team tournament.
The Jayhawks dropped both matches in the Kansas Tournament in Allen Field House and an additional match Saturday morning, as their record dropped to 4-6 for the season.
Kansas will not play another match in the field house until an Oct. 16 meeting with Iowa State The Jayhawks, who have played seven of their first 10 matches at home, have only five remaining matches this season.
But playing matches away from home might help the team, senior outside Shannon Ridgeway said.
"That might do us some good," she said. "I don't know, it's a change of pace, maybe. Our first tournament was away, and we did really well."
The Jayhawks' first matches this season were at the Southwest Missouri Tournament where they placed second.
At that tournament, Kansas defeated Southwest Missouri State for the first time in the three-year tenure of coach Frank Albiz. Since then, however, the team has been slowly slipping, with a third place finish at the Kansas Tournament Sept. 11-12, a quick three-game loss to nationally ranked Nebraska and the three losses over the weekend.
In the first round on Friday, Michigan State downed Kansas in a hard
fought, five-game match, 10-15, 15-11,
15-8, 12-15, 15-8.
That put Kansas in the third place game Saturday evening, where it was defeated by Sam Houston State 15-6, 15-5, 10-15, 15-12.
On Saturday morning, the Jayhawks were trounced by Southwest Missouri State 15.7, 15.6, 15.8. Thirteen of the Bears' 45 points were scored on serving aces in the 58-minute match.
Albiz started to juggle the lineup during the Southwest Missouri State match, a pattern she continued through the second game of the Sam Houston State match.
Against Sam Houston State, Albizt started senior Kristi Conway in place of Ridgeway in the first game. In the second game, she started senior Michelle Klone in place of outside hitter Judy Desch, and junior Kim Robinson in place of setter Monica Spencer and Conway.
"The subs did a nice job." Ridgeway said. "They let the starters see what was going wrong. I think we learned a lot."
"We were letting down mentally. When we played poorly, I think it shook our confidence. I just tell them. 'If it's a good set, hit it, if it's not, keep it in play.' When we lose confidence, we tend not to hit hard"
Kansas rallied to win the third game against Sam Houston State with the lineup that had been starting for most of the season.
Albitz said, "I started moving people around because I didn't have anything to lose. The thing we were having was a lot of mental errors.
BELVEDERE
James Larson/KANSAN
Hooky Helm, Kansas outfielder, beats a throw back to first base. Kansas won the game against Butler County Community College 16-1.
KU baseball team wins one of three
By a Kansan reporter
In the first game, Brad Hinkle stopped Butler County for one run,
For one game, the Jayhawks played solid, error-free baseball in winning the first of three five-inning contests against Butler County Community College 16-1.
Overall, the Jayhawks outscored Butler County 23-19, but Kansas dropped the second game 11-4 and the last game 7-3.
and Jeff Spencer headed the offense with a towering home run to left field.
Baseball coach Dave Bingham said the team played a good, aggressive first game but didn't pitch or play well on defense the last two games.
well on defense. "Brad pitched a good game and Jarrett (Boeschen) played well defensively." Bingham said.
he said that although he hated to lose, the fall season was for working out problems.
Early in the fall season, Bingham was concerned with the lack of offense, but yesterday his concern switched to pitching and attitude. He said that other than the game from Hinkle, the pitchers did not perform. He also questioned some of the players' willingness to win.
"Some of the guys, I am not sure they want to win." Bingham said. "I don't want to sound too negative, but this is the time to learn how to win."
Recreation Services presents
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MANDATORY MANAGER'S MEETING:
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For all leagues will be held, Monday, Sept. 21 at 6:30 p.m., North Robinson Center. If you miss this meeting you may miss the football season! Priority scheduling will be awarded at this time.
INSTANT SCHEDULING:
Tuesday and Wednesday, Sept. 22 and 23.
Sign your teams up and pay fees from 8:30 a.m. to
4 p.m. at 208 Robinson.
**ENTRY FEES:** Trophy Leagues: $20
Rec A, Rec B, Co-Rec Leagues: $10
PLAY BEGINS: Sunday, October 4, 1987 * please note *
For more information call 864-3546.
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University Daily Kansan / Moncay, September 21, 1987
11
Sports
KU cross country teams finish second
By MIKE CONSIDINE Staff writer
The KU men's and women's cross country teams both finished second in Saturday's Jayhawk Invitational.
Texas-Arlington won the men's title with 61 points, three points ahead of Kansas. Emporia State claimed three of the first four places and won the women's meet with 36 points Kansas, behind freshman McLean McLean's second place finish, tied Texas-Arlington for second with 54.
With the right line-up, the men could have won a third consecutive championship. The Jayhawks' surplus of runners became a drawback
when four teammates, running unattached, topped sophomore Matt Bell's 24th place finish (33:58.68).
“It’s going to take more time to get our team in a position where we know what they’re going to do in a given meet,” coach Bob Tinmons said.
Ineligible freshman Andy Pritchard (33:06.19) and junior Jon Koslin (33:12.98) would have finished 17th and 18th if their scores had counted. Either score would have kept the streak intact.
Junior Craig Watke placed 6th (31.46.88) and sophomore Steve Heferan was 6th (31.51.13) for the Jawhaws.
"We weren't fresh and ready, yet
you don't want to be now," Heferian said. "We're training hard to get in pretty good condition at the end of the season."
Timmons noticed a difference from the team he left to go on a two-week cruise. "I'm really pleased to see the progress they've made." Timmons
Ben Melly, Texas-Arlington senior won the men's race in 31:17.44. The women's winner, in a five-kilometer course, was Emporia State's senior Cindy Blakely (18:11), who began her career at KU.
MacLean (18:26) led until the final three-quarters of a mile Her strategy was to build an insurmountable early lead.
"That girl (Blakely) ran a smart race," MacLean said. "She let me lead up to the hill. I just couldn't concentrate enough to hold on."
Women's coach Cliff Rovelto was impressed by MacLean's performance.
Before the race, Rovelo said he hoped to place four runners in the top 20. Five Jayhawks made it: MacLean, senior Trisha Mangan placed 6th (19:04), sophomore Kelly Koffey was 13th (19:27), freshman Tony Gundy was 16th (19:39), and freshman Tina Saulsbury was 19th (19:47).
Men's soccer club goes one-and-no for weekend
By ROBERT WHITMAN
By ROBERT WHITMAN Staff writer
Staff writer
The climax of a weekend of competition for the men's soccer club lacked only one element yesterday — an onepoint.
The University of Nebraska-Lincoln failed to show up for its game against Kansas, which was scheduled for 2 p.m. at Memorial Stadium.
The weekend was not completely lost, though. Saturday, the Jayhawks defeated the University of Nebraska-Omaha, 1-0, evening their record at 1-1.
"The frustrating thing is that we
have a full schedule, and there's lots of teams that want to play us." KU coach Glen Shirtliffe said. "The fans get grunted when they come out here because they're expecting to see a game."
Shirtlife added that the forfeit was especially frustrating because many parents of team members were in town this weekend in conjunction with the University's Parents' Day activities.
Shriftlife said he had talked to Nebraska—Lincoln the week before to confirm the game. "They said they would be here today (Sunday)," he would be here today (Sunday)," he
said. "That's the last time I'm going to schedule them for a while."
Shirtliffe said it was not the first time the Cornhuskers had failed to show up for a scheduled game. He said that about a year and a half ago, KU traveled to Lincoln, only to find the Orlando club had canceled the
But the Jayhawks did get in a game Saturday at Shenk Complex, 23rd and Iowa streets, against Nebraska-Omaha.
"We should have had five or six goals, at least," Shirtliffe said.
Kansas finally scored with about five minutes left in the game. Defender Marc Boussaguet stole the ball from a Maverick defender, dribbed around two other defenders and hit a low shot past the Nebraska-Omaha goalie.
When Nebraska didn't show up, Shirtliffe called for a intrasquad scrimmage.
"We had the refs already paid for, so we made them earn it," Shirtliffe said.
Shirtlift put the first-team forwards and midfielders, plus the second-team defenders, against the second-team forwards and midfielders.
Sports Briefs
Tennis team sweeps tournament
By a Kansan reporter
The Kansas State Invitational women's tennis tournament turned into an intra-squad match for Kansas Friday and Saturday at Manhattan.
The team from Oral Roberts University didn't make it to the tournament, and Kansas' two other opponents, Drake and Kansas State, offered little resistance to the Jawhaws.
Four of the Jayhawks' singles players, seniors Tracy Treps, Susie Berglund and Marie hibbard played in the third blanked their way through the field
and into the semi-finals.
Instead of having them play each other at Manhattan, Coach Scott Permanel decided to have the team come home and play the tournament out here this week to see how well he played on hard, and Jonsson will play Berglund, with the winners playing for the championship.
The Jayhawks' doubles teams also cruised through the tournament. The teams of Jonsson and Treps and Hibbard and Mindy Melae made it to the finals, which will also be played here this week.
KSU's soccer team beats KU women's club
By a Kansan reporter
Two second-half goals by Kansas State's Gaby Hanek gave the Wildcats a 2-9 victory over the KU women's soccer club yesterday in Manhattan.
The game was a scoreless draw at halftime. Hanek scored her first goal with about 20 minutes to go in the game from a direct kick 30 yards out. KU goal. The ball sailed over the head of KU goaltie Beth Warfield.
defender Liz Roark touched the ball with her hand inside the KU penalty box with about five minutes to go in the game.
"We didn't deserve to win the way we played, but we played well enough to win anyway," KU coach Kevin Conner said.
CITYPARK
The second goal came on a penalty kick by Hanek after KU
STADIUM BARBER SHOP
Conner said the offensive line of wingers Leigh Strom and Pasquale Haunstermann and center back Declan Ridley. He said the team had four one-ones plays with the Wildcats' goalie but failed to score.
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Since January 1987, AT&T's rates have dropped more than 15% for direct-dialed out-of-state calls. So they're lower than you probably realize. For information on specific rates, you can call us at 1 800 222 0300.
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12
Monday, September 21, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
"HOW I MADE $18,000 FOR COLLEGE BY WORKING WEEKENDS."
M.A.S.H
When my friends and I graduated from high school, we all took part-time jobs to pay for college.
They ended up in car washes and hamburger joints, putting in long hours for little pay.
Not me. My job takes just one weekend a month and two weeks a year Yet, I'm earning $18,000 for college.
Because I joined my local Army National Guard.
They're the people who help our state during emergencies like hurricanes and floods. They're also an important part of our country's military defense.
So, since I'm helping them do such an important job,they're helping me make it through school.
As soon as I finished Advanced Training, the Guard gave me a cash bonus of $2,000. Then, under the New GI Bill, I'm getting another $5,000 for tuition and books.
Not to mention my monthly Army Guard paychecks. They'll add up to more than $11,000 over the six years I'm in the Guard.
And if I take out a college loan, the Guard will help me pay it back-up to $1,500 a year, plus interest.
It all adds up to $18,000-or more for college for just a little of my time. And that's a heck of a better deal than any car wash will give you.
THE GUARD CAN HELP PUT YOU THROUGH COLLEGE, TOO. SEE YOUR LOCAL RECRUITER FOR DETAILS, CALL TOLL-FREE 800-638-7600; OR MAIL THIS COUPON.
*In Hawaii: 737-5255; Puerto Rico: 721-4550; Guam: 477-9957; Virgin Islands (St. Croix): 773-6438; New Jersey: 800-452-5794. In Alaska, consult your local phone directory.
c 1985 United States Government as represented by the Secretary of Defense. All rights reserved.
MAIL TO: Army National Guard, P.O. Box 6000, Clifton, NJ 07015
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Americans At Their Best.
Sunshine's so fine
sunny day
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details page 6
Tuesday September 22,1987 Vol.98,No.22
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
U.S. copter attacks Iranian shipplaying mines
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A U.S. military helicopter attacked an Iranian ship in the Persian Gulf yesterday after discovering it laying underwater mines, the White House and Pentagon said.
The White House said the United States, with existing rules of engagement,
The Pentagon said the stern of the Iranian ship "Iran Ajr" was set on fire. The fire was extinguished, but the ship was left dead in the water, said Fred Hoffman, the Pentagon's spokesman.
Marlin Fitzwater, the White House spokesman, said U.S. forces took defensive action when the Iranian ship was discovered laying mines in international waters 50 miles northeast of Bahrain.
The attack was outside an area where Iranian gunboats earlier Monday attacked a British tanker.
Pentagon sources who asked not to be named said the confrontation occurred around 11 p.m. local time in the gulf, or about 4 p.m. EDT.
The incident was the first American military action against Iran since Aug. 8, when a Navy F-14 Tomcat fired fiercely two missiles at an Iranian jet that was judged to be hostile. Both missiles missed. The episode was the closest that the two countries have come to combat since the United States started escorting reflagged Kuwaiti tankers in July.
Hoffman, appearing at a Pentagon briefing onday night, said at least two American helicopters were on the scene. "We were waiting when they spotted the Iranian ship,"
One of the helicopters opened fire with 7.62mm machine guns and 2.75-inch rockets after observing the Iranian ship laying mines.
"The location is in international waters at a spot frequently used by commercial vessels, both those of the United States and other neutral nations." Hoffman said.
He said the attack occurred at night, and the helicopters, using night-vision devices, were able to identify as mines objects being dropped over the side of the Iranian ship.
"Acting under the rules of engagement as ordered by the commander of the Middle East Task Force, the helicopter engaged the Iranian ship, setting its stern ablaze." Hoffman said.
"The fire appears to be out and the
ship is dead in the water. Our ships and aircraft are standing by to render such help as may be needed."
Fitzwater said the United States had previously told the Iranian government the way in which it would respond to provocative acts that presented an immediate risk to U.S. ships and to all ships.
"United States forces acted in a defensive manner and in accordance with existing rules of engagement," Fitzwater said.
The Pentagon sent a memo that only one of the U.S. helicopters opened fire, but Pentagon officials who asked not to be identified said both of the helicopters might have participated in the assault.
See GULF, p. 6, col. 6
Hoffman said the helicopters were
IRAQ 0 150 MILES
KUWAIT Iranian gunboat attacks empty British-flag tanker
Kharg Island
Farsi Island
Ras Tanura
U.S. helicopter fires on Iranian ship
BAHRAIN
Strait of Hormaz
SAUDI ARABIA
QATAR
Persian Gulf
UNITED ARAB EMIRATES
Gulf of Oman
OMAN
Leader lectures at K-State
Knight-Ridder Graphic
Arias Sanchez calls for peace
By VIRGINIA McGRATH
staff writer
MANHATTAN — A cease-fire in Central America is essential if a recently signed peace accord between five Central American nations is to be successful, Costa Rican President Oscar Arias Sanchez said yesterday.
Arias Sanchez spoke to an audience of about 4,800 people at Ahearn Field House at Kansas State University, part of the Landon Lecture Series.
"I think one of the most important points in the agenda is the negotiation of a cease-fire in Nicaragua, as well as El Salvador. Unless we put an end to the war, it will be very difficult to follow the Guatemalan accord," Arias Sanchez said.
Aires Sanchez directed the peace accord, which was signed by Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua, on August 7 in Guatemala City. It calls for democracy, economic development and an end to all hostilities in the region.
Under the accord, all Central American countries and foreign countries must stop aiding rebel forces. The Central American countries, including Nicaragua, must also guarantee amnesty, freedom of the press and political freedom.
Nothing is possible until peace is achieved in the region, Arias Sanchez said.
"This entire effort will be use- less if we permit violence and war to continue throughout Central America."
Arias Sanchez said foreign support of rebel forces in Central America must stop because it only served to destabilize the region and perpetuate economic difficulties.
"We demand that all foreign powers suspend military aid to the irregular forces in the region," Arias Sanchez said.
ine U.S.-backed contra rebels are one of those forces.
"As long as you have the contras, the Sandinistas will be a more dictatorial government," he said.
Arias Sanchez said that U.S. support of the contras isolated the United States. "No other country in Central America supports Washington on that issue," he said.
Arias Sanchez said he hoped that
AUTHORITIES
See LANDON, p. 6, col.
MANHATTAN — Costa Rican president Oscar Arias Sanchez walks with U.S. Secret Service agents to the K-State Union after speaking at
Ahearn Fieldhouse. He spoke at Kansas State University yesterday as part of the Landon Lecture Series. $ ^{1} $
When he returned, he sponsored a letter that was signed by 110
The group met with politicians, educators, ministers, journalists, peasants and contra and military leaders.
Slattery is hopeful peace plan can help in Central America
By a Kansan reporter
MANHATTAN — There is a good chance that Nicaragua won't comply with the Central American peace accord, but it's still a good plan. Rep. Jim Slattery, D-Kan, said yesterday after the speech by Costa Rican President Oscar Arias Sanchez.
"Personally, I have serious concerns whether the Nicaraguan government will adhere to the agreement. But the question is, can we act in defensives? If we don't do this, what are we going to do?" Slattery said.
Slattery traveled with a group to Central America in January.
"I'm guardedly optimistic about the peace accord," he said.
members of Congress. It was submitted to President Reagan in March.
The letter calls for bilateral negotiations between the United States and Nicaragua and an end to all outside military aid.
"If we are really concerned about containing the spread of communism, which we must be, we have to address the dire economic situation in that area," Slattery said.
"As far as I'm concerned, the president and the administration could be much more supportive," he said. "Similarly, the mixed signals right now."
Slattery reiterated Arias Sanchez's point that economic conditions in Central America must be improved.
THE DEATH OF BERNARD L. BURKE
"We can't allow those conditions to continue and expect democracy to exist."
U. S. Rep, Jim Slattery, D-Kan.
Regional officials meet to pick site for nuclear waste
By MARK TILFORD
Staff writer
Representatives of five states, including Kansas, will meet today in Little Rock, Ark., to decide how the location of a regional nuclear waste disposal site will be chosen.
The representatives will indirectly choose a host state and an alternate when they deter
Under a plan developed by U.S. Ecology of Louisville, Ky., Nebraska appears to be the leading candidate, with Kansas running second, said Nebraska state Sen. Sandy Schofield.
ond, said Nebraska's state sen. Sandy Schroemer.
The governors of Oklahoma and Louisiana have vowed they will not accept the site if their states are chosen.
Arkansas also is in the Central Interstate Low Level Radioactive Waste Compact, one of the major nuclear sites.
U. S. Ecology was hired in June by the compact to develop a site proposal and construct the waste disposal site, after more than six years of disagreement among the states.
Under U.S. Ecology's proposal, the criteria considered in determining the host state would be: the amount of radioactive waste produced by each state since 1982, the amount expected to be produced in the future, the percentage of energy that pellets on nuclear power for electricity, and the selection criteria also acknowledges those states that have previously accepted other
states' hazardous waste. Those states would be less likely to get the waste site.
The representatives will determine whether to accept U.S. Ecology's selection plan or change the amount of emphasis placed on each category before a selection is made.
Nebraska has produced the most radicative waste in the past and has accepted none in return. Most of the state depends on nuclear power.
Kansas has produced little nuclear waste in the past. It has one nuclear power plant. Arkansas, Louisiana and Nebraska each have two
Under the proposal, the host state would have the disposal site for 30 years, and a new dump
would then be built in another compact stair. But Schofield said she was skeptical of that
Schofield acknowledged that Nebraska rated high in all categories, although she disagreed with the rating.
"I don't think it makes good sense to presume that the dump will be moved in 30 years."
Kansas and Nebraska are the only states in the compact that submitted a complete geological survey. It is unfair for U.S. Ecology to approve of the geology of both states without knowing about the geology of the other states in the compact, she said.
Housing problem persists 51 students still without rooms
Staff writer
By BEN JOHNSTON Staff writer
And, if spaces don't become available by Thanksgiving, those remaining students might have to seek outside of the residence hall system.
Four weeks into the school year, 51 KU students still are living in temporary housing, and a University housing official cannot predict when or if all the students will be placed in regular rooms.
However, because it is impossible to predict when 51 more students will leave the housing system, it is also impossible to predict when all the tenants now in temporary housing will be a regular room. McElhene said.
Fred McEllenbie, director of residential programs, said 176 students lived in temporary housing at the beginning of the semester but the following week because other students had created vacancies by leaving regular rooms.
See related story p. 6.
"I just haven't the foggies notion when the last student will move out of temporary housing." McEleniain said, "We work on it day by day."
As of Wednesday, the students lived in temporary housing that included the ironing room in Hashingg Hall, meeting space areas in Lewis Hall, the stereo room in Ellsworth Hall, the academic resource center in GSP-Corbin Hall and end rooms in McColum Hall, McEhlene业
He said that even though three wings in McColum Hall had been switched from men's wings to women's wings to accommodate the large number of women who applied to the housing system this year, all 51 students still living in temporary housing were women.
"We gave housing we formerly dedicated to men to women," McElhenie said. "We still found ourselves in an overflow situation.
"Some women couldn't live in their sorority houses until they were older, so they had to stay in the housing apartments and else to go other than an apartment."
For each of the last 10 years, students have had to live in temporary housing because the office of residential programs cannot predict where they will actually need housing at the beginning of the year. McEhlenie said.
"This year, we had a limited number of no-shoes." McEhlenie said. "That reduced the number of spaces available, but not a great deal. We also had people that contracted with us and lived elsewhere."
McEhlene said that after Thanksgiving vacation last year, no students were allowed to stay in temporary housing.
"At Thanksgiving, we needed the temporary housing, so I mandated they move by that date." McElhene said. "We needed the temporary housing for students who cannot go home for the holidays."
The office of residential programs has not decided whether students living in temporary housing will be allowed to break this year, McElhenie said.
If the office does require the students to move, he said, it will not be responsible for finding other housing for them.
---
2
Tuesday, September 22, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Official suggests states lead way in formulating AIDS-related laws
WASHINGTON — The federal government should not bar discrimination against AIDS patients or impose confidentiality requirements even though some state approaches may not work, the Reagan administration said yesterday.
"I'm not ruling out a federal role in this," Health and Human Services Secretary Otis R. Bowen told the House Energy and Commerce subcommittee on health.
Filipinos protest assassination of leftist
But he said states should lead the way in resolving the difficult confidentiality and discrimination questions arising from the AIDS crisis — at least until they prove they're not up to the task.
Subcommittee chairman Henry Waxman, D-Calif., has introduced a bill requiring confidentiality of test results and barring discrimination against those who have AIDS or are infected with the virus.
MANILA, Philippines — Thousands of people demonstrated nationwide yesterday against purported fascist influence in the government and the assassination of a young leftist leader.
President Corazon Aquino, meanwhile, ordered changes in military commands.
In Cebu City, about 350 miles south of Manila, the New Patriotic
Alliance said it held the government responsible for the Saturday shooting of its national secretary-general, Lean Alejandro, because of the government's inability to defend the people.
Noel Tabasa, regional general secretary of the social activist organization, announced a break with the Aquino administration.
Fire. explosion may have sunk Titanic
PARIS — Spokesmen for a salvage expedition that surveyed the wreck of the Titanic said yesterday that an explosion and fire, rather than an iceberg, may have caused the luxury liner to sink.
caused by a blast, said Jacques Montlucon, who is overseeing the preservation of artifacts retrieved from the ship.
That theory arose after divers discovered a hole in the front of the wreck that appeared to have been
"The form of the metal, pushed out rather than in, indicated an explosion, perhaps from a coal fire," Montlucon said.
Razing work begins on Spandau prison
BERLIN — Wrecking crews began tearing down Spondan prison on yesterday, and souvenir hunters were offering $55 for each brick from the huge, sprawling lookup where former Nazi deputy fuerher Rudolf Hess lived alone for 21 years.
Hess, 93, Spandau's sole inmate, hanged himself in the prison yard Aug. 17. Plans call for the prison to be razed and the site turned into a shopping center for British soldiers stationed in West Berlin. The 600-cell structure is in the British-controlled sector of West Berlin.
From The Associated Press.
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Biden admits stretching truth
The Associated Press
Syracuse transcript shows he finished near bottom of class
WASHINGTON — Democratic presidential candidate Joseph Biden admitted yesterday that he was wrong when he boasted at a campaign appearance earlier this year that he had been in the top half of his law school class.
The Delaware senator, his campaion rocked last week by admissions of plagiarism, acknowledged his law school records showed he finished near the bottom of his class at Syracuse University.
He also admitted in a statement released late yesterday that he had made several other errors during a campaign coffee on April 3 in Claremont, N.H. But he also defended some statements in at the same event, which was tapped by GCNAN, the public service cable network.
On the tape, Biden was irritated by persistent questioning about what
law school he attended and how well he did.
"The first year in law school, I decided I didn't want to be in law school and ended up in the bottom two-thirds of my class and then decided I wanted to stay and went back to law school and in fact ended up in the top half of my class," Biden said.
Biden's transcript, which he released at a news conference Thursday, showed he had finished 76th in a law school class of 85.
"I think I have probably have a much higher IQ than you do," he shot back at the questioner.
Biden has been the center of a storm of controversy in the last 10 days about his law school career and his failure to credit others for speech rhetoric he used. He also revealed that he committed plagiarism as a law school freshman in 1965 and took a course over to make up for the
The Legal Times of Washington reported yesterday that Biden's plagiarism at law school leaked out after the former law school dean discussed it at a dinner early this month.
The weekly publication said that Craig Christiansen, dean of the law school until Aug. 15, talked about the incident during a Sept. 4 dinner with three other law school officials.
Christensen later denied he mentioned anything specific in Biden's record.
error.
And Biden also admitted last week he had used parts of other politicians' speeches without credit, but he said those were minor mistakes.
those were in prison.
The tape of Biden was aired April 10 and 12 as part of the network's "Road to the White House" series, C-SPAN spokeswoman Nan Gibson said.
Lawyers question Bork's views
'Judicial temperament' concerns bar association panel
WASHINGTON — American Bar Association lawyers challenging Robert H. Bork's fitness to serve on the Supreme Court are concerned about his comparatively extreme views respecting constitutional principles, ABA officials revealed last night.
The disclosure came at the end of a long day and evening of testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee, during which Bork was attacked by civil rights leaders as a protector of privilege and power. In four former attorneys general as a man of rarely raised legal distinction
The ABA testimony was submitted by Harold R. Tyler, head of the
The Associated Press
association panel that reviewed Bork's record for more than two months. Tyler told the committee that four of the 15 panel members, because of concerns as to Bork's judicial temperament, think he is not qualified.
Tyler said that by judicial temperament the dissenters meant his compassion, open-mindedness, his sensitivity to the rights of women and minority persons or groups, and comparatively extreme views respecting constitutional principles.
Tyler said a fifth member of the panel voted "not opposed" to Bork. He said that according to ABA standards "not opposed" means the candidate is found to be minimally qualified but not the best available
candidate.
candidate.
Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Uahat, attacked the integrity of the four dissenters.
He said they based their opposition to Bork on political reasons because they were allied with liberal causes and organizations that have bitterly opposed Bork.
It was previously disclosed that the panel voted 10-5 in finding Bork well qualified — its highest rating for prospective justices. The large number of negative votes is unusual for a Supreme Court nominee.
Hahn says she wants truth told
Tyler also revealed that one member of the ABA committee expressed reservations about Bork's role in 1973 in obeying President Nixon's orders to fire Archibald Cox as special prosecutor in the Watergate scandal.
The Associated Press
Hahn, a former church secretary,
entered the federal courthouse here
at 9 a.m. and left early in the
afternoon, saying the grand jury
wanted her to return Tuesday for
more testimony.
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — A drained and tired Jessica Hahn testified yesterday before a federal grand jury investigating the PTL ministry, answering questions about her sexual liaison with Jim Bakker and the subsequent payoff that led to the TV evangelist's downfall.
"I'm just really drained and tired," she said during a lunch break. "I want it all to be over. I also want to cooperate."
Hahn said she would do whatever needed to be done while the investigation continues.
She added that she tried to be as truthful as she could in her testimony about a 1980 tryst with Bakker and subsequent payments she received
The sexual encounter occurred in a Florida motel room when Hahn was
The grand jury is looking into allegations of misconduct at PTL, from which Bakker resigned last March after the incident with Hahn was disclosed.
Hahn said she agreed in 1980 to accept $265,000 for her silence but broke the agreement after Bakker mentioned the encounter. The payments stopped after that. Hahn's lawyer, Dominic Barbara, said his client received $20,300 before payments stopped.
Hahn said she posed for semi-nude pictures in Playboy magazine and submitted to an interview with the magazine in order to tell her side of the story. The interview and pictures are due out this week.
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Campus/Area
3
Local Briefs
Commission to vote on plan for bank site
The Lawrence City Commission will take final action tonight on a proposed expansion for Douglas County Bank at Ninth and Kentucky streets. The commission is scheduled to consider the bank's plans to add more parking, a drive-through facility and a new office building.
Bank officials have encountered much opposition from residents who want to preserve the area.
Mike Wildgen, assistant city manager, said the city would hear public comment at the 7 o'clock meeting at City Hall. But he said he thought problems had been worked out.
The commission also will consider authorizing Buford Watson, city manager, to spend an additional $25,000 to continue researching the rezoning of shopping center sites. The planning commission will eventually present its reports for public hearing.
The commission also is expected to schedule an initial meeting for an Eastern Parkway Task Force. The Eastern Parkway is a proposed addition to the proposed South Lawrence Trafficway.
Bus hits bicycle hurting KU student
A KU student was treated and released from Watkins Hospital yesterday after the bicycle she shot struck by a bus, KU police said.
KU police Lt. Leanne Longaker said neither the bus driver nor the bicyclist, Janell Daniщеsche, more, was cited for the accident.
A police report on the incident had not been filed yesterday after noon.
Danitschek said she was riding her bike east along Jayhawk Boulevard in front of Wescoe Hall near the curb when a pedestrian crossing the street suddenly stopped in front of her.
She said she swerved farther into the street to avoid hitting the pedestrian, and a passing bus clipped her left handlebar, knocking her to the ground. She sus- pended ankle and bruised head.
The pedestrian, she said, immediately left the scene.
KU grad Bill Kurtis to speak in Topeka
Bill Kurtis, nationally-known television newsman and 1962 University of Kansas graduate, will deliver a Mennenger Lecture at Washburn University's White Concert Hall at 8 p.m. today. The lecture topic will be, "The Responsibility of Television in the 1980s."
Correction
Because of a reporter's error, the number of vacant Student Senate seats and the number of seats available for freshmen were incorrectly reported in yesterday's Kansas. There are seven vacant Senate seats. One seat is open to an engineering freshman and another is open to a freshman in the college of liberal arts and sciences.
From staff and wire reports.
New probation policy raises GPA standards
By JENNIFER ROWLAND
Some students in the college of liberal arts and sciences will find it harder to make up for low grades in their freshman and sophomore years at the University of Kansas under a new probation policy effective this fall.
Staff writer
Under the new policy, students will be placed on probation if their semester or cumulative grade point averages are below the requirement for their credit hours or if they don't fulfill the continuous enrollment curriculum in math and English.
The new core curriculum requires transfer students with fewer than 25 hours and all freshmen to enroll in English courses their first semester and mathematics by their second semester. They must enroll in these classes in subsequent semesters until they complete the college requirements.
The new probation policy requires a minimum grade point average of:
1.0 for 6 through 14 credit hours.
1.4 for 15 through 29 credit hours.
1 6 for 30 through 44 credit hours
1.6 for 30 through 44 credit hours
1.8 for 45 through 54 credit hours
1.8 for 45 through 99 credit hour
2.0 for 60 or more credit hours
Students who have at least 60 credit hours and a cumulative GPA below 2.0 but have not previously been on probation and have above a 2.0 in their most recent semester will be allowed one semester to raise their grade point to 2.0 before being placed on probation.
The old policy did not include attempted credit hours in grade point averages, but the new policy does and includes failed grades. The grade graded "W" are not included in this average.
Robert Lineberry, college dean, said, "We hope that students early on will become familiar with the requirements for graduation and that you will be able to succeed. You can't wait until your senior year to pick up your
"It permits the student to reach their ultimate goal in smaller steps. And we think that's positive."
The new GPA requirements apply to all students in the college. He said that the early and continuous enrollment in math and English was stressed at summer orientation and that the college was trying to inform students of the new probation policy.
grades, basically.
Lineberry said the policy might have adverse effects on students whose grades fluctuated.
Pam Houston, assistant to the dean for undergraduate services, said faculty and students on the College Assembly and the Committee on Undergraduate Studies and Advising had discussed the policy for about two years before it took effect this fall.
"The messages we are giving students are sometimes unrealistic," she said. "We're saying a 1.5 is acceptable, but we want you to have a 2.0 before you graduate."
"The main impact is that students are going to have to have higher grade point averages past their first year," she said.
Houston said the assembly and the committee passed the policy last spring after considering spring 1986 semester and cumulative grades for students in the college.
Out of 10,697 students in the college in spring 1986, 864 were placed on probation under the old policy. The committee and the assembly estimated that about 30 more students would have been placed on probation under the new policy. Houston said.
"The primary reason for the change was to make it more gradual so the students could build up to it and have some chance at graduating," she said.
She said the college was going to begin the policy last fall but postponed it until the new core curriculum went into effect.
Snack delivery service fights late-night hunger
Bv IULIE McMAHON
Staff writer
It's 11 p.m., and it looks like another late night of study. Hunger pangs have just hit, but the vending machine is broken, and the car's in the shop. What can hungry hall residents do?
They can have a snack delivered to their residence hall by Nibbles, a new study snack delivery service that delivers candy, cookies and other things.
And starting Monday, Nibbles will deliver items from I Can't Believe It's Yogurt, T.J. Cinnamon's, Bucky's and Joe's Bakery.
"Our target now is dorms until we work out the kinks, if there are any. Then we'll start on fraternities and sororities." Beth O'Neill, proprietor of Nibbles, said.
She and her husband, Charlie O'Neill, run Nibbles from their Lawrence home. Neighbors are on call to help deliver the various snacks. They pack baked egg yodas, berry bars, gum, unpacked popcorn and cookies.
"Also, we're going to introduce homemade stuff once in a while until we run out. We call it a 'dumpling'."
Homemade goods are browns, gingerbread and cookies made from the recipe of Mrs. Fields', a national cookie chain. Nibbles will be served at an at time until it is gone, then offer another.
"We're workingwith a baker right now to develop what I call 'wonderful finger foods' recipes." she said.
This is the first semester that Nibbles has been open, and many customers are curious about the service.
"Most of what people are doing is calling to find out what we have and what we are," she said. "We've already had some repeat customers."
O'Neill said she was aiming for students in residence halls who didn't have kitchens or cars, and didn't want to interrupt their studies.
Favorite items are things such as frozen Snickers bars because they're unusual. Unusual things sell best, O'Neill said.
"A lot of times people are sick of vending machines, or the machines are sold-out or they're broken," she said.
"They're not something you can get by running downstairs or going to Dillon" to buy "sure."
Because Nibbles focuses on students in KU residence halls, it will be open only on days that the residence halls are open and from 6 p.m. to midnight. But it may expand its hours during finals. Nibbles only accepts cash, and orders must be of $3 or more.
Mike Toller
The hard way
Robert Phelps, Leavenworth sophomore, snares a frisbee. Phelps was playing in front of Strong
"fall yesterday."
Hearing postponed for man accused of murdering wife
By a Kansan reporter
The preliminary hearing for Carl L. Kemp, 40, was postponed yesterday until 9:30 a.m. Oct. 14, Douglas County District Attorney Jim Florv said.
Flory said the hearing was postponed because Kemp's lawyer had requested more time to prepare his case and because a second-degree charge has been increased to a charge of first-degree murder.
Kemp was to appear in Douglas County District Court yesterday for a second-degree murder charge in the death of his 32-year-old
wife, Judy Kemp. Lawrence police found Judy Kemp on Sept. 9 in a box in a shed next to the coule's mobile home. 101 Michigan St.
Flory said he had received additional evidence since the original charge was filed. A first-degree charge denotes premeditation of an offence, which requires intent to kill, but no forethought. Flory said.
"After receiving additional information, I felt the first-agree charge was appropriate. Floridian."
Kemp is being held in the Douglas County
Jail in lieu of $150,000 bond.
Photocopiers using credit-type cards, not coins
Staff writer
By MICHAEL MERSCHEL Staff writer
Making a stack of photocopies on campus no longer means carrying a sack full of change, thanks to new materials like the credit-type cards instead of coins.
The photocopiers are in the Law School library and at the Wescoe Duplicating Center on the first floor of Wescoe Hall.
Nancy Jaeger, assistant to the
For the photocopier in Wesco, disposable cards good for $5, $10 or $20 worth of photocopies can be purchased at the duplicating center office for the cost of the photocopies plus sales tax.
dean of libraries, said the library was accepting bids for new public-use photocopiers at all the libraries on campus, but details about the photocopiers wouldn't be available until later this month.
The cards have magnetic strips that keep track of how many photocopies can be made.
Sue Beton, supervisor of the center, said even though photocopies cost 10 cents each on the machine, they were not as cheap since they were first sold in July.
Betow said she thought customers liked the machine because it could copy on different kinds of paper, and they could use it after the duplicating
center closed.
Greg Roller, Lawrence junior, said he liked the machine even though it couldn't reduce or enlarge and even though the cards couldn't be reused once they expired. He said their convenience had prompted him to make more photocopies than ever.
"It saves a lot of time," he said.
"You don't have to fish for your change."
operate on charge cards, but they are different from the ones at Wesco.
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Law library patrons can purchase plastic cards for $1 and pay for up to $99.85 worth of copies in advance on the website www.library.ca. Law library assistant at the law library.
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Tuesday, September 22, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Pins and needles
Children play in puddles, fields, parks, and woods. Everything is fun and games to them.
And a recent incident revealed that some children play in dumpsters.
Since children don't understand danger, adults have the responsibility to protect them.
Unfortunately, no one was watching two boys, ages 6 and 7,
when they were outside playing darts with used syringes.
Hospital officials have said that they seal hypodermic needles in containers and dispose of them in a dumpster. Since the incident, officials have replaced their topless dumpster with two dumpsters with lids. And the hospital is taking further precautions. For example, officials will keep the needles in the building until the truck arrives to collect the trash.
The safety measures are good, but a solution to the problem would be even better. The solution lies with a broken incinerator inside the hospital. The hospital disposed of needles and syringes in an incinerator until it broke down in June.
The incinerator should be fixed immediately, and then no one, child or adult, will run the risk of coming into contact with contaminated blood.
To be or not to be
The Bard will be on trial Friday, and it's much ado about nothing.
Three U.S. Supreme Court justices will decide in a mock court case whether Shakespeare actually wrote the words attributed to him.
It does not matter whether the masterful writing was crafted by Shakespeare or by someone else.
by Shakespeare's is by Shakespeare's. Through the years, credit for works known as Shakespeare's has been attributed to authors from Francis Bacon to Christopher Marlowe.
This time, Charles Francis Topham de Vere Beauclerk, a 22-year-old undergraduate at Oxford University, argues that his ancestor Edward de Vere, the 17th Earl of Oxford, wrote the words. Vere says Shakespeare was paid to pose as the author because writing plays was not suitable for an earl.
The debate is academic, and its solution will not solve anything. No matter whether the writer was born in 1564 and pursued an acting career or was born in 1550 and led the life of an earl or did neither, the works are masterpieces.
But meanwhile, the trial is scheduled at the Metropolitan Memorial United Methodist Church in Washington, D.C., and two professors from American University's college of law will make the arguments.
The participants and those who watch should keep one thing in mind:
"What's in a name? That which we call a rose by another name would smell as sweet."
Righting wrongs
It was a move that Americans should be ashamed of.
In 1942, the U.S. government plucked thousands of people of Japanese ancestry from their homes and dumped them in detention camps.
Officials feared that the Japanese were spies for Tokyo.
Last week, the House began a long-overdue effort to compensate the internees. It passed the Civil Liberties Act, which would apologize for the interment program and authorize $1.2 billion for payments of $20,000 each to people whom the program moved, confined or otherwise deprived of liberty or property.
The act also designates $50 million for educational programs dealing with the interment.
It wasn't.
The opportunity to right a wrong should be embraced by government officials.
The House vote was split 243-141. And although the Senate is expected to pass the act this week, the Office of Management and Budget has said it would recommend that President Ronald Reagan veto the act for budgetary reasons.
Reagan should ignore that advice and do what's right.
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board
News staff
Jennifer Benjamin ... Editor
Jul Warren ... Managing editor
John Benner ... News editor
Beth Copeland ... Editorial editor
Sally Streff ... Campus editor
Brian Kabertle ... Sports editor
Dan Ruddellmann ... Photo editor
Bill Sket ... Graphics editor
Tom Eblen ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Bonnie J. Hardy...Business manager
Robert Hughes...Advertising manager
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JMBORGMAN CARNITENCHVIRGEE 2007
SHE'S QUITE AN ASSET TO THE CAMPAIGN...
HE'S QUITE AN ASSET TO THE CAMPAIGN...
1988★
DOLE FOR SIDENT DOLE DENT DOI
Charitable conversations overheard
During Greek Week, as I sat waiting for the bus in front of Bailey Hall, I observed two students, a male and a female, with white buckets full of money.
The sun was out, but a cool breeze made it the kind of day that makes people love Kansas weather. I overheard some people talking about starting the weekend early. Sounded good to me. I lazily looked through the paper, wishing I was going to read a novel. A bus approached the stop, so I looked up.
Two students were walking down the sidewalk toward the pair with the white buckets. They looked away, trying to avoid being approached. Undaunted, the woman stepped in front of them and smilingly asked whether they would like to make a small donation for the needy children of Lawrence. The students still didn't look at her and kent moving.
"Come on, it will make you feel better," she said, still smiling.
The two mumbled something, fished around in their pockets for a while and then plunked a few coins into the bucket. The female grinned at her partner and thanked the two students.
Across the street, a large group of students had gathered on the lawn. Some played Twister, ping pong and human checkers, while others took turns chasing each other in a game. Students carried more of the white buckets.
---
Jerri
Niebaum
Staff Columnist
Everyone seemed to be having a good time.
I watched the party until my gaze was brought back to my side of the street by a man who approached the pair and their buckets.
"Would you like to make a small donation for the needy children of Lawrence?" the woman asked him.
he told her that he contributed directly to charities. The man nodded and said that was cool. But the woman was more persistent.
"We're playing Twister for 48 hours," she informed him.
He smiled and continued on his way.
He shimmered and combed his hair. Later, a young man approached the pair. Clad in genuinely faded jeans, a T-shirt that was thin with wear and a ragged pair of tennis shoes, he looked like an unlikely contributor. They asked him anyway.
"We're playing Twister for 48 hours to raise money for the needy children of Lawrence. Would you like to make a small donation?"
"I am a needy child of Lawrence," he replied.
The man solicitor looked at the young man's
The young man looked at his shoes. "These are going on two years," he said, then turned and left.
going on two years, 'ne said, then darren and tert.
After he left, the male turned to his partner.
He turned to me, and put his shoes he could be a needy child of Lawrence, too,
he laughed. The two glared at the young man's disappearing figure. Some people just didn't care about other people.
The woman looked down the sidewalk and saw a friend. He would contribute, she said. He was cool. She ran down the sidewalk toward him.
"We're playing Twister for 48 hours to raise money for the needy children of Lawrence," she told her friend. The two laughed.
The friend was having a party that weekend and invited her. "Call me," she said, then remembered that she wouldn't be home to take the call. "I won't be home tonight. I'll be at
The two talked for a few more minutes, set a time that he could call her and parted. As she walked away, she called to her friend, "Thank-you for the 6 cents. That will really help."
Jerri Niebaum is a Lawrence senior majoring in journalism
The joy of giving.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAIL BOX
If so, I disagree.
Bigotry plaques society
I applaud the efforts of the University Daily Kansan to characterize the problems of black and white relations at the University of Kansas. This week's "Tuesday Forum" was provocative because it recognized both groups' frustration and allowed each to voice that frustration.
my primary problem with this "Tuesday Forum" stems from its inability to recognize KU as commonplace in terms of this conflict. The problems that arise here at KU are not unique to universities in the United States, nor are they unique to universities.
However, the first step in solving any problem is recognizing that the problem exists. I am confident that if we as a society are determined to fight all forms of discrimination, KU and the United States will benefit.
Am I to understand from the "Quacks" article in the Sept. 16 issue of the Kansan that those believe in angels or ESP are, in Professor Hudson's opinion, quacks?
Narrow-minded professor
As a society, we can no longer allow the ignorance that leads to segregation and hatred to dominate our thinking. Isolated efforts are not enough; attitudes must change. Further, in order to make strides toward changing these attitudes, we can no longer view racial problems as black and white. It is sad to say, but all racial groups, as well as women and many religious groups, experience bigotry and frustration. We should be empathetic to any victim of discrimination or segregation, regardless of its foundation.
Michael Diggs, Wichita junior
Empiricism is an important way to look at life, but it is not the only way.
Mark Jost, Lawrence graduate student
Arafat's voice
Since September 1975, the efforts of Henry Kissinger, the U.S. has refused to listen to negotiations for the Palestinians from Yasser Arafat and the Palestine Liberation Organization until they accept United Nations Resolution 333 and acknowledge Israel's right to exist.
I find it somewhat mystifying that the Reagan administration can consider Iran's Rafsanjani a "moderate," yet it won't recognize Yasser Arafat. It is further disheartenting because there are other groups who distrust the distinction between the terrorist Abu Nidal and the PLO — of which Nidal is not a member.
Let's not forget that "Palestinians have human rights, too." And the Palestinian identity is an innate characteristic that will not disappear as it is passed from fathers to sons. The Palestinian Arab people have the legal right to their homeland, and whether or not others support the Palestinians as I do, it is time that we get to hear the voice on the other side of the Palestine . . . that of their fine leader Yasser Arafat.
Israel constantly gets away with twisting arms whenever negotiations are mentioned with Arafat because they, the Israelis, have successfully seduced key figures in our nation's administration into seeing Israelis as the great martyrs of the "Promised Land" at the mercy of the "terrorist" Palestinians, who act on the whim of Yasser Arafat.
Zeta Mattioni, Tulsa, Okla., junior
Perseverance
Dan Houston's article on Sept. 15 is clearly mistaken. He is blind to obvious problems in our society and distorts leadership's role in the African American community.
The serious problems dividing Americans are poor enforcement of voting rights, economic discrimination (particularly hiring practices) and still unequal cultural acceptance.
There are no "all-black social events" on this campus. Denying any student access to a campus social event violates University code. If your students choose not to attend, that is their choice.
This University may now be less prejudiced and more eager to welcome African Americans. The situation is still more close to atrocious than acceptable. Racism and cultural ignorance abound on this campus and in this country. African American students have studied white culture from kindergarten through college. Meanwhile, white students have overlooked the heritage of African American society. How can you respect a culture you don't even know?
To assimilate cultural values would be suicidal for African American culture. I am in a fraternity, Phi Beta Sigma. I know that Greeklettered organizations have provided a cultural base for African-American students for decades. We have been a significant source of leadership for our communities, nations and world. Unanimously, public service is our purpose. C and Panhellenic are "social" organisms, but not political. Public service includes, but is more than just, philanthropy. Our cultural values often lead us to be politically active in social change. Our counterparts obviously are not. Our organizations integrated membership decades ago.
African American culture has survived four centuries of institutionalized terrorism (slavery) and systematic degradation in this land. Yet, we persevere. I maintain we should preface and propel African American culture whether white students are comfortable with it or not.
Cedric L. McCay, Kansas City, Mo., senior
BLOOM COUNTY
VIRTUALLY SCRIPTLESS
OUR PROTAGONIST WANDER'S
THE WILDERNESS OF THE
AMERICAN LANDSCAPE ...
GASP.
GASP.
9-22 1974/10/31
NO STORY. NO DIALOGUE...
NO ISSUES... NO THEMES...
WATER...
bv Berke Breathed
HE'S COMPLETELY WITHOUT DIRECTION ...
AUGH...
HE IS NOT, HOWEVER.
WITHOUT HIS NEEDLE: SHARP
INSTINCTS FOR A SNAPPY
METAPHOR...
BOY! I FEEL
LIKE THE
DEMOCRATIC
PARTY!
---
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, September 22, 1987
5
Tuesday Forum
Professor researches antiquity Spencer Library a wealth of rare manuscripts, books, maps
THE MUSICIAN
James Larson/KANSAN
David M. Bergeron, professor of English, studies the Francis Bacon manuscript discovered recently at the Kenneth Spencer Research Library. The library houses about 185,000 books dating from A.D. 1455 and about 250,000 manuscripts dating from 2000 B.C.
An unexpected call from Ann Hyde, curator of manuscripts of the Kenneth Spencer Research Library, alerted me to a hitherto unknown (at least to me) Francis Bacon (1561-1625) manuscript in the local collection. What triggered the new multi-vOLUME, complete edition of Bacon's works to be published by Cambridge University Press.
The Sotheby Family Collection in the Department of Special Collections, Spencer Library, contains a scribal transcription of several Elizabethan and Jacobaean items, including letters and poems. But the brief Bacon prose work, titled A direccion for the reading of manuscripts with profit," has obviously been be editing it for the new Bacon edition by transcribing it from the 17th-century handwriting, commenting on its meaning and trying to place it (even date) it within the context of Bacon's writings.
He was also a major political figure, serving as attorney general and eventually as king chancellor of England during the reign of James I. Unfortunately, his acceptance of bribes led to his resignation and disgrace. Perhaps he should have paid more attention to his own essay "Of Great Place," which warns government officials about corruption.
Bacon, sometimes falsely thought to have written Shakespeare's plays, primarily wrote prose and often manifested an interest in history. As a writer, he is best known for his essays, a revised version of them published in 1625.
Or. he might have heeded his ideas in the brief item found in the Spencer Library, in which Bacon indicated that a means of understanding history involved noting the vices and virtues of a people, "the natures and affections which are wrongly in men by their nature of life." He knows whereof he speaks.
Reading the Bacon manuscript in the comfortable surroundings of the Spencer Library reminded me anew of this extraordinary asset that is available to faculty and students here. This library has several parts, though I am most familiar with the
Special Collections (rare books and manuscripts) and Government Documents. (!have been known to sneak a glance at the University budget in the Archives division on the fourth floor.)
The library's greatest strength in British literature and history lies in the 18th century, and yet it contains more than 300 different volumes printed in England between 1485 and 1640. The Joyce and Yeats collections are outstanding; they include personal letters. But the library's holdings touch virtually all disciplines, the sciences as well as the humanities.
My current research on the family of King James I of England has been
aided greatly by resources in Spencer, such as the beautiful 1616 edition of James's works and several contemporary accounts of him. In a word, the library can immeasurably aid research of various kinds; it is open to anyone who needs its resources, especially students.
The life of the research scholar often takes him into strange libraries and archives and forces him to acquire skills (for example, paleographical ones) that he knew little about. Such has been my own path. And it has been a path of joy, of making discoveries, of tackling seemingly insurmountable difficulties, of pushing harder my own
understanding and eventually of sharing this gained knowledge through publication and teaching. Two ingredients remain essential: curiosity and discipline, which enable a scholarly quest. One superb resource for acquiring knowledge on this campus is the Spencer Library, a place brimming with maps, books, manuscripts and illustrations. Francis Bacon would have found it a great place to learn about history and life.
David M. Bergeron is a professor of English and recipient of the Balfour Jeffrey research award, one of four Higuchi research awards given in 1987 at convocation.
Inside Spencer
James Helyar, curator in graphics at the Kenneth Spencer Research Library, stands in the library's ambulatory, which displays a smattering of works within the department of special collections. The library also houses the Kansas Collection, University Archives and is a depository for federal documents.
James Larson/KANSAN
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Something's still not quite right, LeVar...Take it again from "And they call the wind 'Murray.'"
Songwriters of the Old West
Kansan Fact: KU Students Spend Over $4 Million A Month On Miscellaneous Expenses!!!
Sub&stuff
Sandwich Shop
5 p.m.-Midnight
We Deliver!
841-DELI
Video Player
Four Movies
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DAILY 7:10, 9:45
Sat. Sun 2:00, 4:30
Fatal ATTENTION
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THE AMSTERDAM GUITAR TRIO
Give yourself a Dutch Treat!
A trio of talent is coming to entertain you
Presented by The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Chamber Music Series
8:00 p.m. Thursday, October 1, 1987 Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reserved/For reservations call 913/864-3982
Public: $11 & $9; KU & K-12
Students: $5.50 & $4.50;
Senior Citizens and Other Students: $10 & $8
Funded in part by the KU Student Activity Fee, Swarthout Society and the KU Endowment Association
HALF PRICE FOR KU STUDENTS
SUA SPECIAL EVENTS and KJHK Present
Hoodoo
guru
Sunday, October 4, 8 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom $9 with KUID, $10 Public
Tickets on sale now at the SUA Box Office all CATS outlets, Mother Earth and Budget Tapes and Records in Topeka, and UPC at K-State.
6
Tuesday, September 22, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Homeowners say drainage hindered by Colony Woods
By VALORE ARMSTRONG Staff writer
Staff writer
Continued development north of the Naismith Valley has concerned homeowners in the valley for years, but Colony Woods apartments, 1301 W. 24th St., has only worsened the problem, homeowners said recently.
Jeanne Ellermeier, 2925 Arkansas St., spoke at last week's City Commission meeting on behalf of many owners of property near Naismith Stream, which runs south from camper trailhead. The property owners are concerned that Colony Woods may aggravate the area's tendency to flood.
"We have appeared before the commission so much that I'm sure they really don't care to see us again, but we will continue," Ellermeier said Monday.
David Gunter, city planner, presented an amended site plan at the meeting for the parking lot additions already completed at the south and east ends of Colony Woods. He said that the spaces along the east drive boundary to the 100 year flood zone needed and that a permit was needed.
Ellermeier, a 23-year native of the area, said that very wet seasons, usually called 100-year floods because they affect most areas infrequently, hit the Indian Hills Neighborhood Association area every few
years. She said she'd seen cars and pianos floating after repeated hard rains.
"We have yet to see what affect the whole development will have," Ellermeier said. "You have to have a really wet season to see the prob-
The city planning department is determining the effect of the additional paved area on the Naismith Stream.
City Commissioner Dennis Constand said the paved surface of new parking spaces at the complex would put even more strain on the stream than did the original high-density development. He said the new pavement might cause more erosion to its banks because of run-off.
Constance also said that if a requested chronology of events determined that Colony Woods officials had known they needed city approval but constructed the additional lots anyway, he would be less sympathetic toward the complex.
"Frankly, I'm not inclined to be accommodating to someone who violated our rules." Constance said.
The city had originally zoned the entire area as a flood plain, Ellermeier said, but recently lifted that restriction in order to qualify for a federal flood insurance program. The city now allows development as long as water detention measures are
included in each development plan reviewed by the city.
Ann Bakerink, president of the neighborhood association, said, "We realize that development may be a good thing, but if it creates problems for the residents who have lived here a long time, that's a concern."
City Commissioner Mike Rundle said yesterday that he was concerned that the commission had not dealt with such high density developments as forcefully as it should have.
Rundle said the Colony Woods site plan had met all the building requirements.
Nancy Shontz, former city commissioner, also exaggered concern last Tuesday about Colony Woods' effect on drainage.
"I think that the development is too intense for that particular area," Shontz said Monday. "It creates too much building and asphalt. All the water hits the building and parking lot and goes right into the stream."
The Naismith Stream runs along the east side of the complex. As more ground to the north up to the University, the stream must carry more and more run-off.
"If there's a good rain, I wouldn't be surprised if cars are washed off the parking lot and into the stream," Shontz said.
Nursing school enrollment drops
By AMBER STENGER
Staff writer
KANSAS CITY, Kan. - The University of Kansas Medical Center is having trouble attracting nursing students and keeping the nurses in trains, hospital officials said yesterday.
The number of students actually enrolled in the nursing school has decreased by 22 percent since 1983, said Rita Clifford, assistant dean and director of student affairs at the school of nursing. She said applications also had decreased by 22 percent.
Enrollment problems have been aggravated by the Med Center's difficulty in keeping nurses after they have worked at the Med Center for about two years. Often, nurses are attracted to better-paying positions at private hospitals.
"Our entry level salaries are competitive, but our merit increases aren't competitive after a nurse has been here for about two years," said Eugene Staples, director of hospital administration at the Med Center. "It is easy to draw that nurse away from us for a higher salary."
Mary Anne Eisenbise, director of nursing services and associate director of the hospital, said that one hospital in the Kansas City area paid nurses almost $55 an hour on weekends but that the Med Center only paid from $15 to $20 an hour on weekends.
The starting salary for nurses is
$21,786 plus there are
thirty-seven days of 347 full-time
employment.
"We have about the same number of registered nurses on duty today as we had this time last year," Stapais said. "But we've increased the staff by 21 positions, and the new positions remain unfilled."
Getting salary increases approved,
however, is a lengthy process.
"If we think our salaries are unreasonable or unfair, we have to make a petition to the state personnel department in Topeka," Staples said. "If they think we are right, we have to ask the Regents and the Legislature for more money."
But even if salary increases were applied, their results probably would increase their salaries.
increase theirs," Staples said. "So, it is not an easy task getting ours up to par."
"Once we set our reimbursement rate, the private hospitals simply
Staples said he had asked the hospital personnel department to study possible salary increase proposals. Staples and Eisenbise said a severe shortage of nurses could occur in three or four years.
But even though the Med Center is having difficulty retaining nurses now, the quality of care has not suffered. Staples said.
"I applaud that and would not change that for the world. But it has affected us in a negative way because we are seen as a 'woman's profession.'" she said.
Clifford the increase in career opportunities for women was one of the biggest changes.
Staples said another reason fewer people were entering the nursing profession was that they were often on work irregular hours and on weekends.
From the KU Weather Service
Lawrence Forecast
TODAY
Blue skies
HIGH: 74°
LOW: 47°
Mostly sunny and pleasant as the high reaches the low to mid-70s overnight. Overnight lows will be in the mid-40s.
5-DAY
WED
Sunny
76/48
HIGH
LOW
THR
Partly sunny
77/51
FRI
Mostly sunny
70/46
SAT
Partly sunny
72/42
SUN
Partly sunny
72/49
North Platte
77/41
Sunny
Omaha
73/47
Partly sunny
Rain F-Storms Snow Flurries Ice
Goodland
76/44
Mostly sunny
Hays
75/45
Sunny
Salina
75/49
Sunny
Topeka
74/47
Sunny
Dodge City
76/51
Sunny
Wichita
77/51
Mostly sunny
Chanute
78/51
Sunny
Kansas City
72/48
Mostly sunny
Columbia
70/49
Partly sunny
St. Louis
68/53
Mostly cloudy
Springfield
74/48
Mostly sunny
Forecast by John Dolusic.
Temperatures are today's high and tonight's overnight low.
Conditions are forecasted for this afternoon.
Tulsa
79/52
Partly sunny
WEATHER
Senators to receive letters from local Bork opponents
By MICHAEL HORAK
Staff writer
About 300 letters written by KU students who oppose the nomination of Robert Bork to the U.S. Supreme Court, filed on February 1 of officeful of nprvl U.S. Senators today.
The letters were sent Friday after the Lawrence and KU chapters of the National Organization for Women in front of Kansas Union in front of the Kansas Union.
They collected more letters in downtown Lawrence on Saturday. Members of the campus NOW group will accept letters opposing Bork's nomination until 3 p.m. today. They will have a table and volunteers inside the Kansas Union with literature about the nominee.
NOW is a national women's rights group that has fought against Bork's nomination since it was announced this summer by President Reagan.
Pam Skarda, president of the campus chapter, said student reaction to the letter-writing campaign had been very positive.
"Of all the people we talked to, only about three said they supported Bork," said Skarda, Omaha, Neb., junior. "The rest opposed his nomination."
Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan., and the four senators on the Senate
Judiciary Committee who remain undecided about Bork were targeted in the letter-writing campaign. Students from states other than Kansas were encouraged to write to their state's senators.
Skarda said that Kassebaum, who publicly supports Bork, could be a sway vote. Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan., was not targeted because he strongly supports Bork, Skarda said.
KU students who wrote letters Friday were given a sample letter and literature about Bork's stand on issues. Skarda said the literature they distributed came from sources other than KU. She also taught Through this literature, Skarda said NOW showed how Bork would hurt women and minority rights.
"To send something to Dole would
definitely be a 22 cent loss," she said.
Skarda said NOW stressed Bork's opposition to abortion, affirmative action, gay rights and civil rights issues.
She said the letters that had already been written varied from a few lines on a postcard to three-page letters. She said the group got an equal response from male and female students.
Jill Jordan, Lawrence special student, has been helping with NOW's letter-writing campaign. She said the thought of having Bork sit on the
Arias Sanchez is scheduled to speak to members of Congress on the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives today. He will speak to the United Nations General Assembly tomorrow and will receive an honorary degree from Harvard University on Thursday.
"I think young women my age are enjoying many of the fruits won by activists of women's rights without understanding how hard those rights were to win," Jordan said. She said Senate approval of Bork could jeopardize those hard-won rights.
nation's highest court scared her
Both Jordan and Skarda predicted that the letters opposing Bork would have some effect on the senators who received them.
President Reagan would not ask Congress to allocate more money to the contrast until after Nov. 7, the date the peace plan is to take effect.
Landon
"It's hard to say exactly what effect the letters will have, with but a hot issue like Bork, I'd say, yes it will," Skarda said. "Senators feel obligated to look at what their constituents say."
Larry Shaiman, Kassebaum's press secretary, said yesterday that his office had received about 2,000 letters concerning Bork's nomination. He said letters were running more in favor of Bork than against him, but the difference between the two was not overwhelming.
"Letters are one of many factors, but she will also base her decision on his past record and what she personally knows about him," he said.
"In practice, however, Central America is not receiving sufficient preferential treatment," he said.
"We deserve a chance not to be opposed until the 7th of November. That is precisely what I have asked the president. Until that date, he should give it a chance," he said.
But the Reagan administration has already announced that it will seek more aid for the contras before Nov. 7.
"A democratic government is the only road to lead us out of poverty, dependence and war. Young democracies should be granted preferential terms of international trade and external debt relief.
Continued from p.1
Arias Sanchez said economic problems were at the root of many of the political problems in the country. Arias Sanchez's critics should be given special care.
Skarda said NOW's campus chapter would continue to ask students to write letters against Bork until the final vote on his nomination was taken.
UNIVERSITY MIDDLEGATS
PEDRO RICO
MANHATTAN — About 4,800 people listen to Costa Rican president Oscar Arias Sanchez at Alhearn Fieldhouse. The president spoke about his plans for peace in Central America. Inset, Arias answers questions from the press before the lecture.
Gulf
Continued from p. 1
about 15 miles from the Jarrett when they observed the activities of the Iranian vessel. It was only after the air crews were sure that the ship was dropping mines over its side that the crews asked for and received permission from Rear Adm. Harold Bernsen to open fire, the spokesman said. Bernsen is the commander of the Navy's Middle East Force, the Navy battle group that operates inside the Persian Gulf.
"It wasn't a snap judgment," Hoffman added.
Hoffman declined to identify what type of American helicopter mounted the attack, but it appeared that the aircraft was a specially equipped Army copter assigned to the Special Operations aviation unit has been in the Persian Gulf to augment the firepower on U.S. Navy warships.
Hoffman also declined to say how many American helicopters were in the air, beyond saying it was more than one. The Jarrett is thought capable, however, of supporting only two helicopters.
Hoffman said he did not know of any Iranian casualties.
Earlier yesterday, President Reagan confronted Iran at the United Nations with a demand that it clearly and unequivocally accept a ceasefire in its Persian Gulf war with Iraq or face a worldwide arms embargo spearheaded by the United States.
On Campus
■ An affirmative action workshop,
“Preventing Sexual Harassment,” is scheduled for 10 a.m. today at the Rine Room in the Kansas Union.
Kansas Union.
■ The University Senate Executive Committee will meet at 4:30 p.m. today in 231 Strong Hall. Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for academic affairs, will be at the meeting to discuss the proposed University-wide core curriculum.
Troyau and practice for the KU Men's Soccer Club are scheduled for 5 p.m. today at Shenk Complex, 23rd and Iowa streets.
The Hispanic-American Leadership Organization meeting is sche
Student leaves temporary room
Pine Room in the Kansas Union
French Table is scheduled for
11:30 a.m. today at Parlor C in the
Kansas Union
duled for 6:30 p.m. today at the International Room in the Kansas Union.
A College Republican's meeting is scheduled for 7 p.m. today at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union Room. In Winter Jr.-Lawrence, will speak.
■ "Mental Health Issues for Women in the '80s," a workshop by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, is scheduled for 7 p.m. today at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
■ The first meeting of KU Students Against Hunger is scheduled for 7 p.m. today at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union.
- "The Predicate Structure of Saramacan, a linguistics colloquy by Mervyn Alleyne, University of the
West Indies, is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. today at 207 Blake Hall.
Cellist Yo-Yo Yea will perform at 8 p.m. today at Hoch Auditorium. Tickets are on sale at the Murphy Hall Box Office.
Several Student Senate committees will meet tonight. The University Affairs Committee will meet at 6 p.m. at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. All other meetings will be in the Kansas Union: the Student Rights Committee will meet at 6:15 p.m. in the East Gallery; the Elections Committee will meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room; and the Finance Committee will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Kansas Room.
Living in temporary housing was like being in limbo, according to Christine Kohls.
By SUSAN D. HARPER Special to the Kansan
Kohls, Liberty, Mo., sophomore, was assigned a temporary residence hall room at Lewis Hall because she turned in her contract to the office of residential programs Aug. 11, more than three months after it was due.
"I didn't have the money to turn in my contract until late," Kohls said. She said she was notified a week and a half before she moved into Lewis that she was assigned a temporary room.
1068. She was not happy with the arrangements. Kohls hoped to live in Lewis this year, as she did last year.
"Why do they take more contracts than they have rooms for?" Kohl's asked. She said temporary rooms are usually more comfortable, feel unsettled and uncomfortable.
Kohl's was put in the fireplace room on the first floor of Lewis with five
The office of residential programs takes more contracts than it has space for with the understanding that those students know they will be in temporary housing, said Sammie Messick, office manager. The office manages students in permanent rooms when cancellations and noshow occurs.
"We just didn't have as many cancellations nd no-shows this year as we have had in the past," Messick said.
There were racks to hang clothes on, Kohls said, but there were so many things around them that the couple decided to live out of their sullices.
other women. The room has a television and living space but no drawer space. And a pool table and planter are placed into a corner, next to the fireplace.
As far as security, there was a dead-bottle to on the door and thin cloth covering it.
The women constantly wondered when they would be moved, Kohls said. They were not comfortable, because they were not in a permanent place.
---
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, September 22, 1987
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Tuesday, September 22, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Police still looking for driver-assailant
By JAVAN OWENS
Staff writer
Lawrence police are still searching for the driver of a car involved in a possible aggravated battery against a KU student early Sunday morning at the Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity house, 1911 Stewart Ave., police spokesman Sgt. Don Dalques said.
Scott Moore, Overland Park senior, was in good condition at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, a spokesman said yesterday. He was admitted to the hospital about 1:30 a.m. Sunday for head injuries he suffered after an apparent altercation with four men in a car that night.
According to the police report, a 1978 or 1979 yellow Camaro Z-28 followed the double-driver bus that stopped them. The carers home from a party to the house.
Fraternity member Glenn Martin, Birmingham, Ala., junior, said Sunday that he could not identify the four passengers in the car but that he was certain they were high school age.
The car stopped next to the bus at
the fraternity, which is on private property, members said. Fraternity members surrounded the car, according to the police report. House members exchanged words with the car passengers.
But Moore said yesterday that he was not involved in the altercation that led to his getting hit by the car.
Moore said he got off the bus and walked around the front of the car. Then the driver accelerated. Moore said the hood of the car to avoid getting hit.
"I tried to take the lesser of two evils," Moore said. "All I can remember is seeing the driver's face while I was riding on a road."
As the driver turned east on 19th Street, Moore was flung off the hood of the car. The car then headed east down 19th Street, the police report said. It reported that members could distinguish a "DG" on the Kansas license plate.
Picture could reveal dead man's identity
By a Kansan reporter
The San Miguel, Colo., County Sheriff's office has released this picture of the man sheriff's deputies in a raid on the home. [not waterful] near Telluride, Colo.
The man told people he met in Colorado that he was an art student named Eric from the University of Kansas.
The picture was taken with a video camera before the Grateful Dead concert Aug. 16 in Telluride.
San Miguel County Sheriff Bill Masters said his office still had no leads that directly linked the man to KU.
Anyone with information about the man should call KU Police at 864-5572
16.1987
C
Lisa Jones/KANSAN
Pardon me, miss
KU preventive maintenance worker Sid Hays gives a lift to a foam mannequin perched on the Chi Omega fountain. Haws moved the
dummy yesterday evening after someone notified the workers of the prank.
Independence blast still a mystery
The Associated Press
INDEPENDENCE, Kan. — Investigators continued searching yesterday for the cause of a noon-time explosion in the southeast Kansas town's central business district that flattened one building and damaged several others Sunday.
The owner of the meat market
destroyed his mother said he thought
that the explosion
Roger M. Johnson, a spokesman for Union Gas System, Inc., said yesterday that the explosion was under investigation and that it would be premature to speculate on a cause.
insurance adjuster who asked that his name not be used said it would be in the neighborhood of $500,000.
"It's a good thing it happened when it did. If that thing had gone on Saturday afternoon or Monday afternoon, there'd have been several fatalities," said city Street Superintendent Leon Sherwood.
Investigators had no firm estimate of the monetary damage, but an
On the Record
Campus whistle returns after short absence
- Two blue 10-speed bicycles valued together at $200 were taken between 8 p.m. Sept. 14 and 8 p.m. Sept. 15 from a residence in the 3300 block of Iowa Street, Lawrence police reported.
Malfunction in power supply corrected; students, faculty cope with its sound
- Two cameras, a flash and a leather camera holder valued at $1,150 were taken between 1 a.m. Saturday and 1 a.m. Sunday from a car parked at Raintree Place, Lawrence police reported.
■ An AM-FM radio/cassette player and speakers valued $750 were taken between 8 p.m. Saturday and 10:30 a.m. Sunday from a residence in the 3000 block of Harvard Road, Lawrence police reported.
A 1976 Honda moped valued at $250 was taken between 1 a.m. Wednesday and 1 a.m. Thursday from the bike rack on the west side of Joseph R. Pearson Hall, KU police reported.
Staff writer
By JORN E. KAALSTAD Staff writer
The campus whistle that knocks you off your feet at the end of classes started to howl again yesterday after it was silent for a week.
The whistle has been mute because of a malfunction in the power supply to the master controls, said Randy Mankell, director for electronic systems.
Samuels said representatives from the manufacturer of the control systems repaired the computer-based controls yesterday.
when it blew for a minute after mechanics replaced a circuit board that they thought was causing the original problem, said Bob Porter, associate director for physical plant maintenance.
The whistle had blown at midnight twice earlier this month. Then, on Sept. 14, the whistle was shut off
Normally, the whistle blows for seven seconds at the end of class periods.
Students and faculty members had mixed feelings about the absence and impact of the pandemic.
Tim Arwine, Garden City graduate student, said he enjoyed the peace and quiet when the whistle was out of order.
"The whistle is an intrusion for my ears." he said. "If people aren't
T
he whistle is an intrusion for my ears. If people aren't intelligent enough to read a watch, they don't belong in a university.'
- Tim Arwine Garden City graduate student
Dana Leibengood, associate dean of journalism, whose office is within a hundred yards of the whistle, said he enjoyed the whistle, because it helped keep a tight appointment schedule.
He said he wasn't bothered by the noise from the whistle.
"That's probably because I have a 90 percent hearing loss in my left ear." Leibengood said.
Shelby Gernon, Hiawatha graduate student, said she liked the whistle, although she said it was obnoxiously loud, because it told her when classes were over.
Election for tax increase to be Nov. 3
intelligent enough to read a watch, they don't belong in a university."
By a Kansan reporter
The Douglas County Commission yesterday gave final approval to Nov. 3 as the date for a special election on a 1-cent county sales tax.
The tax proposal is a response to a $1 million revenue loss in the county and its cities because of the 1988悍革 the federal program. This loss, coupled with state and other federal cutbacks, would severely deplete money for capital improvements, nonprofit organizations and social services.
The commission also approved a resolution outlining how the county would spend its share of the revenue generated by the tax. Several Douglas County cities, including Lawrence, will receive a portion of the revenue.
The resolution divides the county's
24% for human services
7% for township roads.
24% for human services. 4.5% for historical programs
- 23% for the replacement of bridges and culverts
40% for public parking and public building construction and improvements.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, September 22, 1987
Sports
9
NFL
players strike because of free-agency conflict
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — NFL players called their second strike in six years last night, putting their six-figure salaries on the line for the freedom to choose where they work.
“As of midnight tonight (Monday) the players of the National Football League will be on strike again, and that’s really, really great. Gueshapwu, executive director of the NFL Players Association, said in announcing the strike during halftime in New England Patriots-New York Jets game.
"There's no way it can be averted. We've been forced into it," said for the players, the owners and the owners.
The owners vowed to continue the season Oct. 4-5, after a one-week delay, with non-striking regulars and free agents who were told to report Wednesday, the same day the
union planned to start picketing. The owners
said they would honor requests for ticket
The issue was free agency. The union demanded that any player with more than four years' experience be free to choose his team; the owners insisted on some compensation for teams losing free agents, a system that only one player change teams in a decade.
That was much different from the 1982 strike, which lasted 57 days and cost seven games of the 16 game schedule. That walkout was over money; but since then, the average player salary has risen from $90,000 to $230,000 a year.
"Free agency cannot be summed up in terms of dollars. It's not about money. It's about dignity and freedom," Upshaw said.
"It's about who you work for."
There had been no talks since a meeting Friday between Upshaw and Management Council negotiator Jack Donlan, and no further negotiations were scheduled. "The stone's court," said Jim Conway, assistant director of the Management Council.
The two sides have met 19 times since first exchanging proposals April 20, and each has made just one counterproposal, both within the last two weeks.
Donlan said he offered concessions Friday on several issues, including pension and roster size, if Upshaw would delay the strike 30 days. But Upshaw said the only specific proposal was to increase rosters from 45 players to 49.
"For two weeks, they refused to meet
They were too busy," Donlan said. "With seven days left, they made their first economic proposal. It would cost $200 million and throw out the system that is working. We had a good system. It's taken the players up to $300,000 in year. We don't want to throw that out."
A Management Council statement yesterday said that free agency was the only issue that had been discussed.
Although Upshaw told the players to expect a long strike, he said it should not take that long to settle the differences.
"I think you could hammer out a deal in a matter of a day, but it will take two or three days to do the language." Upshaw said. "If we started today, there would be no reason there couldn't be games Sunday. Even if we talked tomorrow, it could still be done. In
1982, they took eight weeks off and came right back."
Conway said it would take much longer. "We don't look for this falling in in 24 hours," he said. "We think the parties have some room to move where we are now and any labor agreement."
Commissioner Pete Rozelle, who attended the Management Council meeting, said he was just an observer.
"They are so far apart, it wouldn't make sense for me to intervene right now," he said.
Some teams, like Indianapolis, saw an already had full rosters of free agents to continue the season, but others had barely more than one or two players signed.
KU defensive line is no obstacle as yet to opposing teams
Upshaw insisted that the union's support was solid, "including Chicago, which had so many question marks around it."
By CRAIG ANDERSON Staff writer
On paper, the size and experience of the Kansas starting defensive linemen should look like a formidable obstacle to opposing offensive lines. During the Jayhawks' first two games, however, the defense-front foursome has been anything but fearsome.
The average size of the Jayhawks' starting front line of defense against Kent State was 6-foot-4, 261 pounds. Kansas started three seniors and a junior against an undersized Golden Flash offensive line.
The conditions seemed perfect for the Kansas defensive unit to shut don the Kent State running game. The Golden Flashes had lost their quicksilver wishbone quarterback this season, and the team was week. Young had been replaced by a less-mobile, more pass-oriented quarterback.
Kansas defensive line coach Vic Eumont said his unit had practiced well throughout the week, but when it came time to perform in the game, his linemen came up with an overall poor effort.
"Kent State made no adjustments for the game that we weren't prepared for," he said of Kansas 31-17 loss. "We were getting blocked out of plays that there was no way we should have been. We weren't aggressive at all. Missed tackles and poor technique hurt us."
quiet, laid-back personalities of the Jayhawks' linemen off the field stuck with them on the Memorial Stadium turf.
"We don't have any nasty thugs playing for us," Eumont said. "They're all nice guys. Physically they have the talent, but they need to let us play games. They have to get irritated at someone if they want to play well."
Fifth-year-senior defensive end
Eldridge Vaughan said he tried to lead
the team in the 1985 NHL season.
It seemed as though the overall
KANSAS 90
"I've been around (the football program) for awhile, so I try to help the guys whenever they need it," Avery said.
Eumont said he didn't have any idea why the defensive front could practice so well for two weeks and then come up short on two straight game days.
"It's a mystery to me why we wouldn't be ready to play," he said. "The Keen State game was worse for the team than the lack of effort throughout the game."
Fred Sadowski/KANSAN
"I thought we were ready to go," he said. "Mentally I guess we weren't." The coaches did a good job and, but it's up to us to do it on the field."
Kansas defensive left end, Eldridge Avery, right, throws Kent State quarterback, Tim Phillips, for a four yard loss, Avery and the rest of the
White started alongside junior
Senior defensive tackle David White said he couldn't figure out the Jayhawks' attitude at game time. He said he wouldn't have thought Kansas would have come out so flat when the game began.
tackle Tim Adams on Saturday.
Adams, a junior college transfer from Dodge City Community College, had been moved into starting
role last week, replacing senior Von Lacey. Adams had three tackles in his first start for Kansas. Eumont said Adams' promotion to the top of
Jayhawks could not hold back the Golden Flashes' offense Saturday at Memorial Stadium.
the depth chart was a bit misleading.
"Tight now Lacey and Adams are"
"working on the map."
Two juco transfers add talent to KU baseball
Staff writer
By DARRIN STINEMAN
Kansas baseball coach Dave Bingham isn't too big on recruiting junior college players, but this season, his first with the Jayhawks, he has made exections.
Bingham said the team had about 10 junior college transfers, but he said that number would be reduced drastically in the future. He said he brought in a high number of heo players in his first year. He said he would sort out his high school recruiting. He also said he wanted to establish a foundation of more experienced and high-quality players.
Bingham said he expected the two juniors to remain in the meat of the lineup when the real competition began in the spring season.
"When I was at Emporia State, it was really necessary to recruit junior-college players and four-year school transfers," he said. The basis at Kansas is to recruit high school players. I wouldn't make to make (junior college transfers) the main recruiting base."
The main base of the Jayhawks' offense so far this fall has been two transfers from Allen County Community College: Dan Benninghof and Troy Mentzer. Benninghof, a son of Derek and Jon, has been batting third, and Mentzer, a catcher from Topeka, has been in the clean-up spot.
good right-handed hitter and a good power hitter. Dan is a switch-hitter with good power hitting. Are they both good offensive players?
"I think we expect to have both Dan and Troy in the middle of the lineup," Bingham said. "Troy is a
each other to see who won't play. No one earned a starting spot during the game."
And they've both shown this fall. In Kansas' first game, a 15-inning game with Kansas City Bulls that ended in a noughthoff drove in six runs and hit
two home runs, one from each side of the plate. In the Jayhawks' second game, another 15-inning affair, Menter drove in four runs, going three-for-six with a homer in Counsil County Community College
The 15-inning scrimmage-like format exemplifies Bingham's philosophy about fall baseball. He
has emphasized that fall ball is merely an evaluation period and that "There's only one championship season: the spring season."
For that reason, Bingham is hesitant to call Benninghoff and Mentzer the stars of the team just yet.
"I base my opinion on the attitude that until someone has been
C
KU outfielder Dan Benninghoff, left, and KU catcher Troy Mentzer are two of about 10 junior college transfers on the Ja-hawk baseball team. Both players were recruited from Allen County Community College in iola.
around awhile, he's not proven," he said.
If any new Jayhawks appear ready to emerge as pro stand-outs, Benningshog and Mentzer seem to be. They both played in a semi-pro baseball league, the Jayhawk League, during the summer. Benningshog played for Clarinda, Iowa, and Mentzer played for Red Oak, Iowa. The league consists of teams from Iowa and Kansas, and it had several NCAA Division I players, the two players said.
Benningshog has been an outfielder for only two years, but he said the summer ball helped him to improve his defense. The improvement didn't go unnoticed in the fall workouts.
"Dan was a little suspect, but he has worked hard in the summer league and he really got to be a good outfielder." Bingham said. "Danny really shows that improvement all the time. The summer league really helped him."
Beninghoff and Mentzer said they felt pressure to prove themselves as the main Jayhawk run agent. "If it did, it was not an unfamiliar role."
“Oh, sure there’s pressure, but we wouldn't be there if we weren't able to handle pressure,” Mentzner said. “We've been there before.”
Mentzer was drafted in June by the Philadelphia Phillies, but he chose Kansas over the Phillies' rookie league team at Utica, N.Y.
"I thought down the road I could do better at KU." he said.
Jets smash Patriots, 43-24, in last game before strike
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Al Toon's 58-yard touchdown reception broke open a tight game last night, leading the New York Jets to a 43-24 victory over the New England Patriots in the final NFL game before the players went on strike.
The Associated Press
The Jets held just a 6-1 lead at halftime, when NFL players Association Executive Director Gene Hale joined the union would go on at midnight.
But the Jets made three touchdowns in the third quarter, with
O'Brien, who had a streak of 13 straight completions in the game, passed 16 yards to Toon. Two plays later. Hector swept into the end zone
Johnny Hector adding runs of five and nine yards to Toon's score.
Toon, an All-Pro wide receiver last year, outjumped cornerback Raymond Clayborn at the Patriots' 55-yard line, grabbed the pass from Ken O'Brien, broke Clayborn's tackle and sped into the end zone.
Four plays later, Tony Collins
touches up with Russell.
Russell recovered on the 30.
for a 20-3 lead.
New England, which had only 17 yards on offense in the third period, got a break when rookie Roger Vick fumbled at his 32 on New York's next series. Andre Tippet returned the turnover 32 yards for a touchdown.
Unfazed, the Jets came right back. JoJo Townsell ran 60 yards with the kickoff to the Patriots' 32. But he was caught from behind by Ernest Gibson as he appeared headed for the end zone.
The Jets got into the end zone anyway as they drove to the 9 and
Hector again scored on a sweep.
New York added a safety 69 seconds into the final quarter when Jeff Kinney hit the end zone after a punt by Dave Jennings was down on the 3.
Pat Leahy kicked field goals of 22 and 34 yards for the Jets in the first half. Tony Franklin hit from 32 yards in the second period for New England, 1-1, and Greg Baty caught a 1-yard touchdown pass from Tony Eason in the fourth quarter.
With the victory, the Jets joined the
Players met in the middle of the field before the game for solidarity handshakes. But there were no other reminders of the impending strike, the second to hit the NFL in five years.
Los Angeles Raiders as the only 2-0 teams in the AFC.
Nuu Faaola added two 1-yard touchdowns in the final period. O'Brien, who finished 19-for-26 for 313 yards, his 10th 300-game hit, wintes Walker with a 59-yard pass just before Faaola's first touchdown
Royals lose to Mariners
The Associated Press
SEATTLE — Rookie Mike Campbell pitched a seven-hitter for his first major league victory and Donell Nixon homered and drove in two runs as the Seattle Mariners beat the Kansas City Royals 5-1 last night.
Campbell, 1-4, who failed to win in seven previous attempts, allowed the only run on a lead-off homer in the ninth by Kevin Sitzert, his 15th. The right-hander struck out three and walked one.
Nixon gave Seattle a 1-0 lead when he led off the first inning with a home run off Bret Saberhagen, 17-10. Nixon's second homer of the year was the Mariners' third game-opening shot of the season.
Saberhagen allowed all five runs, four earned. on nine hits.
Rey Quinones tripped in the fourth inning and scored the second Marin-
Seattle added two runs in the fifth. Jim Presley singled, Dave Valle walked and ex-Royal Mike Kingery followed with an RBI single. Valle eventually scored as first baseman George Brett dropped shortstop Ross Jones' throw on the potential third out.
Alvin Davis hit a solo run in the sixth, his 26th of the year, for Seahawks.
Scoreboard
Baseball
American League
Toronto 2, Baltimore 1
Boston 9, Detroit 4
Detroit 6, Chicago 3
California 5, Seattle 3
Kansas City 7
National League
New York 7, Chicago 1
Pittsburgh 5, Montreal 2
St. Louis 3, Philadelphia 1
Los Angeles 4, San Francisco 2
Football
New York Jets 43, New England 24
---
10
Tuesday, September 22, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Sports
Ruling could benefit baseball free agency
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Baseball owners conspired to destroy free agency after the 1985 season, an arbitrator said yesterday in a ruling which could force open the market for stars like Jack Clark, Dale Murphy and Cal Rinken Jr.
In his 16-page decision, arbitrator Tom Roberts wrote that the clubs' approach to free agency in 1985 was not consistent with the existence of a collective bargaining agreement between players and owners.
Roberts wrote that free agents surely had a value at some price and yet no offers were advanced. He underlined "no" in his ruling.
"We want to comply, and we will comply," said Barrona Rana, the owners' chief negotiator. "But I can't tell him to engage in free agency or not."
The decision affects Kirk Gibson, Donnie Moore and 60 other 1985 free agents, but it offered no remedies. Hearings on those remedies will begin this week, with Roberts presiding.
"The arbitrator found that the clubs entered into a common scheme, the effect of which was to destroy free agency," said players'
union head Don Fehr. "In other words, they corked the market. We will ask the arbitrator . . . (to make sure that it will never happen again."
Asked if he was surprised by the ruling, the union's associate general counsel, Gene Orza, said, "Not really. I think if 65 percent of the baseball fans understood what was going on, one arbitrator could figure it out."
Fehr said he expected to talk with Rona first, then meet with Roberts to begin the hearings. Fehr said he would seek remedies through money or new free agency opportunities for players already affected, along with punitive damages from the owners. He also said much money the union would seek.
"One of the great difficulties I have with the decision is trying to figure out what it is we have to do different to be in compliance with the collective bargaining agreement," Rona said.
Rona said he held a conference call with all 26 major league owners yesterday afternoon to inform them of the decision.
"The response of the owners was to ask a few questions about what it means, what I thought the remedy stage would be and the impact on future cases," Rona said.
Volleyball team gears up for series of away games
The Kansas volleyball team will play Central Missouri State at 7:30 tonight in Warrensburg, Mo., in the first of seven straight dual matches and one tournament on the road.
By a Kansan reporter
The Jayhawks, 4-6, will not play another home match until Oct. 16, when they play host to Iowa State in a dual match in Allen Field House.
Kansas has lost four straight matches, all at home, including three over the weekend at the Kansas State. Southwest, Missouri, State, a team
Kansas defeated in the Bears' home gym two weeks earlier.
The Jayhawks, 0-1 in Big Eight Conference play, will play four conference matches on the road before returning home.
"I'm hating to get into the conference matches right now because we're getting down a little bit," coach Frankie Albitz said.
Junior outside hitter Eileen Schwartz will not play tonight; instead, she will see a doctor today to have her left knee examined.
Sports Briefs
Colorado's buffalo mascot dies
Ralphie II, the University of Colorado's buffalo mascot, died Saturday of heart failure, but Ralphie III is waiting in the wings to make her debut at Folsom Field.
son.
The original Ralphie attended all CU home and bowl games every season between 1966 and 1978.
Ralphie II made her first appearance during the Buffs' 1978 football season finale. The 12-year old buffalo accompanied the football team on its two recent bowl trips and occasionally made road trips during the regular sea-
Ralphei III is about two years old and was in training to replace Ralphei II for the 1988 season. She now will make her initial appearance either at this week's Washington State game or at the CU-Kansas game on Oct. 17, said CU Athletic Director Bill Marolt.
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864-4358
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Pawn & Jewelry
"Money To Loan"
Buy • Sell • Trade
Cameras • Typeriters •
Stereo Equipment • Jewelry •
Guitars • Amplifiers
1804 W. 6th 749-1919
PAID ADVERTISEMENT
A TRIBUTE TO OUR BALLOONING TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM
In her August 30th piece about our transformed airport, Journal-World reporter Bonnie Dunham says: "Since 1977, the city has received 3.65 million in grants from the Federal Aviation Agency (FAA). With the FAA paying 90 percent, the city's match was 10 percent, paid largely through federal revenue sharing funds, according to Mike Wildgen, assistant city manger."
After describing the major changes at the airport which have taken place since 1978, Ms. Dunham notes: "The multi-million dollar improvements at the airport did not occur without criticism and claims that too few people use the facility to warrant that kind of expenditure."
Here is Mr. Wildgen's response to this criticism: "I think you have to look in the airport's) log for proof that isn't true. We have said for a long time the airport is part of the transportation system...Everybody thinks in terms of roads. But the airport is part of the transportation system too. There is a lot of use of it in terms of business and the private sector."
Lloyd Hetrick, manager of Air Services, the city's fixed base operator, estimates that about 50 out-of-town airplanes land at Lawrence Municipal Airport each month. Although Lawrence Municipal Airport serves as home for approximately 45 privately-owned planes and Kansas University's two planes, Mr. Hetrick thinks, in Ms. Dunham's words, "the busiest season at the airport comes with KU's football games. The busiest days are games with Oklahoma and Nebraska."
Says Mr. Hetrick: "Here lately, with the economy the way it is...Everybody doesn't have the money to fly like they used to. Last year the most we had was somewhere around 50 or 60. In previous years, it wasn't unusual to have 100 on a good day."
Here are the final three paragraphs of Ms. Dunham's piece:
"Both Wildgen and Hetrick say the next major expenditure at the airport probably will be additional instrumentation for landings on days with low cloud cover.
"You have that argument no matter where you go...You have the guys who think an airport is out there for your rich playboys. But now the airport is really important to businesses. I don't have the figures to show. I can't say a business wouldn't come here if we didn't have the airport. But there are a lot of corporations that want to be where they can get their jets in and out."
"Hetrick adds that the Lawrence airport, like airports everywhere, faces an uphill battle in justifying more expenditures.
Despite our being just minutes away from two metropolitan areas with relatively large airports, Mr. Hetrick feels that several million dollars of public money should have been spent on Lawrence Municipal Airport's expansion because "some corporations want to be where they can get their jets in and out." While Mr. Wildgen claims the airport is part of our transportation system because it is used by both avid fans from, say, Oklahoma and Nebraska and businessfolk with acceptable momentum, he says nothing about the fact that for well over two decades the city has not provided any kind of public transportation for those of its young, old, handicapped and poor who needed it.
Each of this great country's governing units exists, not to kowtow to the powerful in the name of growth, but to create facilities which equitably serve the public and thus promote stability. A transportation system designed to accommodate affluent aliens and corporate jets even as it ignores the transportation needs of harried residents is a classic expression of class favoritism which can only result in yet more civil discord.
William Dann
2702 W. 24th Street Terrace
PAID ADVERTISEMENT
MARGARET REMY
"My morning make up routine starts with 14 ounces of hot wax."
Every morning Colleen Beckwith loads a fresh block of paraffin into a hot waxer, gathers inch-upon-inch of column-formatted newspaper type, and begins building The University Daily Kansan. At 5 a.m., you'll find her in close collaboration with the Kansan's editor putting the final touches on the current day's paper. By 8 a.m. she's started on tomorrow's ads.
She's been working on the Kansan for a long time. Long enough to have developed a system of checking so
that photos are sized right and type is set right.
Colleen gets to read the Kansan while she waxes its type down on the pages. Her family gets to see her work every afternoon when she pulls into the driveway, newspaper in hand, after eight hours on the job.
Colleen's job may sound like a lot of cutting and pasting to you, but it's an art to her. She cares about it. She cares about the Kansan. And most of all, she cares about doing a good job for you.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Nobody else speaks your language.
Nation/World
11
Magazine rivals differ about richest person
The Associated Press
NEW VORK - Fortune and Forbes magazines are squaring off with rival lists of the world's billionaires, but the lists bear little resemblance to each other.
Forbe said the world's richest person was Yoshiki Tsutsumi, a Japanese landlord who it said was worth $20 billion.
Fortune gives top honors to the "free-spending sultan of oil," Sultan Muda Hassanal Bolkiah Mu'izzadin Waddaulah of Brunei, who it said was worth $25 billion.
The magazines can't even agree on the business of naming billions.
Fortune said Forbes rushed its list into print this week to beat Fortune to the newsstand by a week. Forbes admits it but says that it has been printing its own list of the 400 richest Americans since 1982.
"It was a bizarre move on their part to do this." Fortune spokesman Gary Belis said yesterday of Forbes' decision to burry its list.
ground on which that protest would rest," responded Sheldon Zalaznick, Forbes' managing editor.
Actually, Fortune got in the first licks. It caught wind of the Forbes list and issued a press release Saturday promoting its Oct. 12 cover story. Forbes' news release about its Oct. 5 cover story came out a day later.
Tsutsumi, No. 1 on the Forbes list,
is the 53-year-old head of Seibu Railway
Group, which is Japan's biggest
and richest landlord. The empire
railsway, over 30 hotels,
about 26 golf courses, ski resorts and
other land.
Calculating the wealth of billionaires seems to be more art than science, judging from the discrepancies between the two magazines' calculations. Forbes' list is heavy with Japanese, while Fortune's is strong on Arab royalty and North Americans.
Fortune, however, gives Tsutsumi credit for just $2.5 billion. Its own No. 1, the 41-year-old Sultan of Brunei, owns practically everything in the Delaware-sized country of Brunei on the island of Borneo.
Classified Ads
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Heading home for the holidays? FLY CHEAP
Call us now. Carpentours Travel, 843-5688.
L Y A Y A
Hillel בו
ROSH HASHANAH
SERVICES
Wednesday, Sept. 23
Dinner at 5:30 p.m.
Hillel House
RSVP required.
Services at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday, Sep. 24
Services at 9:30 a.m..
7:30 p.m.
Friday, Sept. 25
Friday, Sept. 25
Services at 9:30 a.m.
7:30 p.m.
Services held at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center. For more info, call 749-4242.
GRADUATING THIS YEAR?
PLANNING TO INTERVIEW?
On campus interviews are starting now for management, sales and government positions for December and May graduates (all majors). Sign up as soon as possible at the University Placement Center, Level One, Burge Union.
Let's go skiing over Christmas Break! Sunscreen, rain gear, and hiking boots are needed to walk to Heifer Creek, Steambank, Breckenton, and Winter Park for five or seven nights including lifts/parties/trees, races and from more on-road adventures. We offer all-day transportation available. Call toll free for your complete color skip break package 1-800-346-5911
Members of Delta Sigma Phi on KU campus,
contact Dave Broyles, 843-3895.
This workshop is designed to make women aware of the changes that have occurred in the world since 2013, women in the last decade. It will specifically focus on new developments in the psychological literature; how this has affected their own development, and how it affects women when they are in the workplace; and how it will be an opportunity for discussion.
Mental Health Issues for Women in the 80's
Pine Room, Kansas Union
Tuesday, Sept. 22, 1987
7:00-9:00 p.m.
Dr. Sandra Shaw,
Executive Director
Bert Nash Community
Mental Health Center
Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 218 Bright Hall. For more information, contact
Hall. For more information, contact Sheril Robinson at 864-3552
At your request is Lawrence's Best and Most Af-
fordable D.J. Sound and Lighting for Any Occa-
sion. 841-1405
ENTERTAINMENT
blow your cool! Hoodoose Gurus from
countryside to town in CATS at SLA and
CATS 857
No-it's not the "Hard Rock Cafe,"叫The "Aardvark Cafe." Don't miss it-It Friday night from 9-1 in the Kansas Room of the Union. Great D.J. from Metropolis Sound.
Rent a hot tub for your next party. Call Tub-to-go, 841-2091.
ULTIMATE ENTERTAINMENT
ULTIMATE ENTERTAINMENT
JD System for All Occasion
Phil at 82-3300
Phil at 82-3300
Jose out sale! We have several odds & ends that will be offered direct to public at wholesale rices. Buk beds $45, lovesate $60, coffee tables $85, salads $125, bateria $135, sushi $185, sofa & chairs $46 & much more, furry-supply is limited. Inspect at Mark & Juniure Furniture Warehouse, 3rd & Namp Hampstead.
For Sale: Qw est-ce qui se passe? *text* and workbook for 2nd year French. Also, L. Eranger. Will sell for price paid: $40. Call 841-7815 or leave message in Spanish Department for Lort
P. H. PROGRAMS. Five easy to use programs for the Hewlett Packard I/C calculator. Clearly presented step-by-step instructions, in three by matrix, decimal to binary conversion, synthesis division, and send $2.10 (check/m.o) to: Wen Karlmann, Dept. 1, P.O. B400, Rolo M.A.
FOR RENT
1 bedroom cottage. $225.00 plus utilities. Deposit required. NO PETS. Near campus & downtown. 843-3147.
Furnished two bedroom apt one block from the University of st-off street parking. No pets,
APPLE LAN APTS. Accentor contemporary studies available at Apple Lane. On KU bus route. Launch facilities. Ample parking. Water and cable internet month. Call 834-800 for appointment.
Furnished 2 bedroom app, some utilities paid, off-street parking, 1 block from Noisy. Not paids.
FUJI MOUNTAIN BIKE Perfect condition. The ultimate bike hiking mask for £500 (serves $150) or mask for £49 (serves $12).
BRAND NEW completely furnished 4 bedroom
apc available immediately. On the bus route
and in walking distance of KU. Call 794-8228 or
8-4 2-4 3-2 1-0
HOUSE FOR RENT Share large 5 bd/m2 house house CLOSE TO CAMPUS with LAUNDRY IN BASEMENT and responsible arch, design students (guy) need 2-4 more people to share rent and bids at 11th and Kentucki. Contact Darryl at 316-284-8123 or 316-285-2057.日立 1217
MOTHIBA GIOD USED FURNITURE
1024 HIGH 79-890 00 p.m. Saturday 10:24 p.m.
9:26 mth. 79-890 00
Large basement bedroom $150 Utility paid
room for bed, bath & living room. Call Maury
at 842-353-6344
Must subst 2 bedroom apartment. $310/month.
On bus route 841-869. Lowest utilities. P.O. box
route 841-869. Lowest utilities. P.O.
LOW MILEAGE LIKE NEW 82 Yamaha Sca 500
or a quarter mile. Call 82.
or an apriltime weekend. 97-597.
*****New Cordless Bell Phones*******
Oversees call recording. Only
available on Toll Call: 814-8244 or 796-7270
Naimish contracts for sale. Will pay $160 security deposit. Contact Frank at 748-2338.
Hall has one female space available for immediate move in. Consider such features as individual lease liability, acceptance of Canadas Fidelity insurance and mans职 and you'll see why we're recognized as one of the best housing options at KU! For more info call or come by Naismith Hall 1803 Nairdville Drive.
Onkyo TX35 receiver, $200. 1975 Bradley GT. $2000.
Desk $50, dorm carpet $45, 10-speed bike $50. Call
841-4743.
Rent 1/3 of three bedroom townhouses at $150 plus a discount on bus route. Call Maria or Leru at 841 929-6969.
Sunrise Apartment
Racing bike 1887 Bianchi 59 cm, $480. Ross
19-inch mountain bike $200. Both bikes in ex-
cellent condition. Call 843-1753.
SUNRISE PLACE 9th & Michigan
SUNFLOWER HOUSE. Roams available as
members graduate in September. Low rates,
great location. 749-6871, ask for Ann, Deb, or
Tom.
Offering luxurious townhouses and apartment living.
Stop by to see our show unit at 9th and Michigan or call:
843-7877 for an appointment.
Office hours are 1.5-M F
Bassett recellect! We have just received a truckload factory close-out recellect. While 40 size recellect last-only $180 or terms. Hurry to Mark & Quinn Furniture Warehouse 4th and 5th St.
Sailboards: BIC 200S Funboard with 5.7 foot sail-4720, VINCA 285, 110 litre 60m S2ail, sail-4800 or 4800 will separate. 1·642·428
Sublease-1 bedroom plus loft. Very unique.
Available immediately. Call 841-5797.
Truckdad dishie sale! Over a dozen styles to choose from with 4 or 6 chairs. Stall prices at 18¢ and terms. Inspect at. Mark & Qain House Warehouse, 8th and New Hampshire, Lawrence,
BIC 200 SUSINIFER-4200-SPECIALIZED ROCKHOPPER MOUNTAIN BIKE EXECUTIVE MODEL 4200 SUSINI FUZENIX SUZUKI 60 GLS, RUNS GOOD. 600-LEAVING LASTMESSAGE IS NO ABOVE. 70-2121 LASTMESSAGE IS NO ABOVE.
Vacuums - Save big money. Reconditioned with
months guarantee. Price starts at $14.95.
Lawrence Vacuum & Sewing Center, 916 Mass.,
845-1297.
Arkansas quartz crystals, wholesale prices. 749-4426.
Sailboards BIG 206 Funchard with 8.7 kWh
sailboard-$270 BIG 315 110 litre 8.08 m³ sail,
adjustable床* $400 or will separate * 1,402 l/202
sale: sofa床 & 10-speed at 799
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, September 22, 1987
AUTO SALES
1972 Honda Motorcycle CB350 Perfect condition.
Must sell! CAL8646448.
dition. Call to see this camper. 842-8017
Nokoda Hardship Camp. 5,000 miles. 3 ballets
An absolutely Awesome Array of Antiques, collectibles and neat stuff we have: hardback and 1/2 price paper bookbills, full line of new comic books, fine art prints from Indian, american, indian, and couture jewelry (glitter and good stuff), the right vintage clothes for any occasion, antique toys, fine art glass, doulour fur.
sion, antique toys, fine art glass, doll house
sion, miniature furniture, fists, the best
fashion of antique furniture in the area. Quantile Pice
n 111 New Hampton. Open Sat. & Sun.
tha
1978 250XL Honda motorcycle. Good condition.
Call John at 841-5881.
Call John at 841-3881.
Call 261/12 foot Excel, Mh wheeler. Excellent con-
trols.
FOR SALE
Oldsmobile Outlast. Runs super-new-
ity tires, exhaust.充勧.den-tented. 400 KBO.
Call 841-7613. 6-p-n. weekdays and weekends.
Ask for Terex.
Brand new Samsung microwave $100, value for $80 at Colony Woods, apartment N17.
Phone numbers:
customer service,
and audiobooks. Must sell. Call 841-6762.
Fourth floor, 8150. Call 841-4150.
1974 Pontiac Safari wagon Air, cruise, tilt,
AM/FM cassette stereo. Runs great. 848-1736.
FDD
2-100 Computer, 2 drives, 192K, lots of software,
printer. All for $490. Please call 841-6712
1875 Super Breeze convertible top, paint, interior, tire-under cover. Pornchair wheels. Complete restoration. #4250 OBO. Call Dave at 864-6726.
1998 Dustin pickup kit. Silver, 5-sided, A/C. Must sell! Priced below book value, with new AM/FM cassette stereo and near new Topper thrown in. 842-4238.
For Sale: 1880 Pontiac Suburban A/C, sunroof,
great gas mileage. $2900/best offer. Phene
1900 CJ-7. 4-speed, high mileage, very clean.
$3000, Limo, 1-400-6532
1979 Buick Regal, super condition, air, AM/FM cassette, very clean, new seat covers, $2600.
841-2790.
LOST-FOUND
70 VW Beetle; excellent condition. No rust, heat
radio, white. NW Lawrence. $750.
NW
79 Honda Civic; runs, needs engine and body
Call 841-7942 for 4. p.m. and 7. p.m.
79 Toyota Celica. Manual standard features
w/air conditioning, stereo, etc. Good condition.
Bertone XI/9. 184. Fun sports car 1:5peed, leather interior, power window, New stereo, amplifier tires and more. Looks great! Must sell. 31K, $500. 841-409-6005. nightly 8:41-7424
CARS SELL for $155 (average!) Also, keeps
on line at available values: 805-649-6007.
$78.79 for details
ORDER NEW 1988 CARS-TRUCKS-
OVER COST DELIERT D.
THQ345254M87
THQ345254M87
FOUND: long-haired, blue-eyed, black and white
cat, has extra toes. Found in 27th St. Terr., and
laurie ionia on September 16. Buf 842-5521.
FOUND: Set of keys on railing outside Haworth Hall on Thursday night. To claim, come to 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
LOST. Black leather jacket. Heavy sentimental
Reward. Request call 841-6900.
FOUND Set of keys with VW. ear keys. Last Friday on Massachusetts Street. Call 843-277-9177
checkers Pizza has an immediate opening for 10 kegs of 3.50 lb dower and have their own insurance, 3.50 hr plus commission & tips to start $3.60/keg from 3.30-3.80 at checkers Pizza, 212 Kyle Road,
VOLN: NEWTON
Lost: 2 ladies rings; union restroom; September
9. Please call 749-3119 or return to KU Police
Lost: long-hairred black cat at 12th and Tennessee
area. Decaplied. Answers to Shadow. Reward
JFICE MGRU/PCHASER. Professional to manage office operations & purchasing for one of our locations & buying experience. Must be organized, have a strong attention to detail, memorize w/experience. Send resume by September 23 to: FORESIGHTS Solutions, Inc., Hamshire St. Lawrence, KS 65014.
Lost wire-rimmed eyeglasses in black case.
Please call 842-3589. Reward offered.
10-69 weekly Wkday mailings circulars *Rush mail*
10-69 weekly Wkday mailings circulars *Rush mail*
Bivard Blvd, Bivard 238, Dept. Q, Beverly Hills, CA
90814
ATTENTION: STUDENTS! Nat'l firm preparing for Fall/Winter work. $775 to start you up. (Students, tutors, teachers) Are possible, & you may earn 2, 3, 4 credits/sqr or semester. Must apply now.
HELP WANTED
Adams Alumni Center is accepting employment
applications for waiters, bartenders,
dishwashers able to work day and week
and in the office department. Apply in
apply 8.19.2014. EOE.
65/hour telemarketing Monday-Thursday 5.9e
and Saturday nights. Flexible scheduling. Lenae
location-carpon from Lawrence available. For
interview, call Mr. Lacyen at 749-4492.
Apartment Leasing Agent, part-time position, office skills and leasing experience desired. Send resumes to 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS.
Editor, Weekly Unitied Methodist Church regional newspaper. Part-time position. EOE. Member Project Equality. Submit resume and references to Attention: Council Director, Toskia, KS Attention: Council Director
HELP WANTED in the landscaping department
at Pace Garden at Pace Garden Center,
10th and New York.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $10,495-495,290.yr. New
867-877-6000 Ex R 9758 for current
banking applications.
PART TIME JOBS. Sports officials are needed at Recreation Services for intramural football. No experience necessary. Attend the Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. in room 165 Robinson Center
Babyshitters needed for four-year-old in our home. All schedules considered. Call 841-4177.
Special Project—the week of September 28 through October 2. We will be working on a one day workshop for all the new local manufacturer. We have 20 openings on the a.m. to 4 p.m. on 4th and 12th, and 12 to 4 p.m. on 5th. Contact Manpower Contemporary Services, 90 West 8th, 748-5000. Equal Opportunity.
Looking for mature female student to live with elderly man (Perfect health). Request cooking of homemade meals. Ask about board. Separate room, bath, laundry privileges, single car garage. Lives in suburb of Chicago.
- AVAILS, Crueltyless, Airlines, Amuse-
mental, Medical and Security
unem jobs, internships, and career pos-
itions
*or more information and an application; write
national College Recreation Service; P.O. Box
5124
between 10 a.m. and noon, weekday mornings.
Part time housecleaners wanted 6-18 hours. If you clean enjoying and are meticulous, Buck is the best fit. Contact us to be available over breaks. Call 942-6264
PART-TIME Help apply at Munchers Bakery.
Prefer graduate students. One sales/cleaning
mornings at 8 a.m., 4pm & 6pm hour after training. 250 hours per year required.
**coursera masters & 8% 24-hour training.**
**coursera bachelor's & 9% 24-hour training.**
Student needed for breakfast preparation.
6:30-9:30 a.m. Monday--Friday. $/hour. Contact
843-7459.
HIRING! Government jobs-your area.
$15,000-$68,000. Call (602) 838-8955. EXT. 4055
Student Programmer (Using Dasee IHplus,
Dasee II, and accept design challenges. Work will involve
maintenance of existing programs, new design ef-
ficiences, and accept design challenges. Packages and
hardware enhancements. 20-30 hours/week, $4,000/hour. Flexible work schedule.
Facilities (Buildings Operations) 4:30 p.m. for
demonstration.
Southfield Lawrence • Call 943-7081
The University of Kansas seeks experienced broadcast professional to host "Morning Edition," a daily and information magazine-publish interview program. Students in the university's previous professional broadcasting experience is required. Applicant must possess a bachelor's degree in communications or muncinate idea in a credible but informal manner. Previous public radio experience is preferable. Send letter, audition tape or air check, resume and three current references to: Jim McLean, Larry Miller, Jeff O'Connell, University of Kansas, University of Kansas, Kansas 6654-2897 915-845-3845. Application deadline is October 7th.
Want your own business? Now is the time to start an Avon代表, Call Julie at 843-904-0034
Wanted: Male personal care attendant for 27-year old male quadriplegic. 2 to 3 mornings a week. Will train the right person. For interview, call 892-7940.
We have openings in carpentry, electrical and general labor crews. If you are willing to work with us, we would like a mix of ages of 8 to 12-4, M-F. We would like you to apply to Housing Maintenance. Shop .203 West 15th, Housing Road.
Work Steady-Clerical work in medical office.
Must be available some afternoon. Accurate typing. Secretarial/Receptionist application. 112. W. 6th, Suite 38. References required.
$10-5360 WeeklyUp, mailing circulates!
$10-5360 Mailed to:
envelope. CM.NA-DQP POLB 7730
envelope. CM.NA-DQP POLB 7730
MISCELLANEOUS
Pregnant cat needs home immediately. Can't afford to keep her, will be put to sleep if not helped. Please call 819-828-3700.
SKI KEYSTONE for Thanksgiving, November
28-29 Low package includes, air/airlift,
s rental/transfers/fit tickets. Call 843-5608
Package available without air.
We have a new store that you can get cash on almost anything of value. Also, good boys on cameras, steart, steart equipment (auto & jewelry), Warner Bros., *Beware Jewelry* and *Wainwright*. 1984 W. B. 740-1193
PERSONAL
BT, I love you more than words can say. You're the best thing to happen to me. Thanks for being my best friend, KW.
JS-I loved the letter. PLEASE write again.
Kev, you're the greatest! We have been together
two years today! Now! Whata ya say we
celebrate with a little 'smoozy moochy
two years today! today!
you have a little 'smoochy moozy'
gooody!" Love, your lil' goo-dam
you
Michael W --Someone at Arizona State University loves and misses you very much!! Love, Shannon
Preston C.: We engage a smile and sometimes a word or two. If you look a little harder, you'll notice someone's interested in you...
BUS PERSONAL
Bike Workshops - Our mechanical will teach you to change flats, true wheels, maintain brakes and handlebars. See them on Saturday, 10 a.m. begins September 19. Sunflower, 684 Massachusetts,
eADACHACE, BACKACHE, ARM PAIN, LEG PAIN *Student* and most insurance accepted. For complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Mark Johnson 463-8979
Jimmy and Timmy, Partners in Rhymes, you've come to know a family of musicians. Classic in contemporary music. It's what makes them so great.
AFRICAN ADORNED
Gravstone Athletic Club
Special Instructor tuition
$150 per semester
Racquetball, Tanning
Exercise Equipment
HARPER
SKI FREE AT VAIL/BAREVER CREATIVE!
4 day packages, from $99 person includes lunch:
and free skiing. Add extra nights, just $18.00
per person. Call 1-800-6257 today!
Pregnant and need help? *Call Birthright at 843-821-7001. Confidential help/free pregnancy
COMPUTER CONSULTING: Tutoring and programming for elementary computer science students. Training in engineering, projects and other works. Resumes pre-filled for individuals and groups.
LAWYER
"CRIMSON SUN PHOTO" is looking for young women interested in developing a modeling portfolio. 15% over cost. Call 911-8699
2500 W. 6th Street 841-7230
**STUDENTS!** Order your "school" T-shirts from all schools at kUK represented. Look for PRSA table outside Wescoe, 10:30-2, September 24, 30 and October 1
DRIVER EDUCATION education through mid-Winter Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7790
FLASHBACK PHOTO fast and dependable party picture service. Call 843-4770 to book your next pasts.
Sunflower Mk. Bike Workshops-Learn how to
maintain a bicycle, including basic care,
e.g. p.i.m., begins September 17, $94
and ends December 25, $149.
GRAF/X: Scientific and statistical illustration,
maps, drawings, slides, editing and, also watercolor/acrylics. PHONE 841-2561.
LAWRENCE'S
FINEST
SELECTION OF
RECORDED MUSIC
HOURS:
Mon-Sat;
Sun 11-
DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
844 MASSACHUSETTS
913-749-4211
FREE PREGNACY COUNSELING for the individual &/or couple as well as for their families. Additional counseling services available on a stairing scale. Available to persons of all faith.
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
J&M FAOYS for all your party favor needs.
Hats, shirts, paddies, glasses. If you have a unique flavor idea, call us and we'll find it for you.
845-6270
PENNYLAINE
ORGANIZATIONS • COMPUTER DISCS • RECORDINGS • VIDEOS
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ektachrome
processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W services.
PASSPORT $6.00. Art & Design Building.
Room 206. 864-4767
THE ETC SHOP is open Sunday from 11-4. New shipment of cotton sweaters 732 Massachusetts
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $8/hr, 843-9022
(n.m.)
SERVICES OFFERED
Now in Lawrence, *inexpensive* 4-track demos.
In Beverly Hills, *inexpensive* 4-track demos.
Bass lesson. Basic Phrasings. 84-4243.
Capture that golden tan with a boudor portrait from Photospace. Call Mia or M克娅 @ 94-876-9068
vices. Overland Park ... (913) 495-6788
Prompt contraction and abortion services in
Washington, D.C.
QUALITY Tutoring, Statistics, Economics, and Math. All levels Homework assistance, test preparation, or general review. MA with 7 years teaching experience. Call Dems at 842-1053.
training experience. Call Denise at 813-745-1062.
Seamstress: All ladies dresses can be made here in town. You choose your favorite designs or styles. Call Denise at 813-745-1062. We take them for free. Call: San Diego, 813-745-1062.
Leaving Town?
at airline coul. pric-
no extra service charge
Make your travel
arrangements
messuages
Airline Tickets
- Lowest air fares—complete travel accommodations
travel arrangements
* Eurail and Japan Rail Passes
* Car rental—Hotel confirmations
* Student semester break holidays
See Maupintour travel Service for:
ON CAMPUS LOCATION in the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
Maupintour travel service
749-0700
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your driver's license without patched testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided 841-2316.
Time savers Affordable and professional cleaning for those students who need to spend more time studying and less time cleaning Call 749-3096 Free estimates!!
TYPING
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing. Judy, 842-7935 or Liam, 841-1915.
2 Smart Word Processing. Spelling Corrected Very Reasonable. Call Foster 749-2740.
24 hour typing service. Professional word process on letter quality printer. 843-7643.
AABloudly Fast Typing In Back! Dependable,
Reasonable Rates, Late Night Typing Available
Kalty 841-240 days, 749-534 eve.
ACT NOW: PAPERS-THESES--RESUMES. WRITING LIFELEY 841-3469.
841-8246. Evenings-weekends
PROFESSIONAL TYPING 842-4868 before 10
p.m.
Very reasonable. Call Foster 79-249.
A-1 reliable professional typing; Term papers,
Theses, Resumes, etc. Reasonable IBM Electronic Tweeter 842-3246.
Donaa's quality Typing and Word Processing
Term papers, terms, desserts, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists, Letter
*writing*, spelling corrected. 842-747
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS
MOMMY'S TYPING is back from Australia !!
842.3278 before 9 am, please
KU SECRETARY Typing and word processing
Affordable, fast, accurate. Spelling correct,
letter quality. Pickup on campus. Monica
841-8346. Elections-weekends.
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing, manuscripts, records, theses, letter quality printing, etc. 843-562
Quality typing or word processing for theses, dissertations, resumes, term papers, applications. Professional editing, composition available. Have M.S. Degree.
Quality Typing includes excellent spelling, punctuation, grammar, editing. Fast reliable service. Pickup delivery available. 843-0247
For professional typing/word processing, e-mail Myra. 814-490. Fall special $1.20 page, double-snake, nica.
theWORDOCTORS. Resumes, papers, theses,
'lissertations, commercial. 843-3147.
WRIGHT'S TYPING SERVICE. Term papers, theses, miscellaneous, IBM Selectic. Spelling corrected. 831.0654
WANTED
BOSTON TICKETS WANTED (2) (Good seats.
will wait!! Call Steve-841-7600)
Female roommate wanted to share nice two bedroom apartment. West campus, all utilities paid, rent negotiation required. Roommates need to be needed to share two bedroom rooms. $165/month & 1/2 meals. Call 842 9748
K. U. Women's Ultimate Team, "Betty", 1987 National College Champions, is looking for women interested in learning a fun & challenging sport. T & TH. 5:00. Sat & Sun-11:00. 23rd & Iowa or call 749.5855, 841.2332.
Male or female grad student, or mature
graduate from the University of
Uregon 1 plus 7/8 units; call
(205) 364-7950.
Female roommate wanted. 14$/month plus 1/3
room, apartment, own, on bus,
route 784-4297
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Roommate wanted for 2 bedroom house near campus. Fully furnished except bedroom. Big backyard, dog or cat ok. $160 month plus half of utilities. Call 841-2550.
Roommate needed for townhouse at 8th and Michigan. Private room k75 and 1/3 utility suite.
Classified Information Mail-In Form
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16-20 3.35 5.00 7.05 11.30 16.55 20.75
21-25 3.90 5.80 8.10 12.60 18.10 22.60
26-30 4.40 6.55 9.15 13.90 19.70 24.40
31-35 4.95 7.35 10.20 15.25 21.25 26.25
01 announcements 30 for sale 500 help wanted 800 services offered
100 entertainment 310 auto sales 700 personal 900 tipping
100 games 800 food & beverage 100 more
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LOWS KOWALSKY
Make checks payable to
Japanese lawyer Kansan
191 Stauffer-Flint Hall
lawyer. $& 66045
COUPONS
C
--with this coupon
S
Sub&Stuff Sandwich Shop
FREE MEDIUM SOFT DRINK
with the purchase of any sub
1618 W. 23rd St.
coupon expires 10.6.87 with this coupon only.
The Fitness Factory*
offers you
2 months...$45.
Aerobics at a Special Price 2 months...$45.
*formerly Nature's Best and Factor-E Aerobics
23rd & Louisiana 842-1987
Offer good with coupon only. Coupon expires 10/6/87
$10 Haircut, Shampoo and Blowdry with this coupon.
711 West 23rd 842-1144
coupon expires 10/2/87
711 West 23rd
$1.00 VALUE
SPECIAL 1-2-3 COUPON
Graystone Athletic Club
TANNING SPECIAL
10 Visits for $25
2500 W. 6th Street 841-7230
Racquetball Exercise Equi
$1.00 off Evening Buffet (7 days a week)
50¢ off Luncheon Buffet (7 days a week)
$1.00 off Evening
50¢ off Luncheon
544 W. 23RD
749-4244 FREE DELIVERY
Buy your first Pyramid Pizza at our regular price and...
...get your second
one topping pizza
for only $1 small pizza
Valentino's
PIZZA LASAGNA SALADS
SPAGHETTI MANICOTTI
Enrique 10.87 Erika
Ristorante
PYRAMID
PIZZA
$3 large pizza
"We Pile It On!"
20% OFF
ANY BALLOON
PURCHASE!
--private hot tub rental includes stereo, cable TV, VCR &
optional movie rental
DOUBLE
MEDIUM 2-TOPPING
PIZZA
$5 99
TROUBLE
LARGE 2-TOPPING PIZZA
$6.99
8th and Massachusetts
843-1099
Mon. Sat. 9:30-5:30
Thursday until 8:30
Sunday 1-5
Expires Tuesday, Oct. 6, 1988
Dine in • Carry out • Free Delivery (now you can charge delivery to MC, VISA)
Minsky's PIZZA
PIZZAS
2228 IOWA / 842-0154
CUPON GOOD THRU DECEMBER 31, 1987
TWO-TOPPING only
PYRAMID
PIZZA
"We Pile It On"
The delivery is Fast.
Friendly and FREE.
--private hot tub rental includes stereo, cable TV, VCR &
optional movie rental
PRIVATE HOT TUB RENTAL only $5 PER PERSON
RENTA-CENTER
GRAND OPENING!
Rent Any Item Get Second Week Fo
TWO LARGE
TOPPING PIZZA?
ONLY 99¢
TWO-TOPPING PIZZAS
Coupon must be presented in per-
manent form. Special offer merchandise is not
special. Good with your other discount
Quantities. One item per coupon per customer, please.
Send a check to: 915-876-3240.
EUROPEAN SUNTANNING HOT TUB & CLUSTER HOLIDAY PLAZA 25th & IOWA 841-6232 expires September 30, 1987
The Malls Shopping Center
711 W. 23 Suite 2
842 8899
PYRAMID
PIZZA
$13^{99}
COUNT ON US FOR A GREAT DEAL
"We Pile It On!" The delivery is Fast, Friendly, and FREE.
$1 ZERCHER PHOTO $1.00 OFF 8 x 10 Enlargements from B/W or color negatives or slides HILLCREST 919 IOWA expires October 10, 1987 DOWNTOWN 1107 MASS
Combo Pizza (or up to 4 toppings)
PLUS, FREE DRINKS 1.4 drinks with Large, 3 drinks with medium.
Offer good Monday through Wednesday only.
Dine-in, carry out or delivery (no added charge)
Not valid with refill jug or other promotional offers
King Tut
Large
711 W.23rd
GODFATHERS
WHAT ARE YOU DOING FOR?
PIZZA
PYRAMID
PIZZA
843-6282
Piled high with eight
of your favorite
Toppings plus
Yoghurt.
"We Pile It On!" The delivery is Fast, Friendly, and FREE.
---
Hot Slice
ZENA Jeans $29.99 reg.up to $42
Luncheon Special Hot Slice 22
ONE LARGE
2 for $2 with this coupon
HARDERS
GARDEN LABEL, PASSION FOR LUXE
Combo or Peperoni Mon.-Fri. 11:30-1:30 Dine-in or Carryout Only
Hours:
9:30 to 5:30 M-Sat.
9:30 to 8:30 Thursday
Sunday to 1:00 to 5:00
ONE-TOPPING only
945 Mass., Lawrence
Offer good in Lawrence only.
711 W. 23rd
GOOD OWNER'S HOT SLICE PIZZA
$ 7^{99} $
PYRAMID PIZZA
Plus two Cokes
"We Pile It On!"
he delivery is Fast,
Friendly, and
FREE.
711 W. 23rd 645-0202
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
$2.00 OFF Any 3 or more pizzas 842-1212
BUM STEER BBQ
DELIVERS "HOT" BBQ FAST
$1.00 OFF
Bum Reg. Sandwich, Fries & Drink $3.95 (Delivered or Dine-in)
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
Any Size Pizza
PYRAMID
PIZZA
841-SMOKE 2554 IOWA ST.
We PLAce It On.
The delivery is Fast,
Friendly, and
FREE.
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
$100 OFF
Any 2 or more pizzas
842-1212
the Heart shoppe
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
Figure 12/31/B7
20% off regular priced merchandise
17 W. 9th 749-0991
Buy any size Pyramid Pizza...
PYRAMID PIZZA
Get one FREE
And Receive a 2nd pizza of equal value or less absolutely FREE!!!
Mondays only.
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE DELIVERY
---
$25 HIGHLIGHTING SPECIAL
Good with MARSHA or MARY
reg. $35 & up
DO'S
DELUXE
$100 OFF
Any Pizza Ordered
11 a.m.-4 p.m.
842-1212
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
1/2 PRICE MOVIE RENTAL
expires 10-6-87
not to be used with any other promotion
VIDEO BIZ
832 Iowa Street
Lawrence, KS 68044
(913) 749-3507
VIDEO BIZ
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST + FREE DELIVERY
50° OFF
Any 1 pizza
842-1212
---
FREE!
Vistaburger
with purchase of a vistaburger at the regular price
Limit 1 order per coupon, one coupon per customer. Not valid in
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
Regular $1.35
Coupon expires: 10/31/87
Lawrence/1527 W. 6th
Manhattan • Emporia • Topka • Great Bend
Vista RESTAURANTS
Classical Music on Lp*
Buy 1 get 1 FREE
*Of Equal or Greater Value.
good thru Sept. 25
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS
AUDIO / VIDEO
CLAMSPOND.COM
No jacket required
Sun
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details page 6
Wednesday September 23,1987 Vol.98.No.23
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Iran vows revenge for U.S. attack on Gulf vessel Iran's president declares to U.N. U.S.forces followed Iranian ship for days,Pentagon says that U.S.account is 'pack of lies'
The Associated Press
NICOSIA, Cyprus — In a militant mood as it marked the seventh anniversary of the Persian Gulf war. Iran vowed revenge yesterday for the U.S. Navy attack on an Iranian ship the Pentagon says was planting mines.
Iranian troops paraded through Tehran and other cities on the date that Iranians consider the anniversary of the start of the war. Parliament Speaker Hashemi Ratsfanjian said he was joined by U.S. helicopter gunships on the vessel Iran Ajr "will not go unanswered."
In a Tehran radio broadcast monitored in Nicosia, Rafsanjani told Parliament in a speech, "Our combatants will answer (the Americans) wicked actions in an appropriate way and they will regret what they have done."
He did not elaborate.
In New York, President Ali Khamenei of Iran told the U.N. General Assembly the U.S. account of the attack was a "pack of lies." Khamenei said, "The U.S. shall receive a proper response for this abominable act."
Khamenei also condemned a U.N. Security Council cease-fire resolution aimed at ending the Iran-Iraq war.
But one military analyst, Maj.Bob Elliott of the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies.
Iran's navy has so far not challenged the U.S. task force in the Persian Gulf since the Americans intervened in the region two months ago.
said in a telephone interview, "There are enough U.S. ships in the gulf region to provide targets for the Revolutionary Guards."
The Revolutionary Guards, who often appear to operate outside the military chain of command, have been more active in the gulf in attacks on shipping than the Iranian navy, heavily outgunned by the U.S. task force.
Rafsanjani told Parliament,
"Those who have entered the region by force and embarked on wicked acts will soon regret their actions."
Iran's official Islamic Republic News Agency, also monitored in Nicosia, quoted Rafsanjan as saying the U. attack was quick to divert attention from Khamenei's speech at the United Nations.
BILLY JOEL
Timothy Appleberry, Marquette, Mich., junior, is the 18th in a line of about 350 people waiting for line numbers for the U2 concert. People began gathering in front of Liberty Hall box office yesterday at 8 a.m. hoping to obtain one of the 200 line numbers given out. Tickets for the October 26 concert at Kemperrena will go on sale Saturday.
Hurry up and wait
WASHINGTON — U.S. military forces had shadowed the Iranian ship they attacked Monday night for days, waiting for conclusive evidence that the vessel was laying underwater mines. Pentagon officials said yesterday.
The Associated Press
The officials, who requested anonymity, said the vessel, Iran Ajr, had been tracked by radar and air surveillance for several days as it steamed through the central Gulf toward Bahrain "because it had been seen loading suspect devices" before leaving an Iranian port.
"It was no accident" that U.S. helicopters from the frigate USS Jarrett were flying near the Iranian ship Monday night, using infrared sensors to monitor its activities, one official added.
"When we caught them in the act, we had the evidence we needed and we moved in," he said.
Sources said, without elaboration, that at least two other Iranian vessels remained under U.S. surveillance
The Pentagon said three Iranians were killed and two were listed as missing in the attack, while 26 Iranians were rescued, four of them wounded. It said a Navy boarding party found 10 mines aboard the Iran AJr, a 1,662-ton amphibious landing ship.
Iran said that five crewmen died in the attack and vowed that the attack "will not go unanswered."
Officials said that the United States was attempting to arrange a site for the transfer of the Iranian crewmen, who probably would be turned over to the International Red Crescent Society, the Islamic equivalent of the Red Cross. Sources said that Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates were being asked to allow the transfer.
Meanwhile, President Reagan defended the U.S. attack on the ship as clearly authorized by law because having mines in international waters.
Reporterins in a Pentagon press pool who were allowed to visit the Iranian vessel said there were three large gashes in the hull and deck and that it was pock-marked by machine-gun fire, which the crew quoted sources as saying it appeared the crew had destroyed documents before abandoning the ship.
Reagan also insisted, however,
that the United States had not entered a shooting war with Iran, and White House and Pentagon spokesman said the crewmen of the Iranian vessel would be returned to Iran.
At the same time, Iranian leaders dismissed the U.S. account of the incident and vowed revenge.
Iranian President Ali Khameeni, appearing at the United Nations, described the American account as a "pack of lies" and declared: "The U.S. shall receive a proper response for this abominable act."
The U.S. delegation to the U.N. walked out
Pentagon sources reported that U.S. military bases around the globe had been reminded to maintain an alert for terrorist activity. The State Department said it expects that "American interests are judged worldwide to be at greater risk," and tensions in the gulf itself remained high.
An unidentified Iranian hovercraft closed within one mile or so of a U.S. frigate that was towing the crippled Iran Ajr yesterday afternoon, the Defense Department said, and stopped its approach only after warning shots were fired across its bow.
Artist's project may be key to strange Colorado death
Staff writer
By MARK TILFORD
Colorado officials said yesterday they may know the identity of the man whose body was found Sept. 3 near Telluride, Colo.
Eric Osteen, 23, a former student of the Kansas City Art Institute from Osage Beach. Mo., is thought to be the man who apparently fell 365 feet to his death over Bridal Veil Falls, about one mile east of Telluride.
He apparently was not a KU student, as had been thought.
WYOMING
COLORADO
Denver
Colorado Springs
Telluride
Durango
NEW MEXICO
"If the picture we ran, and the picture on the student ID match, we're very positive," said Sky Walters, undersheriff of San Miguel County. "I hope we get everything tied up because if we don't, we're at a dead end."
"He had a lot of original ideas in art," said Brad Rinke, a KU student and a transfer from the art institute. "He was a unique kind of artist."
Walters said a dean at the art institute had called the sheriff's office yesterday morning and said she had a student identification card with a picture that matched one she had seen in a newspaper.
It may have been a project the former art student was working on that led to his death.
Walters said Osteen's parents in Missouri had been notified and were sending dental records to sheriff's officials so positive identification could be established.
"Until we get positive identification, we cannot be sure," Walters
Walters said the man died of head or internal injuries and had not drowned
with a large fiberglass tree on top of a van."
The top of the tree was found wired to a cable that ran over the ledge of the falls where the body was found.
"He said he had been working on that tree. He said he was going to see Chris and go up around the Denver area and plant that tree on a mountain."
"Last month he left Kansas City
Chris Hughes, a 1987 Kansas City Art Institute graduate and Denver resident, was the person Osteen had talked about seeing in Denver. But though Osteen called Hughes from different places around Colorado in July, Hughes said he never saw his friend.
Hughes estimated it was sometime around the first of August that Osteen last called him. Osteen was in Boulton, and he planned to plan around that city that evening.
"He did say that he was going to plant the tree at midnight or something. He said it meant something—that it meant something in a book." Hughes said.
The tree, which was actually a disjointed limb, was about 15 to 20
feet long and apparently came from a tree that had been struck by lightning about four months earlier in Kansas City, Walters said. It was wrapped in fiberglass and decorated with clumps of ice to protect it. The artifact that Osteen had called the sculpture "Harmonic Convergence Tuning Fork."
The Harmonic Convergence and a Grateful Dead concert in Telluride were both Aug. 16.
Sometime between then and Sept. 3. Osteen apparently made an attempt to "plant" his tree.
"The tree was very,very close to the edge." Walters said.
A Telluride woman videotaped Osteen Aug. 16. The photo of the man that was run in several Kansas and Colorado newspapers, including yesterday's Kansan, was taken from the videotape. The woman had apparently become interested in Osteen's creation, which he had brought to a Harmonic Convergence festival and the concert.
After graduating from high school,
Osteen attended the art institute for
two school years, but did not return
to college because of lack of
money. Hughes said.
Osteen was never a KU student as had been thought, Hughes said.
Rinke lived with Osteen in the residence hall at the art institute and later in a house in the Kansas City area.
He said Osteen spent time working odd jobs after he left school. The closest Osteen came to living in Lawrence, Rinke said, was the summer of 1983, when he spent a month living with Rinke and his mother.
KU submits budget proposals for 1989
Largest of three plans calls for $226.8 million in effort to catch up to peer schools
Staff writer
By MICHAEL HORAK
The 232-page proposal was sent to budget director Michael O'Keefe last week. He will review it and make a recommendation to Gov Mike Hajvej in make a recommendation about the governor's budget package. The Legislature will vote on the governor's request during the next session.
The University of Kansas has submitted a $22.8 million budget proposal for consideration by the state budget director for fiscal 1989. The proposal would increase KU's budget by about $13.9 million.
during effect July If approved, the budget would go into effect July
KU's proposal includes three budget options for the governor's consideration. The first option, a $226.8 million budget plan that was approved by the Board of Regents in June, is the most comprehensive plan of the three. It is the University's official request.
official request.
Under that proposal, KU would receive $129.2 million for general use from the state. The rest of the $228.8 million would come from restricted use funds, such as money paid for residence hall contracts. According to the budget plan, $33.5 million would be earmarked for instruction, $25.5 million for research and $19.3 million for academic
support. Capital improvements account for $18.5 million of the budget.
Zimmerman said that the University's comprehensive proposal gave unclassified employees a 5 percent salary increase. Salary levels for administrators were higher but at rates dependent on tenure and position.
The other two budget proposals were less expensive. One proposal was for $214.1 million and the other was for $75.3 million.
"It is significant that the increase is included in all three levels." Zimmerman said. "It points out the recognition that the need is already here on campus."
Ward Brian Zimmerman, director of the KU budget office, said that student growth was reflected in all three proposals. All three options involved a new program for student growth and 38.4 new teaching positions.
Those budgets were smaller because salary increases for unclassified employees were not included in those plans. Unclassified employees include faculty and administrators.
Student wages would increase by 4 percent, Zimmerman said.
In addition to those increases, each of the budget options includes fund increases created by the proposed Margin of Excellence program. The
Legislature will debate that program this spring.
The Margin of Excellence program has been endorsed by the Regents. It is designed to bring Regent institutions to within 95 percent of the financing level of their peer schools over the next three years. Peer schools are schools similar in scope, size and mission to KU.
KU's budget currently is $16 million below its peer average, the budget proposal said.
To bring faculty salaries up to parity with those of peer institutions, $2.02 million had been targeted for salary increases. Another $1.9 million is tied to improvements in research and graduate student instruction, support for the University's libraries and strengthening of general research programs.
"This incremental budgeting of the Margin of Excellence realizes the need to catch up with our peers." Zimmerman said.
Next month, state budget officials will look closely at KU's proposals KU will have the opportunity to appeal cuts by the state budget director when the governor gives it final consideration.
Zimmerman said that in the past the Legislature usually modified the University's comprehensive budget and allocated slightly less than requested.
Reactor site to become nuclear waste storage
BY MARK Staff writer
By MARK TILFORD
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission last week gave the University of Kansas permission to turn its Nuclear Reactor Center into a site for the temporary storage of hazardous waste. University officials said yesterday.
The center, on West 15th Street across from Jayhawk Tower, will be used for the temporary storage of hazardous waste produced on campus, until it can be shipped to a permanent disposal facility. Waste would be stored in the facility for no more than three months, said Robert Bearse, associate vice censor for research, graduate studies and public service.
Most of the waste that the University produces is now stored in a
Harold Rosson, associate dean of engineering, said. "We sent a description and an analysis of our plan a month or two ago."
semi-trailer on West Campus. It currently is transported to Washington state and Tennessee, Bearsaid said
"Ninety-nine percent of the radioactive waste that is produced in campus is produced in bioloremediation," he will come from University use."
Most of the waste on campus comes from cleaning solvents and chemicals from laboratories on campus.
The reactor has been inactive since 1884. It began operations in 1961
Bearse said the University considered building a new storage building on West Campus, but abandoned the idea after the University was turned down for a federal grant to construct it.
The University, he said, has about $30,000 budgeted to modify the reactor for its new purpose.
2
Wednesdav. September 23, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Hijack suspect's lawyer says U.S. responsible for client's injuries
WASHINGTON — Fawaz Younis, the bijacking suspect arrested after being lured by the FBI into a yacht in the Mediterranean, appeared in court yesterday with broken wrists in casts nearly up to his waist and attorney accused the government of being responsible for the injuries.
Younis' attorney, Frank Carter, said his client, who is charged with
Average score on SAT remains the same
being the ringleader in the June 1985 hijacking of a Jordanian airliner, was lured aboard an FBI-rented yacht Sept. 13 with the promise of a drug deal and then clasped in handcuffs.
Younis is the first arrest brought by U.S. law enforcement officials of a suspected terrorist being sought under U.S. laws.
NEW YORK — Minority students scored big gains on the Scholastic Aptitude Test in 1987, but the average for all groups stagnated for the third straight year, raising doubts about the progress of school reform.
The average verbal score among the 1.1 million college-bound students who took the two-part, multiple-choice exam was 430, one point less than the 1986 scores, but still six points above the all-time low. The 2013 College Board reported yesterday.
The average mathematics score gained a point to 478, its highest level since 1997. The verbal and reading tests each scored on a scale of 200-800.
Hahn says affair with Bakker ruined her life
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Jessica Hahn, declaring, "I am not a bimbo," said in a Playboy magazine interview that she hated every second of her sexual encounter with PTL founder Jim Bakker seven years ago and that it had ruined her life.
the magazine, which includes a 31-page interview and semi-nude photo layout of Hahn, became available yesterday as she concluded two days of testimony before a federal grant jury looking into hush money paid her after the liaison.
A copy of the November issue of
Study proposes nuclear safety guidelines
WASHINGTON - The Nuclear Regulatory Commission should set overall guidelines on closing nuclear power plants for safety violations, the General Accounting Office said yesterday.
Sen. Alfonse M. D'Amato, R.N.Y., who requested the study by the congressional agency, said the
commission should not license any new plants until it implemented that and other recommendations
The report called on the NRC to "provide utilities clear signals on the types of safety and management that could result in a shutdown."
Man lives to make his hiccupping history
LAURINBURG, N.C. — John Crossland has tried hiccup cures for 27 years without success. But now he's resigned to keep hiccupping in the hope he can wait out an Iowa man who holds the world record.
He's got some hiccuping he
him, though. The Guinness Book of World Records says Charles Osborne, 93, of Anthon, Iowa, has had the hiccups since 1922.
"All I've got to do is stay alive and I just must beat that other man," said Crosland, who is 51.
Debate on Bork confirmation continues
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Supreme Court nominee Robert Bork was described by a noted legal scholar yesterday as a man whose views could spill chaos for the nation, but other witnesses at his confirmation hearings defended him and said his views had been distorted by critics.
The Senate Judiciary Committee heard the opposition to Bork from Harvard University Law School Professor Laurence Tribe, who also has been mentioned as a possible Supreme Court justice someday.
From The Associated Press.
And a panel of witnesses including novelist William Styron and artist Robert Rauschenberg suggested that Bork's confirmation to the Supreme Court would be a threat to freedom of expression.
testified she had been startled and saddened by what she said and had distortions of Bork's views during the bearings so far.
However, Carla Hills, who was secretary of housing and urban development in the Ford administration,
And Lloyd Cutler, who was White House counsel in the Carter administration, submitted testimony that called Brk a conservative jurist who was closer to the center than to the extreme right. Cutler still was waiting to testify as the session moved into the evening.
Cutler, who has been criticized by some fellow liberals for supporting Bork, said in a prepared statement that Bork's record "cannot be squared with the extravagant characterizations of Judge Bork as a throwback" to the days when slavery was legal.
Earlier, Hills introduced a panel of four law school professors who support Bork's nomination. She described them as wholly independ-
dent scholars who volunteered to counteract criticism by Bork's detractors.
Meanwhile, Supreme Court Justice Byron R. White was quoted as saying it would be all right with him if Bork won confirmation.
White's comment, interpreted by Republicans as an expression of support for Bork, was related to reporters at the court by Supreme Court spokeswoman Toni House.
She said White made the remark Friday to television talk-show host John McLaughlin and gave him permission to report the conversation.
"I wouldn't regard it as a public endorsement," she said, adding that it was up to the public to decide what the remark meant.
White was appointed to the court by President Kennedy and generally is regarded as being moderate on
civil rights issues and conservative on law enforcement issues. Justice John Paul Stevens announced earlier that he supported Bork's nomination. No other member of the court has taken a position, although former Chief Justice Warren E. Burger also has endorsed Bork.
At the hearings, the extraordinary length of the proceedings was becoming an issue. Republicans complained they could move quicker if they were given more advance notice of the hearing and chairman Joseph R Biden Jr., D-Del, imposed stricter time limits on question and answer periods.
"It's clear this nomination is hanging in the balance." Biden said, noting that the length of questioning may be unprecedented. Bork testified for a record five days last week and the hearings lasted until 11 p.m. Monday.
Bush breaks tie in Senate; SDI cuts rejected
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Vice President George Bush cast the deciding vote yesterday as the Senate, by a vote of 51 to 50, rejected a deep reduction in President Reagan's proposed "Star Wars" budget.
With the Senate split with a vote of 50 to 50, Bush cast the tie-breaking vote on a motion to table, and thus kill, a proposal to spend $3.7 billion for Star Wars in the fiscal year starting Oct. 1.
Bush's vote tipped the balance in favor of the 37 Republicans and 13 Democrats who had lined up against 41 Democrats and nine Republics on the Strategic Defense Initiative spending issue, as Star Wars is formally known.
The vote came as the Democratic-controlled chamber plowed through a huge bill authorizing the Pentagon budget for the next fiscal year.
increase it to $5.7 billion for the 12 months starting Oct. 1. The Senate Armed Services Committee voted for $4.5 billion and yesterday's vote was on a proposal by Sen. Bennett Johnston, D-La., to reduce that figure.
The House, in its version of a defense bill passed last May, approved $2.1 billion for SDI.
The current SDI budget is $3.55
billion, but Reagan sought to
will be somewhere between the House's $3.1 billion level and the figure in the Senate bill.
The final SDI budget will be hammered out in a House-Senate conference committee called to resolve differences between the two bills. It
After the SDI vote, the Senate narrowly handed the administration another victory.
The chamber voted, 51-47, to kill a proposal that would extend the current moratorium on testing of antisatellite (ASAT) weapons for another year.
Nicaraguan leaders proclaim partial cease-fire
The Associated Press
involving the contras.
MANAGUA, Nicaragua — The Nicaraguan government announced yesterday a partial cease-fire with the contrasts to start unilaterally, and it said that an opposition radio station could reopen immediately.
President Daniel Ortega did not specify a timetable for his leftist coalition. We are working on concrete actions to make known the first zones where
Alfonso Robelo, a top anti-Sandinista rebel leader, reacted cautiously, saying Ortega's move may be aimed at dividing the contrasts by sowing confusion in their ranks.
the cease-fire will be declared."
The Nicaraguan government also announced that Radio Catolica, the Roman Catholic Church radio station, could reopen immediately.
White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater dismissed Ortega's announcement. "A unilateral ceasefire is meaningless without conditions," he said, adding that there must be a negotiated cease-fire
The church, under Cardinal Miguel Obando y Bravo, has been one of the
most outspoken critics of the Sandinista government, which has been in power since July 1979.
The announcements were the latest in a series of government moves to comply with a Central American peace plan signed Aug. 7 by Ortega and the presidents of El Salvador, Honduras, Costa Rica and Guatemala.
The same nat troops would be withdrawn to designated areas in a partial truce as a step toward a total defence with the U.S.supported rebels.
Jewish High Holy Day Services
ROSH HASHANAH
ROSH HASHANAH
Erev, Rosh HaShanah - Wed., Sept. 23
Hillel House Dinner 5:30 p.m.
RSVP required. (small charge)
Services at 7:30 p.m.
First Day Morning - Thurs., Sept. 24 - 9:30 a.m.
Evening - Thurs., Sept. 24 - 7:30 p.m.
Second Day Morning - Friday, Sept. 25 - 9:30 a.m.
Evening - Friday, Sept. 25 - 7:30 p.m.
YOM KIPPUR
Kol Nidrei - Friday, Oct. 2, Services at 7:30 p.m.
Hillel House Shabbat Dinner, 5:30 p.m.
RSVP required. (small charge)
Morning - Sat., Oct. 3 - 9:30 a.m. (Yizkor - 11:30 a.m.)
Evening - Sat., Oct. 3 - 4:30 p.m.
Break-the-Fast - Sat., Oct. 3 - 7:00 p.m.
NO RSVP required. (small charge)
All services to be held at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center, 917
Highland Dr. For rides, RSVPs and more info, call Hillel, 749-4242.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, September 23, 1987
Campus/Area
3
Local Briefs
Student struck by automobile after dispute
A KU student was hit by a car late Saturday night after he and a few of his friends had an altercation with the driver of the car, Lawrence police reported yesterday.
Jerry Sesto, Shawne junior, was struck by the driver of a late-model Buick in the 800 block of New Hampshire Street. He was treated on the scene by the Douglas County Ambulance service.
Police said witnesses were able to get the license number and the driver was identified. The case has been referred to District Attorney Jim Flory's office, which has not made a decision about the case.
According to the police report, Sesto and several of his friends were walking a female friend to the Bajek hotel driver of the Bajek vault at them.
Sesto and the driver exchanged words and later began to fight. The driver had returned to the car in an attempt to get away when Sesto moved in front of the car, the report stated.
Senate seeks to fill seven vacancies
Student Senate is seeking seven people to fill openings caused by resignations of senators, said Stephanie Quincy, student body vice president. Positions are available for an architecture senator, an education senator, a graduate senator, a Nunemaker senator and two law senators. Nunemaker senators are freshmen and sophomores in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Quincy said students may apply through the Student Senate office in the basement of the Burge Union beginning Sept. 30.
Leadership school gets three from KU
Three KU officials are among 16
Lawrence residents selected for
the 1988 class of Leadership
Lawrence.
The three officials are Neva Entrikin, office supervisor in the department of art history; Jim Long, director of the Kansas and Burge unions and Lorraine Michel, president of the Student Assistance Center.
The selection committee chose from 61 completed applications.
Leadership Lawrence, a community awareness program, was established in 1982 when the spoon-shaped Lawrence Chamber of Commerce.
Post in affirmative action office filled
A University of Kansas graduate student has been named assistant director of the KU office of affirmative action.
Melissa Manning Nuckolls will succeed James A. Turner, who became director of the affirmative action program and will begin her new duties Sept. 28.
Nuckolls holds a bachelor's degree in psychology and a master's degree in sociology from Wichita State University. She expects to complete her Ph.D. in sociology at KU in December 1968.
She has worked the past year as a programmer at the KU office of information systems. She also has been an assistant instructor and research assistant in the KU sociology department.
KU player arrested in long-distance case
Bv IAVAN OWENS
Kansas wide receiver Quintin A. Smith was arrested Monday night for theft of telecommunications, Lawrence police reported yesterday.
From staff and wire reports.
Staff writer
KU police arrested Smith at his Jayhawker Towers apartment about 7:30 p.m. He was taken to the Douglas County jail and booked. He was released later that night on $750 bond.
Court at 4 p.m. Monday.
Smith will make his first appearance in the Douglas County District
Smith, Houston sophomore, had been charged May 15 after MCI and U.S. Sprint investigators surrendered their evidence for prosecution, District Attorney Jim Flory said.
Flory said he decided to wait for Smith to return instead of starting extradition proceedings. Flory had requested a warrant for Smith's arrest several weeks ago, but the warrant had been delayed.
Football coach Bob Valesente said yesterday that Smith had been sidelined because of a knee injury he suffered in Saturday's game against Kent State. But Valesente would not comment on Smith's arrest.
"Until I hear anything official, I have no comment." Valente said.
have no comment, Valerie said
Doug Vance, director of sports
information, said Smith was unavailable for comment yesterday.
Smith could face up to a $2,500 fine and up to one year in the county jail if convicted of the Class A felony.
MCI investigator Jerry Slaughter in Dallas said yesterday that Smith's
arrest was only the beginning of a follow-up to the company's phone code abuse investigation which was last spring.
Slaughter said investigators had identified additional KU students, including some athletes in Jayhawk Towers who had made illegal calls. Only Smith and one Lawrence resident have been charged.
People who abused phone codes and do not come forward can be put into a class-action suit because the statute of limitations has not run out,
Slaughter said.
A class-action suit is a suit filed against several persons, each of whom can be made to pay the total value of the damages claimed, Slaughter said.
"We recently filed 21 civil suits against students at North Texas State. It was the first university we went to in our investigation last year, and you can bet soon to follow are all the other colleges we investigated," Slaughter said.
Panel lets dance group keep status
By NOEL GERDES Staff writer
Staff writer
The Student Senate Finance Committee, in a special meeting last night, considered revoking the University Dance Company's revenue code status for alleged mis management of the company's budget, but voted instead to send a bill to the Student Senate that would require the company to submit monthly budget reports.
The bill passed nine to four and should come before the Senate during its next regular meeting Oct. 7.
The University Dance Company failed to pay $595.12 in bills from fall 1986 and spring 1987, said Spencer Colvin. Senate administrative assistant and former Senate treasurer. In June, Senate paid the bills for the dance company.
Colvin also questioned the authorization of Senate vouchers by the company to make purchases off-campus. The vouchers give advance approval only to non-revenue code groups for off-campus purchases.
Student organizations can be placed on revenue code status if the Senate determines they have the ability to manage their own budgets. Groups with revenue code status receive a discount every two years, unlike the majority of organizations that request money every year.
Colvin and Matt Kerr, Senate treasurer, originally recommended the finance committee revoke the dance company's revenue code status; but he insisted their minds after hearing testimony from舞公司 officials.
Janet Hamburg, professor of dance and faculty adviser to the dance company, said errors had been made, but the company and the dance department had taken steps to ensure that the same errors would not occur again.
She said the dance company elected Katie Lynch, Lenexa freshman, as the new business manager, and she would be supervised by the executive secretary and bookkeeper. Also, all financial transactions would be reviewed by the chairman of the department of music and dance.
THE ELEVEN O'CLOCKS
Dave Niebergall/KANSAN
Deb Snyder (back), Miami freshman; Amanda Porras, Prairie Village freshman; and Vicki Prather, Wichita freshman, sketch landscapes of Potter Lake and its surroundings. The three were working yesterday for a Drawing I class.
A reflecting moment
Autopsy reveals evidence Blunt object caused death
By a Kansan reporter
A Wichita forensic pathologist determined that trauma caused by a blunt instrument was responsible for the death of Judy Kemp, a 32-year-old Lawrence woman whose body was found Sept. 9.
District Attorney Jim Flory said the finding was part of the additional evidence that prompted him to request the higher charge.
District Attorney Jim Flory said the finding was part of the additional evidence that prompted him to request the higher charge of first-degree murder against the woman's husband, 40-year-old Carl L. Kemp.
Kemp was charged Sept. 11, two days after Lawrence police found his wife's body in a box in a shed near the trailer home. 101 Michigan hospital staff were present last week because of a six-day hospital stay for low blood pressure.
The pathologist, William Eckert, finished the two-hour examination on Thursday. But Douglas County Coroner Alan Sanders said the report of the examination was not complete and it is unclear whether he from a toxicology test by the Kansas Bureau of Investigation. Those results have not been released.
Sanders said he had requested the assistance of a forensic specialist after his initial examination.
"Jim Flory and I discussed it and we both thought that it would be a desirable thing to do," Sanders said.
The district attorney's office is in the process of trying to secure documentation.
A preliminary hearing for Carl Kemp set for Monday has been postponed until 9:30 a.m. Oct.14
Flory said he could give no information on whether the murder weapon had been recovered or where the woman had been struck.
Construction work at hall keeps students out of kitchens
Staff writer
By BEN JOHNSTON
Residents of Battenfeld Scholarship Hall say that since the beginning of the semester they have had to endure annoyances caused by construction work the housing office is doing.
And they are not sure the work has improved the hall. Many residents only see the inconvenience of not having a television and the interruptions by workers.
Phillip Monslow, Kansas City, Kan., senior, said yesterday that many of the 48 residents of the hall were pleased the work was being done, but sometimes they were bothered by the workers.
"I am glad they are trying to improve the hall," Monslow said. "But one time a worker came into someone's room at 8:30 or 9 in the morning, but didn't anything. Another time someone was taking a shower, and he had shampoo
all over his head when the water was shut off without any notice."
Carol Tersch, coordinator of planned hall improvements, said that last year all the students shared one sleeping area and one study area, but during the summer the hall was too crowded. She said each had a study area and a sleeping area. She said new stoves and sinks had also been added to the kitchen.
Monslow said the kitchen was not being used yet except by residents
"The biggest problem is when someone has a class at 10 or 11, and he has to go to another hall to eat breakfast." Monslow said.
who wanted to eat cold cereal for breakfast. The residents must go to other residence halls to eat, he said.
Von Tersch said the kitchen originally was scheduled to be completed Oct. 15, but during the summer the contractor said he could complete the work by Sept. 15, so that date was set as the goal. Von Tersch
said.
The kitchen will be open for all meals starting Monday, Von Tersch said.
Kevin Skiridlus, Gaithersburg, Md., junior, said he was not sure the new kitchen was an improvement over the old one.
The new sinks are smaller than the old ones. Monslow said.
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BECOME PART OF THE TRADITION! Working with the Kansas Relays can be an exciting and rewarding experience. Applications will be accepted through FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25. Interviews will be conducted the following two weeks. Stop by the Kansas Track Office, Room 143 Allen Field House today and fill out an application
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4
Wednesday, September 23, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Quote marked
Once again, ethics plague a Democratic presidential candidate.
This time plagiarism plagues
Joseph Biden, the junior senator from Delaware, is charged by critics with using quotes from such notable figures as Robert Kennedy, Hubert Humphrey and British Labour Party leader Neil Kinnock.
Biden claimed at the time that the Syracuse plagiarism incident was an innocent mistake.
And the shadow of plagiarism extends back into Biden's law school career, where he received an "F" for copying five pages from a law review article without giving credit.
The senator blames his aide for a recent quote rerun, saying he was at a loss of how to close a speech and his aide suggested using the Kinnock statement. The duplicated quote from Robert Kennedy was blamed on a speechwriter who, without Biden's knowledge, incorporated Kennedy's words into Biden's speech.
A presidential candidate should embody the values and ideas that would carry the United States into the future. In essence, the candidate should present the ideas that portray him as a capable leader with fresh approaches to lingering or deeply rooted problems.
Biden, known by many for his sharp wit and sterling oratory, has wilted under the pressure of delivering speeches on the campaign trail. Or, worse, perhaps Biden has resorted to others' ideas to mask his lack of imagination.
In either case, Biden, as Senate Judiciary Committee chairman, is called to scrutinize the integrity of Appeals Court Judge Robert Bork.
And Biden expects a truthful answer.
Growing problem
Willie Nelson took on the Nebraska football team and won. But it may have been a hollow victory.
Some Nebraskans were upset when Farm Aid III occupied turf normally reserved for the Cornhuskers team to practice. Nevertheless, Nelson and the other performers prevailed, and the show went on as planned.
Just how much was gained is not clear. Nelson has no plans yet to organize an edition of the fund-raising concert next year, saying he is unsure whether he wants to put his friends through it again "for nothing."
Nelson's point is one well taken. Though Farm Aid is a worthy cause, the plight of farmers is one that seems to get lost in the shuffle. President Reagan contends that the farm crisis has abated, and the topic has been relegated to a back burner.
The fact that even Nebraskans, many of whom work the land to survive, would be upset that the cause interfered with the regular practice routine of the football team is evidence of the general apathy that pervades the issue. If residents of agricultural states are not fully committed to the cause, who will be?
Though the money raised through Farm Aid does help, it is only a drop in the bucket. Moreover, the existence of such efforts may give many who are not well acquainted with the issue the impression that farmers are being taken care of.
Needless to sav. this is far from true.
Perhaps it is time to realize that private charity is not able to alter that harsh reality of the farm crisis. It is a problem whose roots run far too deep to be tilled over by the earnest but ineffective efforts of a concerned few.
Clearance denied
"War Games" was showing in central Europe.
War Games was showing hobbyists in West German computer hobbyists have rummaged about in an international NASA computer network throughout the past three months.
That's right, an unidentified number of people were poking around in the system, which contained information on shuttle projects and rocket failures. The system carried no classified information, officials have said, but the break-in was a serious security breach, nevertheless.
security breach, the computer hobbyists were hackers, computer whiz kids who tried to break into private systems just for the challenge. In accordance with hacker ethics, no data were changed, but the capability existed along with the ability to paralyze the entire system. This display of mental strength may at first seem harmless and cute but at length poses the unsettling question: Is nothing sacred?
In a time when national security secrets are important, West German youths have been involved in illegal acts in the name of identifying security deficiencies. Consider the Red Square landing of Mathias Rust.
Is the unbreakable security system a thing of the past?
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
News staff
Jennifer Benjamin...Editor
Jill Warren...Managing editor
John Benner...News editor
Beth Copeland...Editorial editor
Sally Streff...Campus editor
Brian Kabertine...Sports editor
Brian Ruitelmann...Photo editor
Bill Skeet...Graphics editor
Tom Eblen...General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Bonnie J. Hardy...Business manager
Robert J. Hughes...Advertising manager
Kelly Scherer...Retail sales manager
Kurt Messersmith...Campus sales manager
Greg Knipp...Production manager
David Derffelt...National sales manager
Angela Clark...Classified manager
Ron Weems...Director of marketing
Jeanne Hines...Sales and marketing adviser
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WELLY Chicago Tribune
Robert KENNEY
IMPHRITY
HELL LABOUR KINNOC
bIDEN
Student Senate's rubber stamp
Money should be allocated by student referendum
the role that student government plays in allocating money is an absurd bureaucratic nightmare. As an apathetic student, I used to mock that role. As a student senator and finance committee member, I am now puzzled about how to live with it.
At the first finance committee meeting last Tuesday, every member voted the same way on every vote. The committee acted as a rubber stamp. When the author of one bill retracted her support, we even consented to be its sponsor. I shouldn't say "we," because I didn't vote. I sat there appalled and regrettably silent as the committee gave out several thousand dollars without batting an eye. You might think such mindless action could have been completed in less than five seconds. Wrong. We spent several hours.
Senate met the following night. As a new member, I anticipated some debate from senators supporting various constitutencies. There was none. We argued for an hour or so about an obscure contradiction in the rules, whose source no one could recall.
Finally we came to the bill the finance committee had unanimously and mysteriously authored. I was quite surprised to learn its specific contents, since I had only heard it quickly read in committee and had never seen a copy. However, the other senators were not surprised at all, and it appeared as though this bill would also pass unanimously.
Frank Partnoy Guest Shot
Regardless of the obvious merits of the bill, I had to get up and say something — and I did. I informed all of the senators that this bill was passed by an uninformed committee and that it had not been carefully considered. Ironically, a few minutes earlier we had been lectured to about the crucial role that committees must play in preparing bills. I pointed out that this bill had been ram-rodded through a new and impressionable committee and that its consideration was inappropriate.
I was supported by the senior senator present but the other senators lashed out against me. Even this minor threat to one of their bills was totally unacceptable. They immediately voted on the bill, and it passed with few dissentions, one of them mine. I shudder to think what might happen to a bill they didn't like.
of money — not just thousands, but hundreds of thousands of dollars. Something needs to change.
thousands in idea.
I have an idea that I hope will spark some debate. We can we change the allocation of money for students, you will vote for student organizations. The ballot will consist of several groups, and everyone will vote by allocating different amounts of money. Student Senate will be included among these groups, so if we truly support the Senate, we will give it all of our money.
It seems to me that the Senate is now an entity that is wholly unaccountable to the students. It is a frighteningly efficient politburo. If controlled by anyone, it is by the administrators. I realize most students don't care, but we are talking about a |the new budget.
This method of financing through referendum would eliminate the need for an elite student government structure and give everyone a say in how money is spent. Democracy would best be served because no one would be left out. The only problem would be finding something to do at Senate meetings.
However, if we want the money distributed differently, we will have the opportunity to voice our opinion. A list of groups will be provided, including a brief description of past budgets, services and current needs. For example, one of you might vote to give all of the money to campus transportation. Another might divide the money equally. That would be your right. The average of all of these recommendations would constitute the new budget.
Frank Partnoy is an Overland Park senior majoring in liberal arts and sciences. He is an off-campus student senator.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Segregation's source
Dan Houston: You are definitely right! It is difficult to pinpoint who is responsible for segregation between black and white students at the University of Kansas. Therefore, you should not have made the attempt without giving the matter more serious thought. It is absolutely ludicrous to blame any one group, especially one whose numbers are too few, for the segregation that exists at KU. We are all responsible, white students and their leaders included, since, as you openly admitted, they created the problem.
This generation of white students at KU still has attitudes and behaviors in ways that contribute to the problem of self-imposed segregation between black and white students. This is true, even though it may ease the conscience of some, like yourself, to use white students of the past and the black students of today as your scapegoats.
In your column, you described KU as a place where white students often and eagerly extended invitations for black students to join mainstream organizations. These black students, supposedly under the misguidance of their leaders who gain strength and membership to their own organization by convincing them that invitations are insincere, continually turned them down without so much as an explanation. A more accurate description is that, at best, white students passively accept black members who have taken the initiative to
If your column was intended to help bridge the gap between white students and black students at KU, I am afraid it was unsuccessful. In fact, by blaming the members and leaders of one group, without acknowledging the responsibilities of the other, did nothing but make matters worse.
join these organizations, on their own, whether they were invited or not. Black students who declined these offers did so because they felt more comfortable, active and rewarded as members of their own organizations that they, not a few power-hungry black leaders, have created. White students who are confused and bitter because of these rejections need to seriously consider how eagerly they would join the Black Student Union, or a black fraternity or sorority, if an invitation to do so was waiting for them in the mail today.
Mia Crawford, Kansas City, Kan., junior
Kuine
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UNIVERSAL PRESS SYNCAR
423
By GARY LARSON
The committee to decide whether spawning should be taught in school.
State/Local
States decide date for waste site vote
LITTLE ROCK — Kansans may find out in November whether a radioactive waste disposal site will be built in their state.
The Associated Press
The Central Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compact State, a group of states being considered for the site, instructed a consulting company to continue the process for selecting the host state despite objections from Nebraska.
The commission later set Nov. 16 as the date for the commission vote on the host state recommendation. That meeting was tentatively set for New Orleans, Jim Peery of Atlanta, Ga., the commission's executive director, called it the ultimate meeting.
Alluding to each state's general lack of desire to have the site, Peery noted that the date was near Thanksgiving and told the commissioners, "Perhaps some of you may be giving more thanks than others."
Four of the states in the compact, Arkansas, Kansas, Louisiana and Oklahoma, owned a tween or U.S. Ecology of Louisville, Ky., to go ahead with a
selection process "which shall be rational, systematic and verifiable," and which "shall treat member states fairly and equitably."
The motion spelled out selection criteria, but the Nebraska representative objected to whether the criteria should include credit for states that provide waste-management services for hazardous wastes. Grams said there were no disposal sites in Nebraska for hazardous waste. The other states have some hazardous-waste disposal sites.
But later in the meeting, Nebraska was able to get the other commissioners to go along with specific limits on the waste that would be considered for credit. But Nebraska could not get the commission to accept a proposal to allow each state to count a disposal site that may not be operated by an agency, but but be operating by Jan 1, 1993. If a firm's application is on file by Nov. 1 of this year, though, it could be counted, the commission decided.
The criteria, according to the motion, shall include factors related to groundwater and geologic formations.
Drug may safely reduce cholesterol
By AMBER STENGER
Staff writer
Dorothy Thomas said that she had been fighting high cholesterol for 17 years. Now she may have found a treatment that reduces her cholesterol level and does not cause side effects.
Before using lovastatin, a drug recently approved by the Food and Drug Administration, Thomas, Lawrence resident, had tried dieting, exercising and several drugs to fight cholesterol. Those drug treatments created intestinal and stomach problems for her, she said. So far, she has not had any side effects from lovastatin.
Thomas said that she had been receiving cholesterol treatment from the University of Kansas Medical Center for more than 10 years. She has been using lovastatin for two years.
During that two-year period, her cholesterol level has decreased from 351 milligrams for every 100 milliliters of blood to 238 milligrams, she said. The optimal level is 200 milligrams.
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, September 23, 1987
The Med Center is one of 12 hospitals in the nation conducting tests on lovastatin. The Med Center's Lipid and Arteriosclerosis Prevention Clinic has been testing lovastatin for three years. Forty volunteers, including Thomas, are being treated with the drug at the clinic.
Carlos Dujovne, director of the Lipid Clinic, said that he was optimistic about the drug because it was effective and convenient. But he said the question now is whether the drug is safe to take over a long period of time.
Lovastatin is taken in pill form. Patients take two pills each day. The drug is marketed by Merck & Co. of New Jersey under the name Mevacor.
Cholesterol is one of the main contributors to heart disease, the nation's No. 1 killer. Foods that are high in saturated fat, such as egg yolks, beef and butter fat, contain high levels of cholesterol.
When too much cholesterol is in the body, it accumulates on the walls of the arteries. Buildup of cholesterol on arterial walls causes blood to clot.
"Cholesterol builds up because it does not belong in the body in excessive amounts," Dujonev said. He said that some people naturally produced more cholesterol than their bodies needed.
which can lead to heart attacks.
Recent studies indicate that when people consume too much cholesterol, their bodies also produce higher levels of cholesterol. HMG COA reductase, an enzyme in the liver that breaks down the amount of cholesterol that enters the liver regulates the amount of cholesterol that reductase manufactures.
He said special gates in the liver cell controlled how much cholesterol ester.
"The amount of a substance produced is regulated by the amount of substance in the environment." Dujoven said. "And so when there is cholesterol coming in, then this enzyme production is reduced."
"When there is a lot of cholesterol outside the cell, the cell reads that as having too much cholesterol," Dujovne said. "To protect itself, it shuts off the gates. When it shuts off the gates,
there is no cholesterol coming in. Reductase sees there is no cholesterol coming in, so it starts making more cholesterol."
Lovastatin works by inhibiting the response of the reductase, and thus reduces reductase cholesterol production, he said. The gates open again and normal cholesterol levels are restored.
Dujovine said that the drug had not caused any major side effects.
Because the patients at the clinic are volunteering for the tests, they do not have to pay for their treatments, which can cost from $1,000 to $5,000.
Thomas said that she volunteered because she believed that she had nothing to lose and because the staff at the clinic was thorough.
Clinic workers begin the treatments by encouraging patients to follow a low cholesterol diet, exercise regularly, stop smoking and reduce their weight. Dujove said. Drug treatment follows if cholesterol levels remain high.
1 Clogged artery Heart
Clogged arterial walls lead to heart disease
1 Clogged artery Heart
Clogged arterial walls lead to heart disease
Liver Artery
Liver cells that produce cholesterol (see below)
Reductase producing cholesterol
Liver cell
1 Clogged artery
Heart
Clogged arterial walls lead to heart disease
Liver
Artery
Liver cells that produce cholesterol (see below)
2 The Problem
An excess of cholesterol causes the liver cell cholesterol gates to close. As buildup occurs outside the gates, the lack of cholesterol inside the cell causes reductase to produce cholesterol. This cholesterol then leaves the cell and contributes to clogging other cells or blood vessels in the body.
Cholesterol buildup
Reductase producing cholesterol
Cholesterol gates
Liver cell
3 The Solution
Lovastatin, a drug recently approved by the FDA, inhibits reductase so it will not produce additional cholesterol while the gates are closed. As the cholesterol level decreases throughout the body, the gates open and cholesterol activity returns to normal. Lovastatin, has negligible side effects and will be soon marketed under the name Mevacor.
Inhibited reductase no longer produces cholesterol
4 Cleared artery
Heart
Arterial walls cholesterol free reduce the threat of heart disease
Liver
Artery
Liver cells quit producing cholesterol (see below)
Source: Carlos Dujovne, University of Kansas Medical Center
4
Cleared artery
Heart
Arterial walls cholesterol free reduce the threat of heart disease
Liver
Artery
Liver cells quit producing cholesterol (see below)
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Wednesday, September 23, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Biden has talked of leaving presidential race, aide says
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Sen. Joseph Biden said yesterday he was assessing the damage to his troubled 1988 Democratic presidential campaign, and a key aide said the senator has discussed quitting the race with members of his staff.
"I'm not going to make that judgment now. I'm not going to make any further comments on the presidential race," the Delaware senator told reporters following a string of disclosures involving law school plagiarism and his use of other politicians' material in campaign speeches.
Rumors that Biden had quit the race swirled about his office during the day, and his spokesman, Larry Rasky, called reports that the senator ordered his aides to cease campaign efforts "pure junk."
Biden's campaign was damaged first by reports that he had lifted campaign speech material from British politician Neil Kinnock. He delivered a Kinnock anecdote as if it were his own. Then it was revealed that Biden had plagiated material for a law school paper in 1965.
His political situation deteriorated further Monday, when it was announced that he would be hospitalized.
academic credentials and accomplishments in a heated exchange with a voter in New Hampshire last spring.
During a break in the hearings on the nomination of Robert Bork to the Supreme Court, Biden told CBS News and ABC News, "if the damage done from this makes it impossible for me to win," he said. "I'm impossible for me to conduct a campaign at the same time, then I'm not going to stay in for the exercise."
Some of Biden's aides said that the best way for him to recover politically was to forget about his campaign and focus on his role as chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee and the Bork hearings. Biden said in the committee session that he would not quit as chairman and asserted, "The gavel is mine until they take it from me."
One associate said Biden, who travels to his home in Wilmington, Del., almost every night, intended to discuss his political future with his family before returning to Washington today.
Anne H. Lewis, Biden's New Hampshire campaign director, was asked if she was worried that when she wakes up in the morning, there
will be a call from Biden saying he is dropping out.
"I'm aware that it's definitely a possibility," she said. She denied rumors that Biden's New Hampshire operation was already shutting down.
A Biden aide, speaking privately, said, "Nobody would say that we're not damaged. This is a time when we might right mind would do a reassessment."
But one aide, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Biden's aides thought his campaign had been able to gain the White House.
Biden has been chairing confirmation hearings for Bork while the political controversy has swirled around his campaign. He has asked him to quit and said that officials expected difficulties with fundraising.
Biden qualified for federal matching money on yesterday.
In Iowa, a Biden campaign staffer who asked not to be identified said Washington aides have discussed the possibility of withdrawing, but that Iowa field staffers urged staying in the race.
Navy fighter downs Air Force jet
NORFOLK, Va. — A U.S. Air Force reconnaissance jet was accidentally shot down yesterday by a Navy F-14 fighter over the Mediterranean Sea during NATO exercises, but the two Air Force crewmen ejected safely, the Navy said.
The Associated Press
The Air Force RF-4C jet was downed by an air-to-air missile fired by the F-14, said Cmdr. Jolene Keefer, a spokeswoman for the Naval Air Force Atlantic. The Air Force plane was from Tactical Reconnaissance Wing 26 at Wiesden Base In base
West Germany.
The F-14, from the carrier USS Saratoga, carried the long-range Phoenix missile, the medium-range Sparrow and the short-range Sidewinder, but Keefer said she did not know which hit the Air Force jet.
A helicopter from the Saratoga picked up the two Air Force officers within 30 minutes and took them to the ship, Keefer said.
"Neither of the men suffered any apparent injuries, and both are in good health," she said.
From the KU Weather Service
officers as 1st Lt. Randy Spouse of Sumter, S.C., the pilot, and Capt. Michael Ross of Portsmouth, Ohio, the weapons officer.
She did not have the names of the two crewmen of the F-14, which was attached to Fighter Squadron 74 at Wright-Patterson Air Station in Virginia Beach, Va.
Keefer identified the Air Force
The accident, which occurred at 3:50 p.m. EDT, is being investigated by the Navy and the Air Force, she said.
WEATHER Lawrence Forecast
Sunny and Mild
HIGH: 81°
LOW: 52°
You will be mostly sunny with a few clouds. The high will be near dip to the lower 50s.
THU
Mostly sunny
76/52
FRI
Partly cloudy
78/55
SAT
Partly cloudy
81/50
SUN
Partly sunny
80/50
MON
Mostly sunny
80/52
TODAY Sunny and Mild HIGH: 81° LOW: 52° Today will be mostly sunny with a few afternoon clouds. The high will be near 80° and the low will dip to the lower 50s.
5-DAY THU Mostly sunny 76/52 HIGH LOW FRI Partly cloudy 78/55 SAT Partly cloudy 81/50 SUN Partly sunny 80/50 MON Mostly sunny 80/52
North Platte 81/45 Mostly sunny Omaha 78/52 Mostly sunny
Goodland 82/51 Mostly sunny Hays 81/51 Mostly sunny Salina 80/52 Mostly sunny Topeka 79/52 Mostly sunny Kansas City 78/54 Mostly Sunny Columbia 76/52 Mostly sunny St. Louis 76/55 Mostly sunny Dodge City 82/57 Mostly sunny Wichita 81/56 Mostly sunny Chanute 80/56 Mostly sunny Springfield 77/52 Mostly sunny
Forecast by Scott Dergan. Temperatures are today's high and tonight's overnight low. Conditions are forecasted for this afternoon. Tulsa 82/58
On Campus
"Interviewing I," a University Placement Center program, is scheduled for 8:30 a.m. today at 149 Burge Union
- Retirees Club coffee is scheduled for 10 a.m. today at Adam Lounge in the Adams Alumni Center.
"U.S. Constitution and Civil Liberties," a University Forum by David Gottlieb, professor of law, is scheduled for 11:40 a.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Orave Aad.
SenEx wants change in core curriculum plan
- Campus Christians meeting is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. today in the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union.
- Society of Women Engineers meeting is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. today at 2022 Learned Hall.
■ "The Fifth Republic and the Second Rebuilding of Paris," a slide lecture by David H. Pinkney, professor of history at the University of Washington, is scheduled for 7:30 a.m. at the Spencer Museum of Art, audition hall.
By a Kansan reporter
University Senate Executive Committee members yesterday afternoon voiced continued support for a University-wide core curriculum proposal, but some want changes to include exceptions for some professional schools such as fine arts and engineering.
Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for academic affairs, met with committee members to get their views on the proposal.
"I favor it. I have always favored
it," he said. "I see it implem-
mented." Bunkman said.
Brinkman said the proposed selective admissions policy, which would be debated during the Oct. 1 University Council meeting, eventually may affect the content of the core curriculum.
schools.
Core curriculum requirements include mandatory liberal arts and sciences courses for students in al$ ^{b}$
He said some of the funds for the core curriculum could come from the state through a proposed Margin of Excellence program.
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Judithr Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, also spoke to committee members. Ramaley said she and Brinkman had talked about appointing a dean of undergraduate studies to oversee undergraduate requirements.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, September 23, 1987
Campus/Area
7
Gay entertainers set fund-raiser for march
By KIRK ADAMS
Two popular gay music and comedy acts will perform from 7:30 p.m. to 10 p.m. tonight at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St.
Staff writer
A San Francisco duet, Romanovski and Phillips, and a local group, Pro Pride of Topeka, will perform to raise funds for the National March on Washington in support of lesbian and gay rights, Oct. 11.
Romanovsky and Phillips have performed in more than 35 states and are appearing in Lawrence for the first time. Ron Romanovsky plays piano and Paul Phillips plays guitar. The singer-songwriters play pop and folk music and calypso and 1950s "doo-wop" styles. The act brings their own experiences to stage. They sing about such subjects as gay pride, civil rights, human emotions and nuclear disarmment.
Rex Poindexter, a spokesman for Pro Pride and a promoter of the event, said, "They do everything and have a lot of fun with their music. Some of their harmonies are like Simon and Gartkufel, but their music styles are wide-ranging."
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Poindexter said that any person with an open mind would enjoy the show.
Pro Pride is a group of 30 gay performers who play music, do comedy routines and sing songs. They will open up for the duet and sing "Girl Power." The group has been performing in gay activist shows for about a year and a half.
Pointecker said that Romanovsky and Phillips had been lovers for about five years and that they called them as "professional" homosexuals.
Poinexter said that about 150 people from Kansas City and 30 from Topeka would be going to Washington, D.C., to participate in the march. He did not know how many people from Lawrence were going.
He said Romanovsky and Phillips would have a short performance the morning of the march.
Tickets for the show are $6 in advance and $8 at the door. They may be purchased in Lawrence at Dymnz, 530 Wisconsin St., Spinsters' Point, WI 8011*. Massachusetts St. and at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St.
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H. E.R.O.
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H. E.R.O. is a grassroots student lobbying campaign aimed at building support for increased state funding of our university. By joining H.E.R.O., you will be doing your part to protect the quality of our education.
GET INVOLVED!!
Attend the H.E.R.O. Meeting Wednesday, September 30 at 7 p.m.in the Alderson Auditorium!
Associated * Students * of * Kansas
8
Wednesday, September 23, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
State/Local
Missouri's governor urges KC tax appeal
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY. Mo. — A federal court order increases taxes to help pay for Kansas City school desegregation is a "bureaucratic nightmare" that should be appealed, Missouri Gov. John Ashcroft said yesterday.
The governor, blasting U.S. District Judge Russell Clark's order imposing a state income tax surcharge and increasing local property taxes as "excessive, exorbitant and extremely taxed that he had met earlier in the day with Attorney General William Webster and encouraged an appeal.
"I recommend that we use every legal means at our disposal to fight this order," Ashcroft said. "The order imposes an incredible scheme
of taxation to finance programs that would not even be worthy of voluntary contributions."
Asherco laashed out particularly at magnet schools, a key part of Clark's desegregation order. The magnet schools are specialized programs designed to attract more white students to the 36,000-student district, which is 68 percent black.
Ashcroft criticized one proposal for a 25-acre "working farm with barn," featuring an air-conditioned meeting room and caretaker's apartment, an additional 25 acres of wild land and a fully equipped greenhouse.
my companion great. "It's not as if there are aren't wild lands than can be seen," Ashcroft said.
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, September 23, 1987
9
Meeting leads to confusion for KU sports clubs
Jeff Klein/Special to the KANSAN
By ROBERT WHITMAN
Gordon Kratz, KU coordinator of sports clubs, stands in the entrance to Robinson Center. Much of the confusion over possible changes in guidelines affecting University sports clubs arose during a meeting Kratz had with club representatives.
I
Staff writer
KU Crew president Scott Klaws thought he was responding to a real threat to the future of crew as a University organization.
- if it didn't integrate itself into the recreational services bureaucracy.
Klaus said he thought his club was threatened when sports club coordinator Gordon Kratz told him that he'd be making money and its boats would be sold
Based on that Sept. 9 meeting between Kratz and about 20 sports club presidents, Klaus wrote a letter to Kratz protesting the purported changes. But it only served to perpetuate a sense of confusion about what changes would be made.
In an effort to clear up some of that confusion, representatives from the sports clubs will meet today with Stephanie Quincy, student body vice president, and two members of recreational services.
"The biggest misconception is that drastic changes are impending: reduced funding, losing control of the money that has been taken for them and losing control over their group, period." Quincy said.
Quincy is a member of a sports clubs task force that is to make recommendations to the Senate concerning guidelines for sports clubs receiving Senate money. This year, seven sports clubs divided funds totaling $16,292.
The task force will also propose changes in the method the Senate considers funding requests from sports clubs.
The presidents of all 20 sports clubs registered with the organization and activities center were sent letters inviting them or a representative of the club to the meeting, Quincy said.
She said Mary Chappell, director of recreational services, and Kratz also would be at the meeting to answer questions about the proposed guidelines.
"We want to inform them of the work of the task force this summer and ask for their input," Quincy said.
But KU Crew coach Cliff Elliott, said crew, which received about 61 percent of the money allocated to sports clubs, had been shut out
from giving input to the task force.
"And that's the probably the thing that dispatches or worries me the most," Elliott said. "Crew had requested to be a part of the decision-making process. But it went largely ignored."
Elliott said his biggest concern was that recreational services would start dictating how much he would spend and how it would be spent.
"I'm not interested in cutting the lightweight program, restricting membership and restricting fundraising just to satisfy recreational services," he said.
Elliott said he also was concerned that all sports clubs would receive one block of money from the Senate and crew would lose out in the struggle with recreational services for what it considered its share of the money.
Quincy said no recommendations had been finalized by the task force yet.
"The funding procedure is essentially the same," Quincy said. "What I'm hoping is that we can get some input from people who have knowledge about sports."
Quincy said the task force might recommend the clubs submit their requests for funds to the Senate, but the requests would be reviewed first by the recreational services advisory board.
Klaus said that was not the procedure outlined by Kratz in the Sept. 9 meeting.
The board is composed of five students appointed by the Senate; Ann Eversole, director of organizations and activities; Caryl Smith, dean of student life; Wayne Ossness, chairman of health, physical education and recreation; and one person appointed by David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs.
After that, she said the requests would then be reviewed by the Senate's finance committee, then by the Senate as a whole.
"The feeling I got from Gordon was that we'd lose control of our club slowly, but surely," he said. "We want to be a student-governed organization. If we can't have that government as well into the community."
Kratz said, "What has happened, I feel, is that I was given
some misleading information and I misunderstood some other information."
Kratz said he met with Quincy yesterday and cleared up any misconceptions he had.
"I told the presidents (of the sports clubs) one thing at the (Sept. 9) meeting," he said. "Steve came another thing when we talked."
comments about the boats of the KU Sailing Club.
Quincy said recommendation would be made that sports clubs be required to carry liability insurance, that make sure that all club clubs have insurance policies and that the clubs follow travel guidelines.
Kratz said he didn't tell Klaus that he would sell Crew's boats. He said Klaus confused that with his
She said she hoped members or officers of sports clubs would become involved with the board if the number of student members was increased.
The task force may also recommend an increase in the number of students on the recreational services advisory board to 13, Quincy县.
The task force is scheduled to meet Oct. 9 to finalize its recommendations, Quincy said.
Once the recommendations are finalized, Quincy said, she would write a bill reflecting the recommendations and assign it to the Senate's Student Rights committee.
Seitzer's hit in tenth gives Royals victory
The Associated Pre
SEATTLE — Kevin Seitzer's RBI double with two outs in the 10th inning gave the Kansas City Royals a 4-3 victory over the Seattle Mariners last night.
Seitzer sent losing pitcher Jerry Reed's pitch down the right field line to score Willie Wilson, who had reached on a forceout.
Jerry Don Gleton, 4.4, who got out of a two-out, bases loaded jam in the ninth inning, was the winner. Riehle and Levin saved the final inning for his fifth save.
Reed, 1-2, who replaced Seattle started as the rookie in head of the team, was the loss.
center field wall in the first inning gave the Mariners a 1-0 lead. They scored two more runs in the second inning, two two-out single with the bases loaded.
George Brett hit a sacrifice fly in the Kansas City third, then hit a bases-empty homer along with the next two hits ahead in the sixth to tie the score 3-3.
Brett's homer, his 21st of the year,
set a new Kansas City record for
team homers in a season. The Royals
reached the league standard of 154
set by the 1984 club
The victory broke a four-game Royals losing streak, but failed to gain them any ground in the American League West race.
Victory puts Cardinals' magic number at 9
Jim Presley's RBI double off the
The Associated Press
ST. LOUIS — Vince Coleman singled and scored two runs, leading St. Louis to a 3-2 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies last night that extended the Cardinals' games in the National League East.
By winning, St. Louis trimmed its magic number for winning the division to nine over New York and Montreal. The Cardinals lead the Mets by 3>3 and Montreal, which has played one fewer game than New York, by four.
Danny Cox, 10-8, pitched a five-hitter, striking out six and walking four for his first victory in six starts since Aug. 23. Cox, who had lost his previous season, went seven 2-3 innings before Todd Worrell came on for his 23rd save.
Worrell yielded a lead-off homer to Mike Schmidt, his 32nd of the season and 527th lifetime, in the ninth. Lefthander Ken Dayley then came in to pitch to left-handed batter Von Hayes, with Worrell moving to right field, replacing Lance Johnson. Dayley struck out Hayes, and Worrell
returned to the mound, with John Morris going to right.
Coleman, marking his 26th birthday, singled and stole his 103rd base of the year to open the first inning. After Ozzie Smith walked, both runners moved up on a passed ball and Coleman scored on a wild pitch by Shane Wray. 17-10.
The RBI for McGee, his 103rd, set a single-season record of 102 by a Cardinals center fielder. McGee's additional RBI this year was as a pinch hitter.
Tourney to top off intramural softball
157 teams to play in seven categories
The 157 teams in the tournament will be broken down into seven categories. Men's teams will play for the title of Independent Recreation League A and Greek League A. Men's and women's team divisions are Independent Trophy League, and Greek Trophy League. The Co-ed Recreation League will also decide its champion in the tournament.
By DARRIN STINEMAN Staff writer
Staff writer
The intramural softball season will culminate in a single-elimination softball tournament beginning Monday at the softball fields near Robinson Center.
The softball season was moved from the spring to the fall three years ago because so many games were being rained out in the spring. Johnson said that he thought the number of teams were increasing because people were slow getting used to having the season in the fall.
John Johnson, intramural sports coordinator at Robinson, said that he was pleasantly surprised by the large number of teams entered in the tournament. He said that there was a 27 percent increase in the number of teams from last year.
Teams play only three games during the regular season, and the results from those games help the teams win a tournament to bracket the teams.
The men's and women's winners of the Independent Trophy League and the Greek Trophy League will meet for what Johnson called the "Hill Championship." The winners of the Creationist League won't play each other, but all division winners will receive T-shirts and a trophy.
"The regular season games are used to help match up opponents." Johnson said. "An undefeated team and an underfunded team in the first round."
The teams that had to forfeit a game during the regular season are not allowed to play in the post-season tournament unless they pay a $2 fee. Johnson said that was done to prevent forfeits during the season.
Trophy league teams pay a $20 fee at the beginning of the regular season which includes entry in the tournament. Recreation League teams pay $10
Johnson said the tournament setup was unique in that the teams don't blow out each other.
The tournament is scheduled to continue into mid-October, Johnson said.
"We're one of the few schools in the country that take everyone into the school cafeteria, so they take only the champions of each division, but we take everybody,"
been trying to teach them for three years," she said. "We're starting to play better. We didn't make as many mistakes as we made last week. We just got overpowered at times."
Loss to Central Missouri State extends volleyball losing streak
in spite of the scores, KU coach Frankie Albitz said the team played better as the match progressed.
Kansas plays Iowa State at 7 p.m. Saturday in Ames, Iowa, in a Big Eight Conference match. The Jayhawks will play Northern Iowa at 1 p.m. Sunday in Cedar Falls, Iowa.
Central Missouri State, the No. 1 ranked volleyball team in NCAA Division II, defeated Kansas last night 15-13, 15-11, 12-15, 15-8 in Warrensburg, Mo. The loss by the Jayhawks, 47, extended their losing streak to five matches.
KU offense worse on film than on the field
By a Kansan reporter
"I think our team is finally learning the hard way what I've
By CRAIG ANDERSON
Staff writer
Statistically the Jayhawks offense looked terrible. The rushing game netted only 66 yards. Kansas quarterback Kelly Donohoe and Mike Orth completed only 10 of 29 passes and threw two interceptions. Their longest offensive drive of the game lasted just longer than three minutes
Kansas offensive coordinator Gary Huff didn't enjoy watching the Jayawhack offense bog down for most of the game Saturday against Kent State. He realized later, though, that he hadn't seen anything yet.
After seeing the films, Huff and Coach Baja Valeste said they were
"Watching the game films afterward was just so frustrating," he said. "I saw how close we were, but one or two guys were were breaking down on every play. It was different players every time."
disappointed with the offensive line's performance.
"The offensive line fire off the ball and practices hard all week," Valente said. "When it comes to game strategy, you can look like they are walking on eggs."
Huff said that the line shouldn't take all the blame for the offensive wees. The Kansas offensive line had been looked on as a strength of the offense in early season practices, but Huff said that nobody on the unit could honestly say he had done a good job in the first two games.
Huff said. "Its very frustrating to watch their lack of aggressiveness. They didn't give our quarterback enough time to throw all day."
"The best way you can play is lead by example," he said. "We have a lot of guys who talk a good game, but when it comes time to perform on Saturday, they fall short."
As is usually the case when an offense stagnates, there was discussion after the game about who should start at quarterback. Donohoe, a sophomore, started the Jayhawks first two games, but he couldn't move the offense. Senior quarterback Matt McGill scored in the fourth quarter. However, Huff said Donohoe still would be the starting quarterback.
"It's easy for fans to sit back and criticize coaches' decisions when they don't have, to make the decisions themselves," he said. "I think the quarterback often takes too much of the blame when an offense isn't working."
Despite the offensive misery Saturday, Huff said there were some positive aspects. He said the Jayhawk wide receivers played well. Junior Willie Vaughn led the way with four receptions for 156 yards and
a touchdown. Huff said that when the receivers were open, the offensive line protection broke down or the quarterbacks overthrew their targets.
Freshman tailback Frank Hatchett gave the Jayhawks a little spark in the third quarter, gaining 27 yards in seven carries. Hatchett left the game with lacerations on his back during the same quarter and did not return.
Hatchett was running hard and showed some speed. Huff said, "He should be ready to go by Saturday."
Huff said the few successes gave the Jayhawks something to build on.
"We all have to stick together and weather the storm," he said. "Later, when this is over, we will be able to look back and see who stuck with us. There's still plenty of time this season to make a lot of improvement."
Chiefs expect to field full team for L.A. Raiders game
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Kansas City Chiefs expect to have a full complement of non-striking football players Oct. 4 when they resume their season by playing the Los Angeles Raiders, Coach Frank Gansz said.
The Associated Press
we're going to make the very best of the situation and we're going out there every game to win," Gansz said yesterday as the Chiefs and 27 other NFL teams dug in for the best NFL players strike in five years.
No pickets appeared yesterday, the players' regular day off.
But player representative Nick Lowey scheduled a news conference this morning at what he said would
the Chiefs' picket line outside Arrowhead Stadium. The Chiefs, 1 in Gansz' first year as head coach, were expecting more than 60,000 in Arrowhead Sunday for Minnesota, a game that is expected to be canceled.
"Everybody will have to go out there with a basic game plan. A basic defense, a basic offense, a basic kicking game," he said. "It will have to play ball, football, but We'll get ready to play, and our purpose will be to win."
Gansz said that fans should expect the strike teams to play no-frills football.
Gansz said that he will be waiting at the door today to greet his new players.
'There won't be anything to do but
take physicals," he said. "Then Thursday we'll hold our first practice. We'll come in at 9 a.m. and work on special teams first. The first meeting will be the pnt team meeting. How do we punt the ball? How do we run this formation? We'll take everything in a walk-through at first
... run basic handoff plays, basic pass plays. You can't be too fancy.
We're going to make the best of it."
As special teams coach the past two years, Ganz enjoyed immense popularity among players, a major factor in the decision to dump the unpolluted John Mackovic and elevate Gans to the job. He has always been a player who can rapport with his players that is unusual among NFL head coaches.
and his closeness with the players might seem imperiled by the bitterness that can accompany a strike.
"I liken this situation to my daughter," he said. "I love her. She's a beautiful young gal. But I can remember having some arguments with her when she was 15-16. She would leave the house and go stay with one of her friends for a while. She'd always come back and always make up, manage, and watch it still the same thing, but it'll be her own thing. The players have to do what they think is right. I understand that. But they have to understand my job. The big thing is we've got to get back as soon as possible to the business of winning."
"I didn't go out and get another daughter." he said.
"We hope to have 45 by Friday," Schaaf said. "It's a difficult, but not impossible situation."
General Manager Jim Schaaf said that 40 strike-breakers would be in Arrowhead today for physical examinations.
Nevertheless, Gansz said that he has deliberately not taken part as scouts and front office personnel line up replacements.
"But they will come from all over the country," he added. "They will be players we scouted while they were on the field, camp or players we've been keeping tabs on. There's not a lot of secrets out there. I am not aware of any
(regular Chiefs players) who are expected to re-join us Thursday."
Scafa and Gansz both agreed that franchises in high-population areas such as Los Angeles might have an advantage.
"I think the teams in the heavily populated geographic areas will have the advantage, because they have a lot of players. Los Angeles, Philadelphia, New York," Ganss said. "Those teams will have the advantage. Lots of very good football players live in the San Diego-Los Angeles area. Nobody said it was always going to be fair."
The Chiefs also announced yesterday that ticket holders will have several options for getting refunds on canceled games.
10
Wednesday, September 23, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Sports
Charges filed against Chargers
The Associated Press
SAN DIEGO — The District Attorney's office filed drug charges yesterday against Chargers cornerback Danny Walters and former Chargers defensive lineman Earl Wilson stemming from separate incidents.
Walters was charged with one felony count of possession of cocaine and one misdemeanor count of driving under influence of drugs or alcohol, district attorney's spokeswoman Linda Miller said.
An Oct. 2 arraignment has been scheduled for Walters, who was arrested Sept. 14 by two San Diego police officers after they allegedly observed his car weaving eratically.
The officers alleged that they found 1.7 grams of cocaine in Walters' cellars.
Chargers spokesman Rick Smith said the club had no immediate comment on the filing of charges against Walters.
Team doctors administered a drug
test to Walters the day after his arrest, which the team said showed no signs of recent drug use. But the San Diego Union reported yesterday that Walters tested positive for drugs and alcohol in a urinalysis administered by police.
will not become public record until they are revealed in court, Miller said.
Results of the test given by police
The charges faced by Walters, who was treated for a cocaine dependency in 1984, carry a maximum sentence of $3% years in jail and $11,000 in fines, Miller said.
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PROFESSIONAL MONTHLY MEETING OF THE YEAR
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Environs (in vīl ranz) n. pl.
Environs (in vi ranz) n. pi 1. Anyone interested in the environment 2. Open to everyone
Speaker: Danna Luckey, Dept.
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Kansas Union-Walnut Room
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Let's go skiing over Christmas Break! Sunsafe Tours Sixth Annual College Winter Skis Breaks offer skiers the opportunity to ski in Winter Park for five or seven nights including lifts/parties, races and from more on-road (options available) as well as holiday skiing. call toll free for your complete color ski break brochure 1-800-321-5911
Portrayal of Women in the Media
Tuesday, Sept. 29, 1987 7:00-9:00 p.m.
This workshop will present "Still Killing (Us Softly), a thirty-minute documentary, exploring the ways in which stereotypes in the media affect the images of women. An informal discussion will follow.
Pine Room, Kansas Union
Susanne Shaw, Associate
Professor of
Management,
Executive Director
Accrediting Council on
International Education
on Mass Communication
Sponsored by The Emily Taylor Resource Center, 218 Strong Hall. For more information, contact Pam Lathrop at 864-3552.
Members of Delta Sigma Phi on KU campus, please contact Dave Broyles. 843-3085. Organizing campus war games club. Tour with Cameron. Call Rob at 843-1471 anytime.
SCHOOL OF
JOY
ORDER
YOUR
SCHOOL
T-SHIRT
NOW!
All schools represented.
Look for the PRISSA table outside Wescoe, 10:30 - 2,
Sept. 23, 24, 30, and Oct.
1.
ENTERTAINMENT
At your request is Lawrence's Best and Most Affordable B4. 3D Sound and Lighting for Any Occasion. 841-1465
Don't blow your cool! Hoodoo Gurus from Australia are comin' to town. Tickets at SUA and CATS $10/$10.
Curtis
Timmy, Partners in Rivene. you've seen them at the Up & Under; see them at your party. Classic to contemporary party music. It's big fun. 841-5511.
No 45- not the "Hard Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 46- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 47- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 48- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 49- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 50- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 51- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 52- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 53- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 54- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 55- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 56- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 57- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 58- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 59- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 60- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 61- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 62- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 63- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 64- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 65- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 66- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 67- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 68- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 69- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 70- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 71- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 72- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 73- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 74- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 75- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 76- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 77- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 78- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 79- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 80- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 81- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 82- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 83- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 84- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 85- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 86- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 87- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 88- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 89- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 90- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 91- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 92- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 93- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 94- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 95- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 96- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 97- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 98- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 99- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 100- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 101- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 102- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 103- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 104- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 105- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 106- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 107- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 108- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 109- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 110- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 111- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 112- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 113- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 114- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 115- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 116- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 117- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 118- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 119- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 120- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 121- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 122- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 123- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 124- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 125- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 126- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 127- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 128- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 129- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 130- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 131- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 132- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 133- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 134- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 135- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 136- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 137- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 138- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 139- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 140- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 141- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 142- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 143- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 144- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 145- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 146- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 147- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 148- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 149- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 150- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 151- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 152- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 153- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 154- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 155- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 156- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 157- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 158- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 159- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 160- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 161- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 162- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 163- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 164- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 165- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 166- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 167- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 168- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 169- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 170- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 171- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 172- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 173- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 174- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 175- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 176- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 177- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 178- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 179- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 180- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 181- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 182- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 183- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 184- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 185- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 186- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 187- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 188- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 189- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 190- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 191- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 192- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 193- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 194- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 195- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 196- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 197- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 198- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 199- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 200- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 201- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 202- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 203- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 204- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 205- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 206- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 207- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 208- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 209- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 210- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 211- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 212- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 213- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 214- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 215- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 216- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 217- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 218- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 219- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 220- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 221- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 222- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 223- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 224- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 225- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 226- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 227- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 228- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 229- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 230- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 231- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 232- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 233- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 234- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 235- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 236- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 237- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 238- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 239- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 240- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 241- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 242- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 243- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 244- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 245- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 246- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 247- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 248- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 249- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 250- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 251- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 252- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 253- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 254- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 255- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 256- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 257- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 258- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 259- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 260- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 261- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 262- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 263- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 264- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 265- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 266- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 267- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 268- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 269- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 270- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 271- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 272- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 273- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 274- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 275- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 276- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 277- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 278- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 279- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 280- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 281- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 282- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 283- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 284- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 285- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 286- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 287- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 288- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 289- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 290- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 291- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 292- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 293- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 294- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 295- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 296- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 297- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 298- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 299- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 300- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 301- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 302- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 303- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 304- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 305- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 306- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 307- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 308- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 309- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 310- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 311- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 312- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 313- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 314- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 315- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 316- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 317- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 318- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 319- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 320- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 321- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 322- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 323- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 324- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 325- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 326- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 327- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 328- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 329- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 330- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 331- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 332- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 333- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 334- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 335- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 336- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 337- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 338- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 339- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 340- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 341- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 342- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 343- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 344- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 345- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 346- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 347- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 348- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 349- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 350- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 351- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 352- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 353- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 354- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 355- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 356- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 357- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 358- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 359- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 360- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 361- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 362- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 363- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 364- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 365- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 366- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 367- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 368- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 369- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 370- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 371- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 372- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 373- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 374- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 375- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 376- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 377- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 378- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 379- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 380- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 381- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 382- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 383- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 384- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 385- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 386- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 387- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 388- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 389- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 390- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 391- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 392- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 393- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 394- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 395- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 396- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 397- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 398- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 399- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 400- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 401- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 402- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 403- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 404- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 405- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 406- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 407- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 408- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 409- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 410- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 411- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 412- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 413- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 414- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 415- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 416- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 417- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 418- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 419- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 420- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 421- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 422- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 423- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 424- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 425- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 426- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 427- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 428- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 429- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 430- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 431- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 432- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 433- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 434- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 435- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 436- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 437- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 438- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 439- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 440- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 441- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 442- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 443- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 444- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 445- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 446- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 447- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 448- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 449- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 450- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 451- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 452- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 453- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 454- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 455- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 456- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 457- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 458- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 459- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 460- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 461- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 462- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 463- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 464- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 465- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 466- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 467- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 468- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 469- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 470- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 471- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 472- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 473- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 474- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 475- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 476- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 477- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 478- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 479- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 480- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 481- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 482- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 483- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 484- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 485- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 486- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 487- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 488- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 489- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 490- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 491- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 492- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 493- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 494- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 495- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 496- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 497- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 498- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 499- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 500- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 501- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 502- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 503- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 504- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 505- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 506- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 507- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 508- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 509- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 510- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 511- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 512- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 513- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 514- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 515- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 516- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 517- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 518- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 519- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 520- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 521- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 522- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 523- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 524- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 525- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 526- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 527- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 528- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 529- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 530- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 531- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 532- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 533- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 534- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 535- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 536- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 537- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 538- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 539- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 540- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 541- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 542- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 543- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 544- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 545- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 546- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 547- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 548- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 549- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 550- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 551- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 552- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 553- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 554- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 555- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 556- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 557- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 558- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 559- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 560- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 561- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 562- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 563- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 564- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 565- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 566- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 567- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 568- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 569- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 570- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 571- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 572- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 573- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 574- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 575- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 576- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 577- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 578- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 579- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 580- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 581- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 582- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 583- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 584- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 585- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 586- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 587- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 588- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 589- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 590- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 591- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 592- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 593- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 594- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 595- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 596- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 597- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 598- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 599- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 600- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 601- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 602- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 603- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 604- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 605- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 606- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 607- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 608- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 609- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 610- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 611- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 612- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 613- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 614- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 615- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 616- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 617- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 618- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 619- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 620- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 621- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 622- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 623- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 624- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 625- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 626- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 627- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 628- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 629- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 630- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 631- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 632- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 633- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 634- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 635- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 636- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 637- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 638- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 639- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 640- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 641- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 642- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 643- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 644- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 645- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 646- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 647- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 648- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 649- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 650- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 651- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 652- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 653- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 654- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 655- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 656- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 657- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 658- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 659- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 660- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 661- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 662- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 663- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 664- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 665- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 666- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 667- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 668- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 669- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 670- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 671- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 672- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 673- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 674- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 675- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 676- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 677- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 678- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 679- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 680- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 681- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 682- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 683- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 684- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 685- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 686- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 687- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 688- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 689- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 690- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 691- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 692- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 693- not the "Rand Rock Cafe" in Anaheim. No 694- not the "Rand Rock C
Rent a hot tub for your next party. Call Tub-to-go-
181-2691.
ULTIMATE ENTERTAINMENT
Ultimate Mobile DJ System For All Occasions.
Phil M42-3380
FOR RENT
1 bedroom cottage. $225.00 plus utilities. Deposit required. NO PETS. Near campus & downtown. 845-3147.
APPLE LANE APTS. Contemporary studios available at Apple Lane. On KU bus route. Laundry facilities. Ample parking. Water and cable per month. Call 843-1300 for appointment to see
BRAND NEW completely furnished 4 bedroom
apts available immediately. On the bus route and
in walking distance of KU. Call 749-4236 or
*Master Car Management*.
Furnished two bedroom apt one block from the University with off-street parking. No pets, please 841-5500.
Furished 2 bedroom ap, some utilities paid, off-
charge, lined, 1 pack. Inventory. No pets. B41-5000
841-5000
HOUSE FOR RENT ReShare large 5 bm²/2 mth house CLOSE TO CAMPUS with LAUNDRY IN BASEMENT and 6 bth arm or design students (guy) need 2-4 more people to share rent and bills at 14th and Kentucky. Contact Daryl At 316-841-6123 or 316-286-2689. 1217 N.
Large basement bedroom $150. Utilities paid.
SHARE kitchen, bath, & living room. Call Maury at 842-8348.
Must sublet 2 bedroom apartment $310/mon.
202. W.778. New dishwasher, carpet/paint. On
route bus. 841-969. Low utilities. Pool.
satisfied with where you're living? Naimishm has one tenure fee available for immediate personal consideration. Consider individual lease liability, excellent "A1-BU-Care" coverage, weekly maid service, and you'll see why we're renting best housing options at KU! For more info, call or come by Naimshm Hall, 1803 Naimshm Drive.
Bent 1/3 of three bedroom townhouses $150 plus
12 utilities. No provision. On bus route. Call Maria
SUNFLOWER HOUSE. Rooms available as members graduate in September. Low rates, great location 749-0671, ask for Ann, Deb, or Tom.
Sublease-1 bedroom plus leaf. Very unique.
Available immediately. Call 841 5797.
SUNRISE PLACE
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 ...
841-1287
for an appointment.
Office number is 1.5-M F
FOR SALE
1966 Fender guitar with case, Bill Lawrence blade pickups, good black, good condition,$175. Call 864-264-264
1972 Honda Motorcycle CB500. Perfect condition. Must sell! Call 864-641-841
979-800 Yamaha. Very good condition. Must sell
475.000 Call Luke at 864-9211-841-9698
6475 OBD. Call Lake at 684-821-9401
863 26 12 to foot Excel, 5th wheeler. Excellent condition.
Call to see this camper. 842-8017.
1964 Hoda Nighthawk K 3,000 miles, 2 helmets
K 4444444444
dim blondhairy. A warm Array of Antiques, collectibles and new stuff we wear; hardback and 1/2 price paper bookacks, full line of new comic books, Playbets, Penthouse, etc., laden with fun things to buy.
good staff, the right vintage clothes for any occasion, antique toys, fine art glass, doll house furniture, miniatures, fictional and Quintrilla Friesa Market, 11 New Hampshire, Open Sat & Sun Market, 11 New Hampshire, Open Sat & Sun
Bassett reciellers. We have just received a truckload of factory clear-out reciellers. While 40 man size reciellers last-only $199 or forms, Hurry to Mark & Quarry Purchase furniture.
Brand new Samsung microwave $100, value for $80 at Colony Woods, apartment N17.
Close out sale. We have several odds & ends that will be offered direct to public tables. $50-$100 @ 88 coffee tables, $13, dresser & mirror $79 and mats $49. $150-$200 @ *act at Mark & Hurry-supply* is . . . *act at Mark & Hurry-supply*
Water Cooler, Soda Springs, Jacksonville,
Hurry-supply is limited. Inspect at Mark &
Quain Furniture Warehouse, 8th & New Hampshire,
Lawrence.
For Sale: Bowie concert tickets, October 4 show at Kemper. Very good seats. Call 841-2276 after 5 p.m.
For Sale. King-sized waterbed complete with
liness and lust. Mantel-sell best. Call
789-5200.
FUJI MOUNTAIN BIKE Perfect condition The ultimate bating machine. Not a serrated $160
For Sale: Yakima warrior. New Phil Wood
Camp. Call Jack Nicklaus golf
Call. Mark 841-399
1979 Buick Regal, super condition, air, AM/FM cassette, very clean, new seat covers, $2600.
841-2399
**PROGRAMS**. Five easy to use programs for the Hewlett Packard 1U calculator. Clearly designed and clearly labeled examples. Programs include. 3 by 3 matrix, decimal to binary conversion, synthetic division and more. Send $210 (check/m.o.) to: WM Kulmann. Dept. I, P.O. B406, Rolla, MO
165 Super Bettle Caster-new - top paint, interior tires over coated. Porsche wheels. Complete restoration. $425 OBO. Call Dave at 714-308-7900.
MOTHIBALLE GOOD USED FURNITURE:
MAXXMALL 10:50 AM, SATURDAY 2:30 PM,
P.O. Box 8947, CAMBRIDGE, MA 02469
LOW MILEAGE LAYER NEW 829 Yamaha Seca 560
Start with a trip for 1 hour. Call 694
or visit time weeks. 567-937-4364
180 Chevrolet Monza; very clean, A/C/AM/FM
caterer, great gas mileage. $150 best offer
Racing bike 1807 Biancio 59 cm, $40.00 Ross
183rd mountain bike 2008 Bike inex
844 843-173
*****Cordless Bell Phones****** Overstocked and must be sold by EOM! Only
Dinky TX18 receiver, 1905 Breda GT, $200
Oakley TX35 receiver, 1905 Bradley GT, $200
dorm carpet 45" x 18" speed bike for
Call 641-724-8894
1980 CJ7-4, 4-speed, high mileage, very clean,
$3000. Lencera, 1-695-6532.
AUTO SALES
Truckload dionette sale! Over a dozen styles to choose from with or 4 of 6 chairs. Started at 18:40 in terms. Inspect at Mark & Quain Furniture base, 18th and New Hampshire, Lawrence, KS
Naimish contract for sale. Will pay $160 security deposit. Contact Frank at 914-252-7389.
Phone: **phones**
Sale: sofa sleeper and 10-speed at 739 Massachusetts, Miller Furniture.
Turntable, CD player, amp, tuner, equalizer
749-3025
Sukiak GS 450E, great condition. Must sell soon.
$750 or best offer. 841-7767.
70 VW Beetle, excellent condition. No rust, heat
works, radio, work. NL. White WRN. $750.
1800 Datum pickup. Silver, 5. apeed, A/C. Must
buy. Priced below book value, with new AM/FM
cassette stereo and near new Topper thrown in.
842-4269.
Z-100 Computer, 2 drives, 192K, lots of software,
Z-100 All for $490. Please call 841-6712
1974 Pontiac Safri wagon. Air, cruise, tit.
AM/FM cassette stereo. Runs great. 843-1736.
7200
978-0-265-1427
1981 Olds Omega--good condition, AC, stereo,
cruise, and more. Price negotiable. Call 749-1427
Vaccination-Save big money. Reconditioned with a Vacuum-Care save big money. Reconditioned with a Lawrence Vaccine & Sewing Center, 916 Mascus, Lawrence, MA. (802) 754-5555.
Bertone X9/ 184. Fun sports car! 5-speed,
leather interior, power window, NEW stereo,
amplifier, tree and more. Look great! Mast
sale: 31K, $600; 841-4600;壁砖, 83/472-4
CARS SELL for $15 (average!) Also keeps,
available at 895-600-4007. Extend
$795 for details
78 Honda Civic; runs, needs engine and body. Call 841-798-288 for 4 p.m. and 7 p.m.
79 Toyota Celica Manual standard features air/air conditioning, stereo, etc. Good condition.
ORDER NEW 1988 CARS - TRUCKS-
OVER COST BELDERT D.
HSS 8834-5400
- rota y Celica. Manual standard features
w/air-conditioning, stereo, etc. Good condition.
Newly rebuilt. New offer. Mail 482-8427.
For Sale 1960 Pontiac Sundub A/C, sunroom
For Sale 1960 Pontiac $200/best offer
Phone 800-745-3757
1972 Oldsmobile Cullinan. Rusa superbly-new
from 1981-83. Drive around by car.
Call 841-7615. 6 p.m. weekdays and weekends
LOST-FOUND
798-1718
Tune up your import car, $35. Parts and labor included, satisfaction guaranteed. Call Aaron,
841-6429
Emergency-Lost backpack with Biology books and notes. Test Wednesday the 2rd! Please call 844-6417-Keep trying after a1 m. Ask for Pike.
FOUND: Set of keys with V.W. car keys. Last Friday on Massachusetts Street. Call 843-2877 to identify.
FOUND: long-haired, blue-eyed, black and white cat, has extra teeth. Found in 27th St. Terrace and loworia territory on September 16. Call 842-5521
LOST: Black leather jacket. Heavy sentimental value. Reward. Please call 841-6890.
FOUND: Set of keys on railing outside Haworth Hall on Thursday night. To claim, come to 119 Straffton-Flint Hall.
HELP WANTED
2. lodge 25 injuries; union restroom; September 9. Please call 749-3119 to return to KU Police. Lose wire-rimmed eygelesses in black case. Please call 842-3589. Reward offered.
510-660 Weekly/up mailing cardl Rush self-
marked stamped envelope; Opportunity, 9016
Wilshire Bldd, Box 226, Dept. Q, Bevery Hills, CA
90211
Sixth office尾廷营销 Monday Thursday 9-5 and Saturday mornings. Flexible scheduling. Lenexa location-carpool from Lawrence available. For interview, call Mr. Lackey at 749-4824.
Apartment Leasing Agent, part-time position of, Huntington College, served to 119 Staffer Fint Hall, Lawrence, KS.
Adams Alumni Center is accepting employment applications for waiters, waitresses, bartenders, and dishwashers able to work day and weekend at the university apartment. Apply in person 8:36, 1966 EOE
ATTENTION: STUDENTS! Natl' first prepar-
ment is on campus. Please qualify, corp. scholarships are awarded, interns are possible, & you may earn 2, 3, 4,
385-975-0136 semester. Must apply now.
385-975-0136
Babyssitters need for four-year-old in our home.
One block south of the Library. All library
members (614-841-3900).
Checkers Pizza has an immediate opening for 10 pizza delivery drivers. We have their own car & insurance $35.00 plus commission & tips to start. $60.00 per m.p. at Checkers Pizza, 212th Vale. $9.00 per p.m. at Checkers Pizza, 212th Vale.
Cook wanted for fraternity. Experience in food preparation and housekeeping. Country estate owner needs weekend help. House cleaning and/or outside maintenance was needed. 887-419, evenings and leave name and phone 887-419, evenings and leave name and phone
Editor, Weekly United Methodist Church regional newspaper. Part-time position. EOE. Member Project Equality. Submit research and references to Kappa, Texas, Tkpsa, 6064 attention. Council Director, Kappa.
FREE-Time to Daytona plus commission money. Go to Florida? Go for free, take advantage of promoting the 1 Spring Break trip. If interested, call designers of Travel, 1-800-453-8074.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16.040-593.290; now
$16.040-687.600 R-795 for x-ray
transmission.
HIRING!
150.000-688.000 Government jobs-your area
CALL (602) 838-3881 EXT. 4055
OFFICE MNGR/PURCHASER. Professional to
manage office operations & purchasing for one of
creative and experienced computer salesmen.
Must be organized, creative &
have coordination skills. Salary compre-
sionally varies by location. September 23 to:
FORESTWELL SOLUTIONS, Inc., 304 New Hampshire St,
FORT WASHINGTON, KS 65044
Send letter, audition tape and resume check, resume submission. Send resume to KANU Radio, Broadcasting Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 6654-2072. EOA/KEA application deadline is October 17th. EOA/KEA
and information magazine-produce interview segments and spot and extended reports. One of the special requirements for experience is required. Applicant must possess a pleasant speaking voice and the ability to communicate clearly to the customer. Previous public radio experience is preferred, though not required. Salary compares with other applicants.
MORNING EDITION HOST. KANU, The University of Kansas, seeks experienced broadcast professional to host "Morning Edition", a daily news and information magazine-produce interview series for the college press. You will provide a previous professional broadcasting experience is required. Applicant must possess a pleasant speaking voice and the ability to communicate ideas in a credible but informal manner.
Special Project—the week of September 20 through October 9.
We will be working with a special packaging company with a local manufacturer. We have 20 openings on the 18th and 27th, so please fill in an in-bill. Must be able to work the 20th week. Contact Mantell Contemporary Services W. 8th, 748-300-6. Equal Opportunity Employer.
PART-TIME. Hope you apply at Maucher's Bakery.
Prefer graduate students. One sales/cleaning
mornings at 8 a.m.-noon #4$4 hour after training. 2
weeks of training. Apply to the bakery
groomed at m.a. #4$2.10 hour after training. App
required.
RESORT HOTELS, CruiseLines, Airlines, Amuse-
musement parks, travel agencies, summer
jobs, internships, and career positions.
For more information and an application; write
National College Recruitment Service, P.O. Box 1096, Chicago, IL 60654.
by between 10 a.m. and noon weekly mornings.
Part-time housekeeping wanted for 8-16 hours. If you enjoy cleaning and are meticulous, Buckle is suitable.
Be available on weekends. Be available on over breaks. Call 842-6264
Wanted: Male personal care attendant for
work. Will train the right person. For interview.
Will train the right person. For interview.
Work Stady-Clerical work in medical office. Must be available some afternoon. Accurate secretary, Receptionist/Receptionist activities. App-king 11/22 W.114 B.508. Sack 20%. Requires required.
Student Programmer (Using Dase Ilius, *Genifer*, and "Documentor")—must love and accept design challenges. Work will involve research on new software formats, and research of newly released software packages and hardware enchancements. 20-30 hours/week, $40/hour, flexible work schedule Room 263, Physical Plant Building (Facilities Information) before 4.39 p.m. September 25, 1987.
Want your own business? Now is the time to start earning as an Anv representative. Call Julie at 843-0644 evenings.
We have openings in carpentry, electrical and general labor crews. If you are willing to follow our schedule, we would like to host them 8-12 to 1-5, M-F, we would like you to apply. Housing Maintenance Shop, 2003 West 15th, Houlton.
CONFIDENTIAL LOANS made without credit check or prior credit. For information, call 843-4344
$10 $350 Weekly/Up, mailin; circulars! "Quaas, bobtes. information: RUSH self-addressed envelope. CM/NA-CDQ POLB 7730. Rockford. II. 81126
MISCELLANEOUS
KJHK FM 91
TONIGHT!
D. J.'s playing your progressive music request
K
"SPIN ON THE TOWN"
THE WHEEL
LAWRENCE, KS.
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
plus $1.00 Barrels!
It Could Only happen At...
THE HAWK • 1340 Ohio
1.50
BEER &
SCHNAPPS SHOT
KSY KEYSTONE for Thanksgiving, November
25-29. Low package prices, includes air hotel/ ski
rental/transfers/lift tickets. Call 843-5698.
Package available without air.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★
Hillel לב
ROSH HASHANAH
SERVICES
Wednesday, Sept. 23
Dinner at 5:30 p.m.
Hillel House
RSVP required.
Services at 7:30 p.m
Thursday, Sept. 24
Services at 9:30 a.m.
7:30 p.m.
Thursday, Sept. 24
Friday, Sept. 25
Services at 9:30 a.m.
7:30 p.m.
Services held at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center. For more info call 749-4742
We have a new store that you can get cash on almost anything of value. Also, good bays on cameras, jewelry, sturdy equipment (auto & camera) and more.
Pawn Jewelry & Wallet 10W 8th 740-1919
PERSONAL
Skier: Winter Park, $199. Thanksgiving trip leaves
Tuesday night on sleep bus. Stay in Snow
Blaze condominiums 2 nights. Also, 2 days
rental and lift tickets. For information, call
All Eps Seeking Initiation: GOOD LUCK!! -happy 21st Bettie!! Good luck on your tests.
We'll celebrate later! Love, You good. Lovesbj.
J-Ayhawk-Hey woman! Really enjoyed dancing with you. Let's do it again soon! U R great.
BT, I love you more than words can say. You're the best thing to happen to me. Thanks for being my best friend. KW
**STUDENTS:** Order your "school" T-shirts in all schools at KU represented. Look for PRESSA table outside Wescoe, 10:30-2, September 23, 24, and October 1.
Vintage Sunglasses are Choice! Assorted color frames and lenses
JSP-You so GO GOROUS! Thanks for when I really enjoyed your company. I looked forward to it.
Don't steal 'em from Uncle Ed!
Looking for two chicks adventurous enough to answer this ad. If you can peel a banana without using your hands and grease down that twister盟- drive a buzz. R&C-841-8167
The Etc. Shop
Find your style at
732 Massachusetts
843-0611
GREENS PARTY SUPPLY 808 W.23rd
V V V
Weekly Beer Specials
Michelob 6 pk. $2.99
Coors Light 6pk. $2.69
Miller Lite 12 pk. $5.29
Bombardier 7 pk. $3.89
Phi Psi's!
Can't wait to have a psychedelic and
groovy party with you guys!
Peace & Love-
The Alpha Chi's
Sept 23-Sept 29
Old Milwaukee Light 24 pk. $7.39
Old Milwaukee 24 pk. $7.39
Busch 12pk. $3.98
Old Style 12pk. $3.69
Wiedemann 12pk. $3.19
Sunflower Mt. Bike Workshop-Learn how to repair & adjust your Mt. bike-Thursday t repairs, 6-8 p.m., begins September 17. $5, 80 Massachusetts, Lawrence, 943-5000
SERVICES OFFERED
FLASHBACK FIH070快急 and dependable party picture service. 843-8747 to book your next
THE ETC SHOP is open Sunday from 11-4. New shipment of cotton sweatshirts 732 Massachusetts.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest
Driving Academy. Must be a driver's license
holder, driver's license obtained, transportation
driver's license obtained.
FREE PREGNANCY COUNSELING for the individual & or couple as well as for their families. Additional counseling services available on a sliding scale. Available in 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032 Maine. B41-0007
Capture that golden tain can with boudor portrait from Photo Plus. Call Mira or McGee at 149-306-3960.
---
Pi's Pai-Cs' wait to want a psychic and groovy party with you guys! Peace & Love-The
.COMPUTER CONSULTING Tutoring and programming for elementary school students and advance civil engineering, projects and other works. Reasonable price for individuals and groups.
GRAF/X: Scientific and statistical illustration,
maps, drawings, slides, editing aid, also water
color materials. Phone 811-2561
Snuggle Bunny- 2 years! WOW!! LOVE YOU FOR MANY MORE...Snow Bear.
Sweetie Pie, thank you for all the wonderful times. And I'm hoping for many more. I bear the creations calling! Happy Birthday! Love always,
Patrick
Preston C (Sigma: Sua) We engage a smile and sometimes a word or two. If you look a little harder, you'll notice someone's interested in you...
Gravstone Athletic Club
JIM FAVORS for all your party favor needs. Hats, shirts, paddles, glasses. If you have a unique favor idea, call us and we'll find it for you. 843-8770
Pregnant and need help? Call Birbright at 843-843-1212 Confidential help/free pregnancy
BHEADAM, BACKAGE, ARM PAIN, LEG PAINT. Student and most insurance accepted. For complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Mark Johnson 483-7897.
SKI FREE AT VAIL/BEAVER CREEK! 4 day
ski trip + free skiing. Add extra nights. just $150
and do free skiing. Add extra nights. just $150
**Workshops:** Our mechanic will teach you how to change fats, true wheels, maintain brakes and tires. **Workshops:** 8 a.m., September 19. **50** each: Saturday, 10 a.m., beginning September 19. **Sunflower**, 64 Massachusetts.
BUS.PERSONAL
5 E. 7th 842-1376
Grystone Athletic Club
Special Student Membership
$100 per semester
Requestable in Tanning
Exercise Equipment
2500 W.6th Street 841-7230
KIM'S ALTERATIONS-QUICK SERVICE Suits. Coats, Zippers. Jiapers. All types of alterations. 220 F.West 25th S.H. 842-8128 (Behind Food 4 Les). MUSIC**1*** Audio-Media Party Music. B-rack studio. P.A. and Lights. Maximum Audio Wizardry. D.B.辐749 1275.
KR PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ekchatek
processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W services.
PASSOFT $6.00. Art & Design Building,
Room 306. 864-4767
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $8/hr, 843-9032
(Q.P.)
Now in Laurence: i-negative 4-track demos, DJ sound and light company, private guitar and bass lessons. Basic Productions, 843-4243.
PRIVATE OR FREE GOVERNMENT MEDICAL SERVICES. Overland Park.. (913) 493-6878
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence, 451-576.
QUALITY Tutoring, Statistics, Economics, and Math. All levels. Homework assistance, test preparation, or general review. Ma with 1 yrs of experience in tutoring. Seamless Attensiors: All ladies' dresses can be made here in town. You choose your favorite designs or styles from the latest fashion magazines. I will be happy to help you find one.
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-2316
TYPING
A1 reliable professional typing: Term papers.
Theses, Resumes, etc. Reasonable. IBM Electronic Transcriber 892266
1 plus Typing: Letters, resumes, thesis, law typing, etc. 13 years experience. Call Terry 842-4754 or 843-3673) evening and weekends.
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing. July, 827-945 or Lisas, 841-1915.
ACT NOW. PAPERS-THESES-RESUMES
WRITING LIFELINE 841-3469
AAbboulby Fast Typing is Back! Dependable,
Reasonable Rates, Late Night Typing Available.
Kathy 814 240 days, 749 354 eve.
48 hour typing service. Professional word on letter quality printer 843-7643.
2 Smart Word Processing. Spelling Corrected.
Very Reasonable. Call Foster 109-2740.
1-Der woman word processing. Former editor will transform your scribble into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct letter-quality type. Call 843-2068 days or evenings.
Dunna's Domain Typing and Word Processing
Term papers, tables, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mail lists. Letter quality
printing, spelled correct. 842-7247.
For professional typing/word processing, call Myra 841-4800. Fall special $1.20/page, double-space, pica.
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS.
MOMMY'S TYPING is back from Australia !!
409.877.3391 are here
KU SECRETARY. Typing and word processing,
fastest, accurate, fast. Spelling corrected,
letter quality. Pickup on campus. Monica
841-826. Evenings-weekends
PROFESSIONAL TYPING 842-4868 before 10 p.m.
Quality Typing includes excellent spelling, punctuation, grammar, editing. Fast reliable service. Deliver (rely on available) 842-0247
Prior knowledge or word processing for these,
dissertations, resumes, term papers, applications.
Professional editing, composition
available. Have M.S. Degree.
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing, manuscripts, resumes, theses, letter quality printing, etc. #435 5062
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition,
editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses,
dissertations, papers, letters, applications.
resumes. HAVE M.S. Degree 841-6254
theWORDOCTORS. Resumes, papers, theses,
dissertations, commercial. 843-3147.
WRIGHT'S TYPING SERVICE: Term papers,
theses, miscellaneous, IBM Selectric. Spelling
correction 481-6544
WANTED
BOSTON TICKETS WANTED (2) . Good seats.
will pay!! Call Steve-841-5830.
BOSTON TICKETS NEEDED (2). Any row. Will pay handsomely! Call Brett-843-1207.
roommate wanted to share nice two bedroom apartment. West campus, all utilities paid rent negotiable. Call Victoria at 841-7988. Roommate needed to share two bedroom
Room apartment available. Call Victoria @ 841-19785.
Female roommate needed to share two bedroom
room. Female roommate needed to share two bedroom.
Female roommate wanted. $140/month plus 1/2
units. New apartment, on room, on bus
line.
Female roommate wanted. $155 per month plus
the deposit. No need付款. Trailridge.
447 0986
Roommate needed for townhouse at 9th and Michigan. Private room $175 and 1/3 utilities.
748-0189
Male or female grad student, or mature undergrad to share a new 2 br apartment 2 blocks from the Union. $180 plus 1/2 utilities. Call 841-4705.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Roommate wanted for 2 bedroom apartment and 1/2
roommates. Call after 11 p.m. 749-1867
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12
Wednesday, September 23, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
City OKs more mall money
By VALOREE ARMSTRONG
Staff writer
The Lawrence City Commission authorized city manager Buford Watson last night to spend another day on the job, reconvening of several suburban mall sites.
The city already has spent $25,000 in preparation for the Oct. 7 public school massacre. County Metropolitan Planning Commission will present its findings.
Commissioners passed the authorization with the understanding that all the money may not be needed if the county decides to contribute to the research. Of the three proposed mall sites, two are outside city limits.
Watson said that the additional money was necessary to do the job correctly. He said that the city had hired legal experts to assist in the research and would use expert witnesses and a court reporter during
the public hearing.
City Commissioner Sandra Praeger said that she agreed that the city should be prepared for the public hearing but expressed concern over the amount of money the city has already spent on the project.
In other actions:
Praeger tried to reduce the authorized amount to $15,000, but the amendment was denied.
other activities.
■ They commission unanimously approved a site plan for an expansion of Douglas County Bank, Ninth and Kentucky streets, which will add parking, a drive-through facility and a new office building.
The commission's approval ended a year-long debate on the bank's actions in the area that is listed in the National Register of Historic Places. The commission gave KU student Doug Barland until September. 30 to come up with the money to bring his newly
acquired house up to city code.
The house, 2815 Vermont St. was scheduled for demolition by Sept. 27, because the former owner, Barland's son, wanted to make the necessary improvements.
Barland, Lawrence senior, said,
"I'm a new owner — that's in the past."
Barlard presented several estimates for repairs that added up to less than $5,000 and said he hoped to do much of the work himself.
But commissioners were concerned that the extensive repairs the house needed would cost much more. The city is going to make its own estimates and Barland must have that amount in escrow or in bonds by Sept. 30 or the city will demolish the house.
- The commissioners set an Oct. 19 date for an initial meeting for the Eastern Parkway Task Force.
Club plans to fight world hunger
By BRIAN BARESCH
Staff writer
KU Students Against Hunger will collect food for hunger victims worldwide, and inform students about the hunger problem starting with "KU's War on Hunger," the group's president said at its first meeting last night.
"Students Against Hunger is the most important organization you'll ever be involved with," Steve Brown, Kansas City, Mo., junior, told the 24 students who attended the meeting. Brown said the group would join the Hunger Project, a worldwide organization, in fighting starvation.
"People are dying and I want to do
something about it," he said.
The Hunger Project has grown since its organization in 1977, and now has more than 5 million members, including celebrities such as actor Raul Julia and singer John Denver. Brown said.
Plans for the War on Hunger include collecting canned food, organizing a forum featuring a guest speaker, sponsoring a film festival, campaigning, and a balloon launch at Memorial Stadium.
Fifteen high schools in the Lawrence-Kansas City area would participate in the balloon launch, Brown said, adding that other ideas would probably come from other group members.
Brown said the events probably would take place during one week next spring. Among the possible guest speakers the group is considering are Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole and Sen. Nancy Kassebaum.
Also on the agenda is the Hunger Project's teleconference on Nov. 14 in Kansas City, Mo. The teleconference will be broadcast worldwide and will feature B gelofel, who organized the Live Aid and USA for Africa concerts.
Brown said he hoped the KU group could find merchant sponsors to defray the cost of attending the conference.
Students Against Hunger will work out its exact agenda in future meetings. Brown said. The group will meet again at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the Centennial Room of the Kansas Union.
"You need to be idealistic like you've never been before in this organization," Brown said.
What time does Watson L
the Computer Center close do I get a Closed Class Of students were enrolled in there a Recycling center in Iow long does it take to go
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841-SMOKE 2554 IOWA ST.
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Meal includes 7 oz. USDA Choice Sirloin Steak. Homestyle soup or fresh garden salad, baked potato, seasoned rice or hot butter vegetable and a complimentary order of onion rings. Sun-Thurs. 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Fri. & Sat. 11 a.m.-10 p.m.
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WATKINS STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
"THERAPY ZONE"
Enter a world, not of pain or physical limitation, but a world of strength, pain-free mobility, and progress.
sion back to your original physical self. Enter the Physical Therapy Zone.
TORRES
ATTENTION MALES
BONE UP ON
OSTEOPOROSIS
What is the most common cancer in men 15-34 years of age? Do you know all you need to know about sexually transmitted diseases and contraception? If not, get the facts!
Educators are available to present programs on these and other topics.
The amount of milk a woman drinks during the first 20 years of her life may affect her chance of developing osteoporosis in the future. A recent study found that postmenopausal women who drank milk with every meal up until age 35 had significantly denser and stronger bones than those who rarely drank it. The researchers concluded that drinking calcium-rich milk early in life give a woman more bone mass to draw on when she reaches middle age.
Dairy Council of Greater Kansas City
Skeleton
IT'S STRESS...I GUESS
Cramming for an exam, overdrawing your checking account, or asking the teacher to biology class for a date are all forms of stress. No one can escape stress, but you can learn to cope with it effectively. The key is perception if you perceive an experience as challenging instead of threatening then you can help diminish the stress and take more information on stress, contact the Department of Health Education.
FOR WOMEN ONLY
Women have special concerns: breast self-exam; the pap test; detection and treatment of sexually transmitted diseases that have no symptoms; etc. The Department of Health education offers group presentations to explain the importance of "Women's Health".
BEAK HEALTHY
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday September 24,1987 Vol.98,No.24
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
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Officials seek to curb BSU party violence
By JAVAN OWENS
Staff writer
While Black Panhelenic groups are trying to forget the incidents that led to the suspension this fall of their parties at the Kansas Union, Jim Long, Kansas Union director, and Ann Eavescole, director
Both Black Panhellenic and KU officials will be reminded of those events at a 6 p.m. meeting today in the English Room at the Union.
"It would be a serious mistake to ignore what happened. Long said "We must evaluate the impact of it."
After an Alpha Phi Alpha party Aug. 29 at the Union, Jenkins Jenkins, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore and an Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity member, was stabbed in the hand.
That incident prompted Brian Dougherty, president of Black Student Union, to invite KU police officials to a BSU meeting Sept. 14 to talk about security problems at Union parties. BSU is an umbrella organization for Black Panhellenic and other groups.
"We ought to think about why we are having these parties. We have a serious problem, and we need solutions fast." Dougherty said Sept. 14.
Black Panhellenic and BSU are among several campus organizations that sponsor parties at the Union. But BSU members said Sept. 14 that the groups' parties presented a special problem because they attracted people who were not KU students, including many students from other universities.
Kim Davis, Delta Sigma Theta member and St. Louis junior, said this week, "We have found that it is the people not from KU who present the most problems at the parties."
Many KU students also attend the parties of other chapters in universities around the Midwest, Davis said.
"One thing we have to consider is what kind of image are we projecting." Long said recently. "Are we doing things at the other universities that make other students want to do them at our school?"
Also, unlike any other parties at the Union,
Black Panhellenic parties last until 2 a.m., Long said.
The lateness of the parties may be what attracts troublemakers, Long said. Even the large concerts in the Ballroom do not present the same security risks as the late-night parties, he said.
BSU and Black Panhellenic members said that
revenue from the Union parties was a significant part of their income.
Up until about three years ago, Long said, there was no need to hire security personnel at Union activities and parties. But increasing vandalism and violence have required more security, Long said.
In the 1985-1986 academic year, the Union suffered $50 worth of damages during late-night activities. Damages skyrocketed to $3,250 in the 1986-1987 school year, including the cost of repairs on the model of the University of Kansas in the Union's lobby. Damages so far this year have come to $260.
"When people cannot feel safe at their own party, the University has a concern, and we have
Long stressed that he wasn't sure whether people attending the parties had caused the
Last February, Eversole, Long, KU police and Black Panhellenic members met to discuss what they could do to curb violence at Union parties.
"We talked to the groups in February, but our
See BSU, p. 6, col.
Biden withdraws presidential bid
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Sen. Joseph Biden ended his quest for the 1988 Democratic presidential nomination "with incredible reluctance" yesterday, saying that the revelation of his past mistakes made it impossible for him to continue his candidacy.
Biden withdrew from the campaign after a week in which his campaign was rocked by admissions he made to his claims about his academic record.
The Delaware Democrat is the second candidate to be forced from the race by questions of character and integrity.
"I made some mistakes," Biden told a room crowded with reporters.
"Now the exaggerated shadow of those mistakes has begun to obscure the essence of my candidacy and the essence of Joe Biden."
Biden said he had to choose between continuing his presidential campaign and chairing the Senate Judiciary Committee hearings on the Supreme Court nomination of Robert H. Bork.
"And although it’s awfully clear to me what choice I have to make, I have to tell you honestly I do it with incredible reluctance, and it makes me angry," he said. "I’m angry with myself for having been put in the position — put myself in the position
See BIDEN, p. 6, col. 3
Biden's withdrawal expected by some
By VIRGINJA McGRATH
Staff writer
The demise of U.S. Sen. Joseph Biden's 1988 presidential campaign came as no surprise to those on his campaign trail, an eye on its recent developments.
"I'm not that surprised he withdrew now. The last stages of these situations seem to come quickly." said John Reher, Lawrence graduate student. Reher said he had intended to attend the University of Kansas campaign at the University of Kansas. But he said the plans had only been in the formative stages.
Allan Ciglar, associate professor of political science, had predicted Tuesday that it was only a matter of time before Biden withdrew his candidacy.
Cigler compared Biden's situation to that of former Democratic candidate Garv Hart.
Biden has been accused of not attributing quotes from some of his speeches, plagiarism during his first year at Syracuse University's College of Law and recent exaggerations about his accomplishments while in law school.
Cigler said, "The thing that ended up knocking him out wasn't the plagiarism or a little bit of fibbing but the way he did it. He was using gestures and a persuasive style, but it was somebody else's stuff."
Cigler said that Biden's withdrawal wouldn't substantially alter the Democratic race.
"As of this point, he wasn't a
factor. But it will be interesting to see if other campaigns make a major effort to go after his people and his money." Cigler said.
Reber said that although the media had given a lot of attention to the dishonesty question, Biden had to assume some blame.
"You get the media microscope on you and it's difficult not to have made a mistake at some point. But he has given me of the responsibility," Reher said.
"Unfortunately, it disrupted what I thought would have been a great campaign." he added.
Eric Levitt, president of KU Democrats, said that although Biden would have been a good president, it was best that he withdrew.
"It was probably beneficial for him and the rest of the Democratic party that he got out so it doesn't damage rest of the 88 campaign," he said.
Levitt, who is organizing a Students for Dukakis group, said Dukakis stood to gain from Biden's withdrawal.
"They had similar views and similar support. So Dukakis should be held accountable."
Michael Davis, dean of law, said that plagiarism at KU was "considered a serious academic offense."
"We have an honor code to which all students subscribe by enrolling in the school," Davis said. Breaches of that code are taken to a committee. Davis then looks at the committee's recommendation before deciding how the situation should be handled, he said.
Science instructors hope for financing
By JENNIFER ROWLAND
Staff writer
Equipment in some KU scientific departments is out-of-date and desperately needs replacement, according to some department heads who are hoping for money from the Kansas Legislature to update the equipment.
"We have mammoth needs at the undergraduate level," said Marlin D. Harmony, chairman of the chemistry department. "Our instrumentation is by-and-large archaic."
If approved, a bill now in the interim Committee on Ways and Means could produce up to an additional $8.5 million for equipment at the University of Kansas. State Sen Gus Bogina, R-Lenexa, who is chairman of the committee, said he expected the committee to make a recommendation on the plan by late November.
The proposal would allow the state to issue bonds to pay for equipment. Bond issues of $10 million, $25 million and $50 million are being considered. The University could receive from $1.7 million to $8.5 million.
The Legislature, which reconvenes in January, would have to approve the bill before money could be allocated to departments within the University.
Tom Rawson, campus director of business and fiscal affairs, said the University received the Legislature's annual appropriation for equipment last April. Administrators then allocated the money to different schools. In 1988, which began July 1, equipment money totaled about $9.8 million.
Harmony said the chemistry department had received instruments from national scientific organizations for research but not recently for undergraduate programs, Harmony said.
He said some chemistry laboratory equipment had been used for decades.
"The major costs would probably come at the sophomore, junior, senior levels where the experimentation is more sophisticated and there is the instrumentation is more sophisticated and expensive," he said.
"The concern is that if you're teaching students with equipment that's 30 or 40 years old, they won't be prepared for the real world," he said.
Harmony said the department's operating budget was used for inexpensive purchases of chemicals, typing paper and glassware, such as Kigai.
"We've got a computer list about ten pages long," he said. "Seldom is anything funded off that list, because there's no money."
Harmony said that if money were available, the department would use it to buy such things as chemical balances, electrochemical apparatuses, electrophoresis meters and modern laboratory microcomputing equipment.
"When we have flexibility we try to save up bits and pieces to make undergraduate instrumentation purchases," he said.
Gunther Schlager, chairman of the division of biological sciences, said his division also was hurting.
"We could spend a million bucks and probably do a reasonable job in inning equipping of the teaching
See EQUIPMENT, p. 6, col. 2
Art teacher takes pride in car-part spiders
By BEN JOHNSTON
Staff writer
The spider was made of steel and bolts — not fur and fangs. But in Bracker's imagination, the 4-to 5-foot-long, rust-colored spider seemed just as alive — maybe more so — than any real spiders that share the yard with his five steel spiders on Route 6, two and a half miles south of Lawrence on Highway 59.
The spiders, which have been in Bracker's yard for eight to 10 years, were made of parts painstakingly collected at dumps in Texas, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa and Kansas.
William Bracker leaned over to examine the head of one of his prize spiders.
"I brought the parts back to life," Bracker said. "They were once made for a purpose, and now they have a new purpose."
"Notice how the head has a little different color in the middle than on the sides," said Bracker, former KU assistant professor of dentistry. "Sort of like a dog that has different bones on different parts of its head."
"One was from a pickup truck, one from a Ford, another was from an international truck and that one from a Volkswagen. "Bracker said.
The round, sloping bodies of his spiders are made from the transmissions of several long-since abandoned automobiles, Bracker said.
The spiders' grapples, which are made of grappling钩ooks that were once used to pick up bales of hay, vary in size and shape. Some are solid and angular while others are thin and springlike like coils.
Bracker assembled the parts into spiders only after he had spent years searching for just the right pieces, he said.
"Wherever I am, I look for parts," Bracker said. "If I am on vacation, I go to the junk yard.
"I can remember the time and place I found a particular piece. There is a lot of joy involved in learning to create a piece that completes the puzzle."
"I don't know what the stimulus was other than the parts I collected had the possibility of being something with eight legs," Bracker said. "I had to carry it, I had — the junk, the raw materials, the scrap iron."
After all his efforts to collect parts, he did not consciously plan to create spiders, Bracker said.
Bracker, who has taught art at colleges and universities and now owns a pottery and ceramics company, said he did a variety of art work but found working with old parts to be unique.
"I enjoy the challenge of working with an alternative medium," Bracker said. "Not having the materials soft and pliable like clay makes it harder. Old parts can't be altered. They need to be interlocked like a puzzle, but fitted together without being altered."
Bracker said he displayed the spiders on his lawn because he thought they looked good in a natural setting.
Edie Stafford, who lives across the street from Bracker, said, "I love them. I've seen cars go by and slow down, and I don't think they believe what they are seeing at first."
Metal spiders grace the yard of William Bracker, former KU assistant professor of design. Bracker said started motorists often stopped for a second look at the sculptures, which are made of car parts.
2
Thursday, September 24, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Senate renews Gramm-Rudman; multiple spending cuts possible
WASHINGTON — The Senate voted yesterday to restore the Gramm-Rudman budget-balancing law, renewing the threat of across-the-board spending cuts unless Congress and the president reach a compromise on reducing the deficit.
The bill was passed 64-34, with majority support in both parties, and sent to President Reagan. His
Brothers with AIDS greeted at new school
support for Gramm-Rudman has wavered. Officials said there was no decision on whether Reagan would veto the bill.
The revised plan would bring back the threat of automatic spending cuts, redrraining a provision the Supreme Court found unconstitutional. It also would push the timetable for a balanced budget from 1991 to 1993.
SARASOTA, Fla. — Three brothers whose exposure to AIDS made them parials in their rural hometown enrolled in a new school yesterday without incident and were able to come from schoolmates and parents.
Deputies patrolled the grounds at Gocio Elementary School, and officials reported that 120 of the 615
pupils stayed home. But the day
had encouraged moments for the Rays — 10-year-old Ricky, 9-year-
old Robert and 8-year-old Randy.
"One of the boys" said they had to assign seats in the lunchoom because everyone wanted to sit under a table and the boys' mother, Louise Ray.
Sickle cell carriers who exercise are at risk
BOSTON — According to a military study, healthy young men with the sickle cell trait face about 40 times the usual risk of dropping dead during extreme physical exercise.
have no unusual problems performing ordinary daily activities.
Still, the risk is small. Experts said people with the trait should
Doctors identified the risk in a study of the records of military recruits. About 8 percent of black people in the United States have the sickle cell trait.
Impersonation suspect is sent to jail
ORLAND, Calif. — A parole has been sent back to jail for allegedly impersonating a California Highway Patrol officer, stopping motorists and lecturing them about driving too fast.
wear a uniform and told motorists he was off duty or undercover. Five drivers he stopped called the CHP because the impersonator "just seemed unprofessional," a CHP spokesman said.
Anthony Robbins, 27, didn't
Gulf swept for Iranian mines
The Associated Press
From The Associated Press.
MANAMA, Bahrain — U.S. warships and helicopters swept a strip of the central Persian Gulf yesterday to recover mines thought planted by the Iranian ship that U.S. helicopters attacked this week.
Five Irianians were reported killed, and 26 were captured in the helicopter raid on the Iranian vessel Monday night. It was the first direct U.S. landing in Iran since the United States began protecting shipping in the gulf.
Commercial ships were warned away from the waters about 50 miles northeast of Bahrain, and there were vessels that some mines had been found.
Iran has vowed revenge for the U. attack, and Iranian President Ali Khamenei said in New York that two nations were moving toward war.
He said Iran was "in no way willing to start an all-out war with the United
Britain called yesterday for a world-wide arms embargo against Iran as pressure mounted in the United States to the seven-year-old Iran-Iraq war.
States. But if it happens, we are prepared to defend ourselves."
Britain also announced it would close the Iranian Military Procurement office in London.
The Soviet Union, meanwhile,
withheld its support of an embargo
and instead echoed Iran's call for the
to investigate the cause of the war.
Despite the increased tension and the possibility of more floating mines, gulf-based shipping sources said a reflagged Kuwaiti gas carrier had begun a southbound voyage under U.S. escort.
The reported departure of the 46,723-ton Gas Prince from Kuwait would be the 10th convoy since President Reagan's program of escorting Kuwaii tankers went into effect in
mid-July.
Reagan said yesterday it would be a "great mistake" for Congress to place new limits on the administration's security moves in the gulf, while lawmakers considered whether to do just that.
Moves on Capitol Hill would give Congress a say over whether Navy ships could continue to escort US aircraft in the skies. The 5 flag, as they have for two months.
But tension in the gulf prompted new demands for Reagan to invoke the War Powers Act of 1973, a step he has firmly resisted. The act provides that the president will make a Congress a written report within 48 hours after U.S. forces are sent into "imminent involvement in hostilities."
Reagan argued that such a move "would simply be an encouragement" for the States' advertisers to sell their books on oil supplies vital to the West.
House approves aid for contras
WASHINGTON — The House yesterday approved $3.5 million in new "humanitarian" aid to the Nicaraguan contrasts, and House Speaker Jim Wright said he expected it to be the last U.S. aid ever sent to the rebels.
The Associated Press
The money was part of a stopgap spending bill to keep the government running after the current fiscal year ends Sept. 30. The measure was approved 270-138 after little debate and sent to the Senate.
worked out in a bipartisan agreement between Wright, D-Texas, and House Republican leader Robert Michel of Illinois.
The $3.5 million represents the proportion of this year's $100 million in aid money that has been used for food, medical supplies and uniforms and would be needed to sustain the rebels into November.
The vote came a day after Costa Rican President Oscar Arias initiated an appeal to lawmakers to "take a risk for peace" and eschew further military aid to the contrast at least until Nov. 7, the target date for a regional cease-fire.
Arias told the U.N. General Assembly yesterday that halting foreign aid to combatants in Nicaragua would set the stage for negotiations under his Central American peace plan.
"We want a cease-fire as soon as possible," he said. "We want an immediate beginning to democratization. We appeal for free elections that reflect the true will of the people."
Ex-justice says Bork no radical
The contra-aid money had been
The Associated Press
Burger, in an extraordinary appearance for a sitting or former member of the high court, told the Senate Judiciary Committee, "If Judge Bork is not in the mainstream, then neither am I. It would astonish me to think he's an extremist any more than I'm an extremist."
WASHINGTON — Retired Chief Justice Warren E. Burger, stirred by what he called unprecedented disinformation, declared yesterday that Supreme Court nominee Robert H. Bork was not an extremist and that Bork deserved confirmation.
In particular, Burger criticized paid newspaper advertisements that have suggested dire consequences for Bork's nomination were confirmed.
Burger reiterated his endorsement of Bork as among the best-qualified court nominees from the past 50 years.
Acknowledging that his testimony was unusual, Burger said he was prompted to speak up because he didn't think 'there has ever been more hype, more disinformation' and my opponents of a high-court pomineer.
Burger assailed the nominees' critics for concentrating on Bork's provocative speeches and essays in academic journals.
"You start all over when you're sitting on the bench." Burger said.
Burger also said women and minorities had no reason to be apprehensive about Bork.
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Local Briefs
Tomorrow is last day to drop without a W
Tomorrow is the last day for students to drop classes in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and in some other schools without receiving a W on their transcripts.
Students consult page 15 of the Fall 87 Timeline for details about how withdraws in each school are graded.
The enrollment center is open from 8 a.m. until noon and from 1 p.m. until 4:30 p.m. both today and tomorrow.
Dental records may identify dead man
KU records confirmed yesterday that Eric Osteen, whom friends and police think may be the unidentified man who fell to his death in Colorado, was never a KU student.
The man's body was found Sept. 3 at the base of the 365-foot Bridal Veil Falls, about a mile east of Telluride, Colo.
Meanwhile, Sheriff William Masters of San Miguel County in Colorado said yesterday that his office was waiting for dental records to confirm the body's identity
He confirmed that Osteen's parents had been contacted Tuesday in Missouri and were sending the records to Colorado.
The unidentified man apparently had told people that he was an art student named Eric from the University of Kansas.
Osteen was a student for two years at the Kansas City Art Institute, a fellow art institute student said Tuesday.
Brad Rinke, the fellow student, said Osteen had lived in Lawrence with Rinke and Rinke's mother for one month in the summer of 1893.
Five to compete for scholarships
Rhodes candidates are John Atkinson Creighton, Atwood senior; Larry B Pascal, Richardson, Tex.; Stephen C Moss, Rickson, Gladstone, Mo.; senior
Henrickson also will compete for a Marshall Scholarship, along with Matthew McPheron, Pratie Vickers and Kevin Widdowle, Fort Worth, Texas, senior.
The two scholarship programs, sponsored by the British government, give two-year grants to U.S. students for graduate study at British universities. The scholarships are awards for college achievement or academic achievement, personal character and leadership ability.
Marshall nominees will be notified in late November whether they have been selected for interment or whether that will determine the winners.
Rhodes nonnees will attend state interviews in the Kansas City area in the first week of December. The top choices from those interviews will go to district interviews, where final selections will be made.
Clarification
Information in a story in Tuesday's Kansan may have been unclear. Students living in temporary housing in residence halls who are not offered spots in permanent rooms will be allowed to stay in temporary housing until the end of the semester.
New health plan upsets KU workers
By MICHAEL HORAK
From staff and wire reports.
Representatives of KU's 1,600 classified employees are upset about a new state plan that would begin charging them for health insurance coverage.
Staff writer
Today they will take their complaints to Barbara Duncan, the health benefits administrator for the three-member state Health Care Commission, which negotiated the plan.
John Brothers, president of Classified Senate, will present a resolution critical of the commission's actions. The resolution was passed Tuesday by Classified Senate.
Classified employees are state civil service employees who do not teach. Classified senators, elected by their co-workers, represent the interests of the public and city administration and the Kansas Legislature.
The resolution asks for an independent body to investigate the way the state awards health insurance contracts, and it also calls for a law that would prohibit anyone except the Legislature from
"The consensus among classified employees is that what is being proposed is kind of a breach of obligation on the state's part," said Brothers, who were hired by the state under the understanding that they would find full health care benefits . . . Now we find out they won't."
reducing health care benefits for state employees.
The controversy over health care benefits began earlier this month when the commission announced the award of the state's health insurance contract to Blue Cross-Blue Shield, the only company in the country with such coverage. The several million dollars the amount of money the state had budgeted for insurance coverage.
As a result, the commission decided state employees would pay the difference through monthly fees beginning Jan. 1. Those fees range from $500 to $600 on an employee's salary and smoking habits.
The new insurance plan also prohibits new employees from receiving state coverage during their first 60 days on the job.
H. Edward Flentje, chairman of the commission, said the increase in insurance costs was the result of increasing medical costs and a high hospitalization rate for state employees.
Last year, health-care costs for state employees ran $9 million in the red. Statistically, hospital admissions are 8 percent higher for state employees than for similar groups in the state. Flentje said.
Brothers said the insurance coverage under the new plan would make it difficult for some KU classified employees to afford health insurance. He said he knew of several employees who supported families on less than $800 a month who would most likely drop their coverage.
Brothers questioned why only one insurance carrier had submitted a bid. He also questioned the cost of the contract, which is higher than similar insurance companies and city employees throughout the state, he said.
He said he would ask Duncan to look at whether the state followed the most efficient procedure it could to award its insurance contract.
MF
Lisa Jones/KANSAN
Fall harvest
Autumn skies form a scenic background as Skin Harrell, Lawrence resident, harvests a crop of milo from his fields southwest of town.
Hall custodial workers may get Sundays off
Staff writer
By BEN JOHNSTON Staff writer
For the second time this month, student-housing officials will give custodial employees a Sunday off to see whether the residence halls remain clean while the employees get a break on the weekend.
Jeff Carmody, assistant director of student housing for custodial services, said the housing office was experimenting with giving employees Sundays off and would make a better students and officials responded.
He said Sept. 13 was the first Sunday the custodial employees did not have to work, and this Sunday would be the second.
"We are checking to see if it is justified," Carmody said. "If there were problems last time, I would have gotten calls. Someone would have said, 'Hey this place looked like an open.' But I didn't get those calls."
ed last week because special days,
such as Parent's Day last week,
attracted more people to the halls,
needed more cleaning had to be
done.
Carmody said he didn't expect employees to be overburdened with work Monday because of the Sunday off.
"The volume of trash on a weekend will probably cause the employee to take a little longer to clean on Monday," Carmody said. "Maybe a half-hour to 45 minutes longer."
Susan Bell, hall manager at Joseph R. Pearson Hall, said giving custodial employees Sundays off would not save the housing office any money because the employees still would work 40 hours a week.
Carmody said the employees work
To make up for the four hours they will not work this Sunday, the employees will work half of the one baked; they usually do not work. Bell said.
High school student injures head in fight
By JAVAN OWENS
Staff writer
A Lawrence High School student is in serious condition at the University of Kansas Medical Center with head injuries he suffered during a fight with another student Tuesday afternoon.
Lawrence police spokesman Don Dalquest said the two youths had an earlier alteration in gym class before a teacher separated them.
Yuk "Kenny" Cheung is in the intensive care unit, where he is being treated for an internal head injury, a hospital spokesman said.
After school, the students began to fight again in front of the administration center building next to the high school.
Lawrence High School principal Brad Tate said yesterday that he did not know what started the conflict with his interviewing students and teachers.
nesses. The school will generate a written report using testimony by the students.
"There was an exchange of words earlier in the day. I don't know what that was," Tate said.
Police reported that during the struggle, Cheung was thrown against the building and then to the ground. After a teacher broke up the fight, the other student kicked Cheung in the face. Cheung then complained of dizziness.
Tate said there were several wit-
A Douglas County ambulance took Cheung to Lawrence Memorial Hospital for observation at 4 p.m., police reported.
A Lawrence Memorial spokesman said Cheung was examined at the hospital and later transported to the Med Center because Lawrence Memorial did not have a neurological specialist.
Dalquest said the case had been referred to juvenile court.
Kansan reporter Valorie Armstrong contributed information to this story.
Students circulate petition
JRP residents ask for parking
By NOEL GERDES and MICHAEL MERSCHEL Staff writers
David Conrod, Winfield senior, and David Heitmeyer, Shawnee junior, start circulating the petition Sun- and plan to give it to the board today.
Upset about not having enough places to park, 277 Joseph R. Pearson Hall residents have signed a petition asking the University of Kansas Parking Board to allow them access to parking spaces now off-limits behind their hall.
The petition asks the board to allow JRP residents to park in yellow zone spaces in lot 50, which is behind the fence. The same zone spaces in the same lot are filled.
Heitmeier said that JRP residents had struggled with parking problems since the start of the semester, when the lot changed from a combination yellow and white zone to a part brown zone only and part white zone only.
White zone permits are sold to students living in residence halls. Any student can purchase yellow zone permits.
Heitmeyer said residents filled the white zone spaces early every night, leaving those who arrived later no more than two hours into the new spaces, where they receive tickets.
Ray Moore, chairman of the parking board, said the board probably wouldn't allow residents to overflow into the yellow zone in lot 50 but would consider changing some yellow zone spaces there to white.
"I think the logical thing to do is
the allotment for dorm
barking."
The board will discuss JRP's park when it meets at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday at 208 Strong Hall. Moore said the JRP issue had been placed on the agenda before he was told about the petition.
Moore said the board was trying to determine how many JRP residents had purchased white zone permits and how many of them could show how many spaces to consider adding.
But Conrod said JRP residents weren't certain whether they were allowed to park in the stadium lot. Also, Heitmeyer said he and others were reluctant to park there because the lot was not as convenient or as safe as the lot behind JRP.
Donna Hultine, assistant director of parking services, said parking services allowed JRP residents to park in lot 59, a yellow zone on the west side of Kansas Memorial Stadium, without being ticketed.
Last year, JRP residents had parking problems because drivers with yellow zone permits would fill the combination lot behind the hall, leaving no room for residents' cars, Heitmeir said.
Heitmeier said that the board had done a good job of trying to help with last year's parking problem and that heitmeier probably try to help this time also.
To solve last year's problem, the parking board designated about 200 spaces for white zone permit only, based on the number of white zone permits sold to JRP residents last year. Hultine said.
Heitmeyer said that action had provided guaranteed spaces for JRP residents. But not enough were allotted, he said.
SUA
"I think if we are allowed to overflow into the yellow area it will be better than before," he said.
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4
Thursday, September 24, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Fence-sitting is often comfortable. Just sitting there, basically accepting any opinion that comes along.
A pontiff's stance
Allowing others the freedom to hold their own opinions is part of our heritage, but many interpret this freedom to mean that they are free from defining their own views.
Into this land of the opinionated and the blase came Pope John Paul II for a 10-day tour. The pope is a man who is revered by some and respected by most. Why?
It is not that he coerce others to adopt his views but that his views are clear and his opinions are not hedged according to the audience.
This type of conviction is rare, admirable.
The pope visited minority groups of Catholics that are virtually unrecognized, including blacks and American Indians. He said that the church could not keep silent in the face of injustice. He encouraged those suffering with AIDS.
The pope did not fall prey to the human tendency to be wishy-washy to avoid offending anyone. He offended many with his firm stance on the gay lifestyle, divorce, women in the priesthood and the celibacy of priests. There are those who agree and those who disagree, but all know where he stands.
How many of us are that bold — to state our views, despite their potential for unpopularity with one group or another? How many of us have really taken a stance on the major issues of our day? Could it be that freewheeling discussion is more comfortable than choosing?
The pope's conviction demands conviction in response.
Donor dilemma
On Oct. 1, some hospitals nationwide will face a tough choice. To remain eligible for Medicare and Medicaid programs for the elderly and the poor, hospitals must comply with a new federal law demanding that they identify patients who are potential organ donors.
The law is part of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1986, signed by President Reagan in October 1986.
Hospitals that do not identify donors must devise a system to find patients who would donate their kidneys, livers, hearts or lungs for transplants. To comply with the law, hospitals must inform families of potential donors of the donor option.
Potential donors are those who have suffered loss of all brain functions, but who are kept alive by a respirator. Families of such patients would be under severe stress. The last thing they should be confronted with is information about organ donations.
A more humane way to increase the number of organ donors would be by distributing information about donations. Perhaps hospitals could include a donor organ form in the registration materials for everyone who enters a hospital. That would encourage patients and their families to consider donating organs when they can think about it rationally.
Maybe the country would have enough donors if all drivers would take a minute to decide whether they would donate. If so, they should sign the back of their driver's license.
Small victory
The U.S.-Soviet arms agreement should be looked upon with a wary eve.
And a healthy dose of cynicism.
The United States and the Soviet Union announced an agreement in principle Friday that could eliminate land-based missiles with ranges of 300 to 3,400 miles.
This is a sign of hope for peace in the world, but it must be viewed with a sense of perspective. The elimination would be a drop in the arms-reduction bucket in two ways.
The weapons that would be eliminated represent nearly $9 billion of U.S. spending, a fraction of the country's defense budget.
The administration has reaffirmed its commitment to the Strategic Defense Initiative, which has been a persistent sticking point in arms negotiations. Vice President Bush cast the deciding vote Tuesday against cuts in Reagan's proposed Star Wars budget.
The incidents in the Persian Gulf show the fragility of peace. U.S.-Soviet nuclear missile agreements must be applauded. But they represent only a small corner of the grim arms picture.
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
News staff
Jennifer Benjamin ... Editor
Julil Warren ... Managing editor
John Benner ... News editor
Beth Copeland ... Editorial editor
Sally Streff ... Campus editor
Brian Kabeline ... Sports editor
Dan Rufftmann ... Photo editor
Bill Skeet ... Graphics editor
Tom Eblen ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Bonnie J. Hardy...Business manager
Robert Hughes...Advertising manager
Kelly Scherer...Retail sales manager
Kurt Messeramith...Campus sales manager
Greg Knipp...Production
David Dereft...National sales manager
Angela Clintz...Classified manager
Ron Weems...Director of marketing
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.
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Letters, guest shots and columns are the opinion of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University Daily Kansan. Editorials are the opinion of the Kansan editorial board.
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FATHER MARRIES SISTER
Collegians value luxury of time
Most students at the University of Kansas have friends at home who chose not to attend college for one reason or another. They entered the working world; the "real world" as they liked to call it.
As time went by, however, a wedge was driven between that world and the one we know on Mt. Oread. These friendships became strained and eventually faded.
What is that wedge that comes between college students and those on the outside? Some assert that it is because of collegiate snobbishness; others point to differences in interests. I think it goes far beyond that, though.
College students are blessed with the luxury of time. We have time for observation, time for reflection and time for confusion. We are allowed to look around us, think about what we see, and try to reach conclusions, knowing all the while we will be fed, clothed and sheltered.
And however depressing or perhaps uplifting these conclusions may be, we can keep reflecting; they will change. As the writer Hugh Prather explains, we can live from one tentative conclusion to the next, thinking each one is final. The next we really know for sure is that we are infused.
Therein lies the difference between our world in college and the "real world." Confusion is our
Dan Houston Staff Columnist
luxury
At the University, the curriculum requires each student to confront the Platonic maxim, "The life which is unexamined is not worth living." Though this may be unfair to our working world counterparts, it serves as a challenge to those of us fortunate enough to attend college. We have the opportunity to examine our lives and, in doing so, affirm the value of our existence.
Viewed in this way, college serves not to cast away doubt and confusion but to capitalize on that intellectual turmoil. For only in this turmoil can a true liberal education take place.
Too many students view the University as a factory, producing doctors, lawyers, engineers and writers. But as students, we must learn not only the skills that will feed our mouths, but we must discover for ourselves the values and ideas that will nourish our souls.
If we as students work single-mindedly toward
a particular goal, we confine ourselves to a process. College is then merely an expensive substitute for on-the-job training, and we have no advantage over our "real world" counterparts.
The University was designed to produce great men like Alf Landon, Gale Sayers and William Inge. These people soared beyond their skills, their eloquence and their looks. They explored their minds and found more than an organic computer.
They found a soul in need of nourishment. And they found in the University an environment in which that soul could thrive.
As an academic community, the University of Kansas still has the proper atmosphere to support education beyond simple training. We would all benefit from a better atmosphere. If we failed to take full advantage of our time here,
And we would cheat not only ourselves but society as well by our failure. Where our nation can always use more business and professional resources we would afford to gain them at the expense of great men.
Obviously, not every KU student can be the best in the field he chooses for himself. But we all have the potential to excel in the greater field chosen for us by some unfathomable power.
Dan Houston is a Tulsa, Okla., junior majoring in advertising and political science.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Classified woes
I must be a slow learner. Wouldn't you think that after 20 years as a classified employee I'd be used to having my nose rubbed in cow cookies? Wouldn't you think that the state would have run out of ways to shaft its employees? Is it too much to expect an occasional expression of gratitude or appreciation?
On Sept. 16, John Brothers, president of Classified Senate, informed us through the September newsletter that financing for the "Margin of Excellence." (which, if approved, would result in annual salary increases for faculty and unclassified employees of more than amount classified have been receiving), might be at the expense of classified employees.
He further points out that recent increases in state contributions for unclassified retirement programs were accompanied by decreased state contributions for classified retirement programs. While I'm not 100 percent behind the Margin of Excellence proposal, it simply must not be classified employees who become the sacrificial lams — yet again.
But where is our voice? Brothers, who is probably our most active and productive president, suggests writing to the governor. Maybe. My own experience with that was an exercise in futility. Perhaps a petition would be effective and I would be glad to obtain signatures in Wescue Hall.
On the heels of that announcement followed an article in the Sept. 17 Kansan about further slashes of meager benefits by way of monthly payments, beginning Jan. 1, for health insurance, with rates based on income. The Kansan article didn't specify whether this additional
withholding was for all employees or just those who now have single membership in Blue Cross / Blue Shield, whose premiums are currently paid by the state. On top of that is a discriminatory "discount" of $10 per month for non-smokers. Why not for non-druggies, alcoholics, non-hypochondriacs or non-two-ton-Tessies? Who are these phantoms who keep speaking as our moral conscience? I'll speak for myself, thank you, and I say that if discrimination is legal everywhere except under affirmative action guidelines for employment, then let it be at least thoughtful discrimination. Why not base health insurance rates on medical history rather than salary? Documenting those records is better than verifying whatever "proof" is required for non-smokers. Why should I help pay for the attention-getting hypochondriacs, mental and physical, who drain the resources of the medical profession, and vacation in hospital beds?
It's ironic that as the country celebrates the bicentennial anniversary of the Constitution, we read on the same page of the newspaper or hear in the same segment of the news the Iran-contra hearings, the Bork investigation, Biden's "noncrediting" of sources for his speeches and the governor of Kansas calling a special meeting of the Legislature for approval of his highway improvement program. This president, Haydon, apparently, can come up with creative bookkeeping for his own pet projects, but not for state universities or state employees.
borrow a fitting excerpt from "America":
"Let mortal tongues awake,
Let all that breathe partake
Let rocks their silence break,
The sound prolong."
It's time our tongues awake and our apathetic silence broke. It's time for our Bill of Rights, and that should be the formation of a strong union — amen.
Barbara Paris, administrative officer 1, department of English.
Dedicated advisers
We would like your readers to know that we consider Mr. Brad Taylor's column on Sept. 9 to be libelous of the Department of African and African-American Studies in particular and of the University in general. Needless to say, we cannot recognize any of our faculty in the picture which he presents.
Our experience has been no different from that of other advisers in the college, namely, offering and endeavoring to get each student to take advantage of the full range of advising services, and working patiently with each advisee.
The college carefully "trains" and orientates its advisers every year, with the result that we have a corps of faculty who know the system intimately, know what pertinent advice to give, how to involve puzzled students in charting their way forward, and where to refer them for additional information extraneous to the matter in hand but potentially useful to a given student in the longer run.
The Department of African and African-American Studies, gratuitously assailed by Mr. Taylor, is proud to be foremost among this trained band of teachers dedicated to the welfare of all students at KU. For several years we have advised in the college honors program and at large, and have co-advised with the School of Business. Scores of students and colleagues can testify to our efficiency. If Mr. Taylor has genuine and reliable evidence to the contrary, I would be happy to sit down with him and talk about it.
Arthur D. Drayton, professor of African Studies
BLOOM COUNTY
HELP! I...I NEED
LIQUID REFRESHMENT!
I...I—HEY!
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SAY...
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by Berke Breathed
SORRY.
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TRY THAT.
NEXT TIME YOU THINK
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IMAGINE MEETING JOHN
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I FEEL MUCH BETTER.
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, September 24, 1987
5
THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON
НИЙЕ
СОЛИ
9-24
© 1987 Universal Press Syndicate
124 ©1987 Universal Press Syndicate
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Government poses threat to rights, professor says
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Bv KIRK ADAMS
As the U.S. government expands technologically and bureaucratically, it needs to continue to reinforce civil rights to keep them intact, a KU professor of law said yesterday.
Staff writer
David Gottlieb told about 60 people at a University Forum speech that as the U.S. government's power increases, it begins to have more control over them and thus there are new threats to many civil rights.
Gottlieb spoke on "The U.S. Constitution and Civil Liberties" at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
"About a hundred years before the Constitution, the principle of self-incrimination was established," he said.
The precedent was established as a response to the inquisitorial tactics of church courts that tried to force suspects to condemn themselves, he said. Often, those courts did not give people the right to know what they had been charged with.
When the Fifth Amendment was written, the writers probably did not think that congressional committees would have as much power of investigation and hearings, such as in the Iran-con- hearings, he said.
Fifth Amendment had to be clarified because it only provided protection against self-incrimination in criminal proceedings.
Gottlieb said that in the late 19th century the
But in 1892, he said, the courts decided that the Fifth Amendment applied to investigations outside of criminal trials and any formal proceedings where witnesses were compelled to give testimony that might be used against them.
That is why Lt. Col. Oliver North was protected against self-incrimination until he was granted immunity and why people are protected in grand jury proceedings, Gottlieb said.
He said that in the 20th century another clarification of the Fifth Amendment was necessary in Miranda v. Arizona. He said the Miranda case confirmed that police questioning was covered by the protections in the Fifth Amendment.
By a Kansan reporter
KU students who've been wondering whether there's any place to dance these days should put on their dancing shoes, because a student dance club is going to try to cure their dancing blues.
Student Union Activities is sponsoring a dance party at 9 p.m. Friday at the Kansas Room in the Kansas University. The舞会 is part of an effort by SUA to start a regular series of dances, to be called the "Aard Vark Cafe." A disc jockey from SUA will host, 723 Massachusetts St., will provide music.
Campus club offers dancing
Steve Eddy, in charge of social events at SUA,
said, "We're trying to create as much of a club-like
atmosphere as we can. In this case, your
membership card is your KUID.
Uppercul
"In Lawrence anymore, it's really hard to find a place to dance even if you are of age. But it's not a ciddie bar, it's not a juice bar — it’s a place where college students can get together."
Eddy said SUA had been considering the idea of starting a dance club for some time.
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Thursday, September 24, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
On Campus
- "Small Mammals of Economic Importance," a lecture in Spanish by Fernando Vanzareas Canaz, doctoral student in natural history, and a Latin American studies brown bag lunch are scheduled at 11:30 a.m. today at 109 Lippincott Hall.
"Women and the Farm Crisis: Strategies for Organizing and Empowering Rural America," a lecture by farmer and activist Denise
BSU
Continued from p. 1
mistake may have been that we did not get a code of action in writing for all the groups to follow." Eversole said.
This time around, Eversole said she wanted the agreement in writing. Black Panhelenlic, Long and Eversole are to present suggestions tonight on how to make the Union parties more secure. If an agreement is made, the groups will have their privileges reinstated Oct. 2.
Davis said Black Panhellenic's suggestions included having Greek organizations patrol the parties, moving entrance tables to the steps of the fifth floor and making a sign that states unacceptable behavior.
"We want to let these people know we are not going to accept them anymore and ruin our parties for us." Davis said.
He added that the groups also have suggested moving the parties to the Burge Union or moving overcrowded parties out of the Kansas Room, where they have been placed in the last several years.
"I feel very confident that we will reach an agreement with Black Pantherhelle. Eversoon said, We must not take their down, we just want their parties to be safe."
O'Brien, is scheduled at 3:30 p.m.
today at the Jayhawk Room in
the Kansas Union.
An anthropology lecture by Olga Soffer-Bohsley, specialist in Soviet archaeology at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, is scheduled at 3:30 p.m. today at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
A meeting of the University Amateur Radio Club is scheduled at 6:15
Equipment Continued from p. 1
labs and a reasonable job of refurbishing equipment in the research labs." he said.
He said the laboratories used by the five-deartment division had about a $4-million inventory — most of it obsolete.
Two years ago, when the division moved into the new addition of Haworth Hall, it was given money for movable teaching equipment, such as desks, file cabinets and bookcases, as part of the building fund from the state. Schlager said.
He said the division used some money to refinish old equipment and some to buy new teaching equipment.
Schlager said the University financed laboratories for new faculty. But other teaching labs have not been equipped for eight to 10 years.
Bill Bulgren, chairman of the department of computer science, said he thought equipment maintenance should receive more money.
"What we're really having a serious problem with is the maintenance of that equipment," he said.
He said the computer science needed to keep up with technology.
"A lot of equipment I deal with is out of date after three to five years," he said.
p. m. today at 1014 Learned Hall
A Latin American Solidarity rice and beans dinner featuring a video of Ben Linder is scheduled at 6 p.m. the Christian Miniatures, 1204 Ave Dana.
"Le Lieu du Crime," a video presentation by Le Cercle Français, is scheduled at 7:30 p.m. today.
A Jayhawks for UNICEF meeting is scheduled at 7:30 p.m. today.
Biden
Continued from p. 1
— of having to make this choice.
"And I am no less frustrated at the environment of presidential politics that makes it so difficult to let the American people measure the whole Joe Biden and not just misstatements that I have made."
Biden refused to take reporters' questions and returned to the Judiciary hearings, where he was lauded by his fellow senators.
"I would like to say the Democrats have now lost their most articulate spokesman in South Carolina, who Thur- Sunday壮胆 Carolina, the ranking Republican on the committee.
Biden's rivals for the Democratic nomination were quick to react to his withdrawal.
"I'm very saddened by it," Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis said in Iowa. "It takes a lot of courage to do what he has done, to put the Judiciary Committee's responsibilities ahead of his future."
"It's one more down note," said Rep. Patricia Schroeder, D-Colo.
"And I think we all get tarnished by that type of news."
Reading from his statement, Biden said, "You know this is presidential rhetoric. You know you hate me; 'Biden, what's going to happen when the white-hot heat turns on?'
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Weather Forecast
TODAY
Sunny and warm
HIGH: 82°
LOW: 50°
Today will be sunny and warm. Fair and cool conditions will prevail tonight. The high will be in the lower 80s with the low around 50°.
5-DAY
FRI
Sunny
75/51
HIGH LOW
SAT
SUNy
78/54
SUN
Partly cloudy
79/54
MON
Partly cloudy
81/55
TUE
Showers
77/53
North Platte
78/43
Sunny
Omaha
79/47
Sunny
Rain
F-Storms
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Goodland
80/48
Sunny
Hays
81/49
Sunny
Salina
82/50
Sunny
Topeka
83/49
Sunny
Columbia
80/49
Sunny
St. Louis
78/49
Sunny
Dodge City
84/52
Sunny
Wichita
83/51
Sunny
Chanute
84/52
Sunny
Springfield
83/51
Sunny
Forecast by Kevin Darmofal.
Temperatures are today’s high and tonight’s overnight low.
Conditions are forecasted for this afternoon.
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Sunday, Sept. 27, 1987
Help find a cure for Juvenile Diabetes
Lawrence Forecast
TODAY
Sunny and warm
HIGH: 82°
LOW: 50°
Today will be sunny and warm. Fair and cool conditions will prevail tonight. The high will be in the lower 80s with the low around 50°.
5-DAY
FRI
Sunny
75/51
HIGH LOW
SAT
SUNny
78/54
SUNN
Partly cloudy
79/54
MON
Partly cloudy
81/55
TUE
Showers
77/53
North Platte
78/43
Sunny
Omaha
79/47
Sunny
Rain
T-Storms
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Goodland
80/48
Sunny
Hays
81/49
Sunny
Salina
82/50
Sunny
Topeka
83/49
Sunny
Kansas City
82/51
Sunny
Columbia
80/49
Sunny
St. Louis
78/49
Sunny
Dodge City
84/52
Sunny
Wichita
83/51
Sunny
Chanute
84/52
Sunny
Springfield
83/51
Sunny
Forecast by Kevin Dermofal.
Temperatures are today's high and tonight's overnight low.
Conditions are forecasted for this afternoon.
Tulsa
86/56
Sunny
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, September 24, 1987
Arts/Entertainment
7
living the Legend
JIM
Stockwise from top: Kim Denid, Lakin resident, enjoys one of the turkey drummicks sold at the Renaissance Festival; Sarah Kessler, Kansas City, Mo. resident, takes a ride on the Dragon Swing; John Gregory Hanses, Whitona, Minn., resident, lectures daily at the festival that the earth is flat and the center of the universe; Denise Dwahlen, DeSoto resident, divides ribbons among about 20 girls for a dance around the Maypole.
he Kansas City Renaissance Festival has, for 11 years, been an escape for visitors
T
and tourists and a lot of daylong performances for the actors and
It's fun, frolic, andgarish period dress and dialect. It's food, drink, souvenirs, arts, crafts, sun and clean air.
David Colvin, Overbrook senior,
said that he first went to the Festival
two years ago and has come back
every year since.
"The shows are different every time," he said, after watching "Evan from Heaven" walk barefoot on a tightrope. Most of the stage performers left from year to year and even from morning to afternoon, Colvin said.
Colvin said he was interested in the mythological aspect of the Festival before he came. He said he avidly read fantasy novels such as those by Jason, and played the fantasy role-playing game Dungeons and Dragons.
The Renaissance Festival in Bonner Springs, Mo., presented by the Kansas City Art Institute, has been open every weekend since Sept. 5 and will be held through Dec. 16. The proceeds will benefit the College of Art and Design in Kansas City, Mo.
Aside from the shows, Colvin said that he enjoyed looking at the stalls of the merchants, who sell glassware, pottery and clothes.
"Evan from Heaven," alias Evan Ravintz. a Boulder, Col., resident.
stepped precariously along a rope strung about 10 feet off the ground between two trees. He was barefoot, wearing a gypsy vest and pants.
Although he said he had performed his act for several years at the Festival, he looked as if he were about to plummet from his wire. He stayed aloft, but his antics had drawn about 75 spectators.
“It’s all right,” Evan assured them slowly, as if even talking was difficult while balancing. “I’m not really doing this.”
Three children on the ground held lightweight juggling clubs, waiting for Evan's signal to toss them up to the crocodile crab kept up his piss-stone tide.
"Remember, this is not a game of kicks off. Off The Wire," he reminded them.
After a few tries, the first two children tossed the clubs to where Evan could reach them. The third, a girl named Hew, drew his club into the crowd instead.
"Can I have a slightly larger child?" Evan said, after a few erratic tosses. A few minutes later, he was juggling all three clubs while balancing on one foot, drawing applause by flipping clubs under one leg.
Evan pleased the crowd by sliding down a rope from the tree to the ground to end his act.
Not far away, Emmie Kennicott,
Lawrence graduate student, was
spending the weekend with her family,
baking bread in a stone oven. The
samples been giving away
samples of sourdough bread at the
Festival since 1865.
Kennicott said that her brother got the family started at the Festival. Their father has baked sourdough bread for 26 years, she said.
Donations given at their booth go to Cross-Lines, a Kansas City charity that distributes food to the poor and helps poor people find jobs.
Kennicott said that watching the people was the best part of the Festival. "Some people from England came by and said they had never baked their own bread when they lived in America. They came to America and hated the bread he, so they bake bread now, she said.
On a typical day, the family makes and hands out about 30 bread loaves, she said. The Festival gives them some money to cover the cost of flour, but otherwise it's all just for fun, Kennicott said.
Over at the jousting arena, two knights in full armor, sitting astride armored horses 50 yards apart, glared at each other. Both carried 10-foot jousting lances and large swords. The second "Queen Anne" stood in the royal box, watching the action and cheering for their champion.
The two knights made several passes, galloping past each other and trying to unseat their opponent. Soon they were outnumbered in words, hacking away at close range.
The King's champion unseated his challenger but lost his sword in the process. Carrying two swords now, the dismounted warrior mocked the champion, challenging him to dismount and fight. The dismounted warrior dodged a few lance attacks.
instead, before changing his mind.
Finally, the king's champion disarmed and defeated the challenger. Poised to slay the fallen knight, the winner was interrupted by the King.
"Remember, if you kill him, you'll have no one to joust this afternoon, and you'll be out of a job. What will it be, mercy or unemployment?" the King said. The champion chose mercy.
Marcia Whitmore, Lawrence resident, spent part of the day helping the knights get in and out of their armor. Whitmore usually was one of the Festival's wenches, roaming the grounds and entertaining passers-by. Saturday, she worked at the jousts because they needed the help.
She prefers to play a wench, she said. "I can be crass and obnoxious and get paid for it," Whitmore said.
"You have four guys to do it, and a support team of at least six other people," she said.
Whitmore is working on a metalsmithing degree at KU, but she said she took this semester off because she lacked tuition money.
Pay at the Festival is minimal: performers earn only $7.50 a day. Nonetheless, Whitmore was there for the third straight year.
"Why do I do it? I'm addicted to people," she said. "You do what you need to do. I am here to have fun."
Story by Brian Baresch
Whitmore's wenching costume was long, rusty, purple dress with a puffed skirt. The hat was a wide-brimmed
Photos by James Larson
A MEN'S BATTLE FOR THE SQUARE
"It is 81½ hours of continuous improvisational theater," she said. "The performers try to have as much fun as the guests do."
R. W. B. A.
KU bus driver crafts leather saddle with state history written all over it
By JAVAN OWENS
Staff writer
Bill Gomer is a teacher. That's the side of him the KU students who see him every day do not know, because they see him as their bus driver.
At night, after an ordinary day of taking students around campus and Lawrence, the KU on Wheels bus driver becomes an art teacher. He teaches pictorial carving in Topeka on Tuesday evening for the Kansas State University crafting at the U.S. Penitentiary at Leavenworth on the other nights he has available.
But Gomer is the first to say that bus driving is not a long-term career goal. He wants to teach — a little America, a little history.
"Most of the students think, 'He's just another dumb bus driver. 'Come me said. 'There's a problem.' He says, 'It's relaxing and stimulating.'
History - Kansas history to be exact - is written all over a battle he has created for the Kansas State Historical Society.
The project, which began just as a demonstration of leather working for the society two years ago, blossomed into a project that will
tell about how Kansas came to be.
Although still incomplete, the saddle has been appraised at $35,000. Gomer has worked on the 16th in all of Kansas "in the pots." 108 counties.
Engraved in the leather are scenes from Kansas history, as well as state landmarks and symbols, such as the sunflower.
He worked on the piece at the American Lung Association Cider Days festival, which took place in April. He plans to finish it in October.
Former Gov. John Carlin and Rep. Jim Slattery, D-Kan., both have signed the saddle. Before the work is completed, President Ronald Reagan, Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole and Mike Hayden also will add their signatures.
He said the saddle would go on loan to the Museum of Natural History in Topeka for one year. Then it will be on loan to the Kansas State Historical Society for one year.
"It may never get sold, but it's got history written all over it," Gomer said.
Kansans may see the saddle as it toures the 105 counties it was created in. Gomer said.
He wants students to learn about
F
Folk arts are the kind of crafts that have been passed down from generation to generation. It's like when a blacksmith taught his son the tricks of the trade. If we don't keep it alive, we're going to lose our heritage."
— Bill Gomer
Craftsman and KU on Wheels
bus driver
folk art. Only through learning about the arts and crafts of yesterday can a student understand what the art of today is, he said.
"Folk art are the kind of crafts that have been passed down from generation to generation," Gomer said. "It's like when a blacksmith makes a knife, and it gets traded. If we don't keep it alive, we're going to lose our heritage."
The leather craftsman has been fighting to keep his craft alive in the minds of young Americans.
Sundays, his garage in Jarbalo becomes the studio for his 10 saddle-making students.
Gomer said he was concerned that there were fewer and fewer places where students could learn old crafts. Kansas State University is the only Regents school that has such a program, he said.
Phil Blackhurst, chairman of the University of Kansas art department, said he did not know if folk art used folk art don't require formal training.
"When you think of folk art or a folk artist, you think of someone who has acquired a craft, but has undergone 'normal training'. Blackmur said.
"Many students have not learned how to apply their book learning to life," Gomer said. "That's what I'm talking about — learning to use those skills and creativity with them with what you learn in class."
Gomer disagreees. Gomer, who earned a master's degree in fine arts at Emporia State University, said an artist must learn to reconcile his formal and informal training.
His saddle, he said, is an example of that.
"This is more than art; this is a part of history."
ALEXANDRA BURTON
Scott Carpenter/KANSAM
Bill Gomer, a KU bus driver, displays the saddle he made for the Kansas State Historical Society. The saddle, which is to be signed by President Reagan, was on exhibit Saturday and Sunday at the American Lung Association Cider Days in Topeka.
---
8
Thursday, September 24, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Arts/Entertainment
KU theater opens season with dark comedy
By KIRK ADAMS
Staff writer
The costumes are colored foam rubber. The set is left to the imagination — and the whole play is the recollection of one character.
"The Marriage of Bette and Boo," a semi-autobiographical play by Christopher Durang, is a comedy that takes a satirical look at relationships between women and their institutions like marriage, religion and the medical and law professions.
The $2^{1/2}$-hour play consists of two acts and 33 scenes. It was first produced on Broadway in May 1985 and won 13 Obie Awards.
The University of Kansas play is directed by Glenn Q. Pierce, playster of theater and media arts, and opens the 1987-8 University Theater Series tonight. It has been selected as a member of the American College Theatre Festival.
Pierce said he chose to do the play because it was told from a college student's perspective and because the play expressed many of the same concerns that affected anyone in the university community.
Pierce described the play as a "dark comedy".
The play is told by the character Matt Hudlocke, played by Christopher Hayes, Olathe sophomore. Matt searches his memory and knowledge of his generation to try to better understand himself and who he will become.
Pierce said the script, the acting, the set and the brightly colored costumes expressed the distortions that existed in Matt's memory.
When characters are not active in scenes, they fade to the background but remain visible.
"It's a play that takes place in Matt Hudlocke's mind, and once an idea is
Hudlocke's mind, and once an idea is
firmly embedded in the mind it doesn't leave." Pierce said.
Costume designer Valerie Drake, Kansas City, Kan., graduate student, had a lot of input in choosing the costumes.
"I read the play, and my first reaction to it was that all the characters in the play lived in boxes. And I saw it in my mind as glass boxes. They were talking at each other constantly, but never really communicating. It was like walls between them." Drake said.
Thus, the creation of the foam rubber costumes.
"I think we've come up with some
that's probably prettie novel."
Drake
"It really adds an emphasis of exaggeration to the play. At first I thought, 'Oh dear, this is going to come across as too whimsical for the play.' But she said she changed her mind after she saw the dress rehearsal.
"The characters are very artificial, and I think the costumes do a good job of lending to that artificiality."
Drake and Pierce said the show was different from the Broadway play.
The set is a large circle surrounding the stage, meant to symbolize Bette and Boo's wedding band. Within the set are hundreds of sheets of paper that symbolize the pages of Matt's life.
Drake said, "The script's basically the same, but we took great liberties with it visually" — with the light, with the stage set, with the blocking on the screen. "We did this in the game that we could be as liberal with this as we wanted to visual."
"The attitudes toward the church are much a part of his writing. He went through Catholic school, so he started playing from that experience."
Pierce said he thought Durang was expressing anger at the church in many of the scenes.
Jay Karnes, Omaha, Neb., senior, who plays the priest, said, "There's a segment where I, as an actor, am afraid of offending black people in the audience. I am offended by it myself. I hope that people see it as a comment, not on black people, but on racism and close-mindedness of the individual, and not even, necessarily, on the Catholic church." Karnes said that the priest character was a racist.
Pierce said the author made social commentary throughout the play.
Phillip Schroeder, Olathe senior, who plays Karl Hudlocke, said he
I
thought the play had a meaningful message.
"I think it says, basically, to believe in yourself and not something the masses say is right."
Karl Hudlocke, played by Philip Schroeder, Olate the senior, loses his temper during a business conference with his son.
Some of the actors told how they dealt with nervousness. Sara Lahey, Fairway senior, who as Bette Breman has the largest speaking role in
the play, said she sometimes got nervous on stage.
"I have a lot of breathing and in-
ventive exercises and focus wort-
Schroeder said, "Everybody gets nervous, it's just a matter of how you deal with that nervous energy — you channel it, you make it a part of your
actions rather than letting it hold you back."
"The Marriage of Bette and Boo" will play tonight at 7:30 p.m.; tomorrow and Saturday at 8 p.m.; and Sunday at 2:30 p.m. in the Crafton-Preyer Theater. Tickets are available at the Murphy Hall box office.
TOM SALMON
Members of Bette and Boo's family admire the new addition to their family. From left to right are Soot Hudlocke played by Hillary Weltz, Northbrook, ill., sophomore; Karl Hudlocke, played by Philip Schroeder, Olahtine senior; Boh Hudlocke, played by Brent Wright, Olathe senior; Bette Brennan, played by Sara Lahey, Fairway senior; Margare Brennan, played by Lynnae Lehfeldt, Olathe junior; and Paul Brennan, played by Kevin Crawford, Lawrence senior;
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1.8 KU GPA for students who have 45-59 total hours graded A,B,C,D,F
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Campus/Area
Photography prof resigns from KU
By a Kansan reporter
Gary Mason, the head of the School of Journalism's photojournalism sequence, resigned yesterday because of health reasons, he said.
Mason, who turned in a resignation letter Tuesday, said working without a break since 1976 and working with the group for 30 years had taken a toll on him.
He said he just decided, "It's time to quit."
Dana Leibengood, associate dean of journalism, said he did not know who would be found to teach Mason's classes for the rest of the semester.
On the Record
or whether someone could be found by next week.
"We'll certainly make every effort to." he said.
Mason said he had suggested several people who could teach his three
Mason said he had thought about messaging him, but not that he would with admin training.
He said he thought that leaving toward the beginning of the semester would be better than leaving toward the end, when his classes would be more involved.
■ Currency and coins valued at $435 were taken between 9 and 4:59 p.m. Saturday from a residence in the 2000 block of West 27th Terrace, Lawrence police reported. ■ A 1957 Hess vehicle valued at $1,955 runs
A 1965 Honda贷款 at $1,265 was taken at 10 p.m. Friday from a
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An AM-FM stereo/casette valued at $400 was taken between midnight and 9 a.m. Monday from a car parked at a residence on Apple Lane.
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Thursday, September 24, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Jews take time out to observe holiday
By BRIAN BARESCH
Staff writer
Today is the first day in the year 5748 on the Jewish calendar, and about 1,500 Jewish students on campus are observing Rosh Hoshanah, the first of 10 days leading up to the Day of Atonement.
Many students and faculty are not coming to class today, too, in accordance with KU regulations regarding religious holidays.
Forty-six students attended Hiliel House's dinner and services last night, according to Daveen Litwin, director of the house, which is a communal living group for eight Jewish students at 940 Mississippi St.
Hillel House provides educational, social and cultural activities, projects and services as well as a place for worship. It also serves for religious services. Lwalin said.
During these holidays, Litwin said, Jews ask forgiveness of people around them and of God for things done wrong during the year, and they also attempt to return to their roots and begin again.
"We contemplate what we have been and think about what we want to be in the year to come," she said. "It's a very life-affirming holiday."
The Hillel feast included Jewish egg bread, cooked in a ring instead of the traditional braided shape. That tradition symbolizes the life of Israel, without beginning or end.
Another traditional food is apples dipped in honey. The honey symbolizes the sweetness of good life, as do
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An important part of Blow Hoshanah services is the blowing of the shofar, or ram's horn. The horn was blown in ancient times to communicate that something important, such as a call for warfare, was taking place. Now it is symbolic.
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The horn blowing, as well as candles and prayer, will be among the activities rounding out the Rosh Hashanah celebrations at the Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Drive.
Yom Kippur marks the second time Moses descended from Mount Sinai, a month and 10 days after he climbed there to ask atentement from God for the Israelites' worshiping of a golden calf.
Yom Kippur on Oct. 3 will mark the end of the days of atonement. Jews traditionally fast all day to observe the holiday.
Lori Kagan, Chicago senior, said she had to reschedule a test because of the holiday. Her instructor was standing at first, she said, but then relented.
University regulations allow students whose tests fall on religious holidays to reschedule the tests. Carol Prentice, assistant to the vice chancellor for academic affairs, said the same rights applied to faculty.
Sabrina Oppenheimer, Bnei-Brak,
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not meet because most of her students were not planning to attend anyway.
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I
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, September 24, 1987
Sports
11
Life off the bench no rest for Hunter
By MIKE CONSIDINE
Staff writer
Gary Hunter has found a way to simplify his life. He no longer commutes between a part-time job in Prairie Village and his full-time job as an associate athletic director for administration at the University of Kansas. Now his 70-hour work week is a more manageable 60 hours.
This summer Hunter, 43, resigned his job as a municipal court judge in Prairie Village. For the previous $1 \frac{1}{2}$ he had managed both responsibilities.
During the first year of moonlighting, he lived in Overland Park. His wife, Pam, and daughter, Shannon, a senior at Shawnee Mission East, still live there and spend weekends in Lawrence.
His son, Shawn, is now working on his masters' degree in business administration at the University of Kansas.
Hunter, who friends call "Bear," decided that after six months of commuting between Lawrence and Denver, he would be a longer feasible to hold both positions.
"When I was living there it was much easier to go to the courthouse and perform the regular functions of my job," Hunter said. "And it's better to have someone in the community (on the bench)."
The decision to abandon his law practice left a few people scratching their heads, Hunter said.
"A number of friends and associates thought I'd gone nuts," he said. "But all of my attorney friends told me that I should like one of the innmates has escaped."
Thomas Hammill, who served as a municipal court judge in Prairie Village with Hunter, spoke for both factions.
"Obviously it was a radical career change, and to some extent it came as a surprise. Hammill said, "But we've had a long time of blue churning through his veins."
Hunter, who received his bachelor of science and law degrees from the University of Kansas, said he had been asked to work in athletic administration.
administrator.
"Most young people dream on bringing an athlete or possibly a coach." Humana said. "I always wanted to be an athletic director or the general manager of a major-league franchise."
The Council Grove native came to the University on a football scholarship and was a safety for the Jayhawks under Coach Bob Mitchell for two years. Hunter also played on the freshman basketball team.
Hunter, who won no varsity letters, quit football when he realized that he had little chance for playing time until his fifth year. He had a wife and son to support and planned to be enrolled in law school by that time.
Kansas City area, specializing in malpractice insurance defense.
After earning his law degree in 1968. Hunter practiced trial law in the
Hunter served as a trial lawyer until 1985 and as a municipal court judge from 1976 to 1987.
`o do miss it from a trial lawyer standpoint,' Hunter said. 'I'm the excitement and competition of the court room. I also miss some of the more interesting cases I tried in bench, but we're very busy here.'
He said that his duties as judge required 5-10 hours per week. Hunter handled the trial arraignment docket on Tuesday mornings, the trial docket Thursday evenings and administrative functions during the evenings. Hammil assisted when the case load became too heavy.
"It gave me an opportunity to think about some of the things that needed deeper thinking," Hunter said of his commuting. "On the way home, I'd relax, listen to music and catch up on the news. It was not as unpleasant as it might appear."
Hunter said that the two jobs complemented each other in some ways. He said he was in Kansas City on athletic department business twice each week and could plan his schedule accordingly.
Despite his heavy schedule, Hunter said he still found time to run, bike, swim or play racquetball on his lunch hour. He spends his evenings at KU athletic events or games at his daughter's high school.
In 1982 Bob Frederick, then an assistant athletic director, offered Hunter the presidency of the Greater Kansas City KU Roundball and KU Quarterback Clubs. He headed both teams for full-time volunteer for three years.
Hunter told Monte Johnson, then athletic director, in 1985 of his desire to work in athletic administration "five to 10 years down the road."
He was hired as an assistant athletic director six months later, replacing law professor Lonnie Rose who was employed on a part-time basis.
Johnson said that Kansas was the first school he was aware of to hire someone with a legal background in the athletic department.
"I was absolutely delighted that an opening occurred," Johnson said. "Gary is absolutely one of the most men I know in athletic administration."
In 1986, Hunter was promoted to his present title. His duties are to assist in the administration of athletic programs; coordinate NCAA, Big Eight Conference and University rules interpretations to maintain compliance; to assist in contract negotiations and event scheduling and to supervise the department's marketing efforts.
"Surprisingly enough there is a great deal of law involved." Hunter said. "A law degree is helpful in
See HUNTER, p. 6, col. 1
EU ALL AMERICANS
Fred Sadowski/KANSAN
Associate athletic director Gary Hunter stepped down from his position as a municipal court judge this summer to devote his full time to KU athletics.
Gubicza pitches five-hitter as Royals defeat Mariners
The Associated Press
SEATTLE — Mark Gubica pitched a five-hitter and Bill Pecota and Larry Owen honored in the fourth innning Wednesday night as the Kansas City Royals beat the Seattle Mariners 9-0.
Gubicza, 12-17, struck out a career-high 11 and walked five.
Mark Langston, 18-12, took the loss. He gave up seven runs on 11 hits in six-plus innings. He struck out seven and he missed his American League lead to 244.
The Royals scored in the first inning when Willie Wilson led off with a triple and Kevin Seitzer singled.
Pecota, the eighth-place batter in the line-up, hit a two-run homer in the fourth after a walk to Lonnie Smith. Pecota missed an just inside the left-foul field 40.
Chiefs' strikebreaker hunt ends in laughs
Kansas City scored three times in the seventh on a two-run double by Danny Tartabul and an RBI single. A third hit gave him a two-run single in the ninth.
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — For a fraction of a second, onlookers were startled. A pickup rolled past as two big guys stood in the bed, held shotguns and shouted, "Where's the scabs? We're looking for scabs."
but the grinning faces of tight end Paul Coffman and linebacker Dino Hackett were instantly recognized, and everybody got started with a laugh on the Kansas City Chiefs' first day of picketing.
Driving the pickup was noseguard Bill Maas, who was also given credit for the idea.
"We thought it would be a nice light-hearted way to start the day," Hackett said.
Most of the Chiefs, along with reporters, photographers and representatives of sympathetic unions were assembled outside the main door when Coffman and Hackett made their entrance.
The joke brought hearty laughter from the crowd. There was never any hint of real danger
"Billy Bob's the one who thought of it," said adding that the weapons were "unloaded, of course."
"At first we were going to fire a few shots in the air," said a grinning Coffman, "but we decided that would be unwise."
"We just wanted to keep this as light-hearted as possible. Hackett said, but this is serious
The nearest thing to violence was when center Tom Baugh's labrador retriever caught sight of quarterback Todd Blackledge's rottweiler.
With ears erect and hair bristling, the two large, powerful dogs faced off nose-to-nose and stared, neither making a sound. A moment later, both tails were wagging and everybody went back to the
Golf coach goes back to basics to prepare team for tournament
business of setting up the first day of picketing at Arrowhead Stadium.
The Chiefs, joined by members of several unions, carried signs saying, "NFL Fair" and "Negotiate. Don't Procrastinate." No non-union players were visible outside the main entrance.
Gary Heise, director of public relations, said the non-union players were given their physicals yesterday afternoon and were bused into the stadium past the pickets this morning for their first practice.
"May we can vent our frustrations by yelling at them, and that would make us feel better," center Rick Donnalley said.
By a Kansan reporter
The Chiefs, like their counterparts around the NFL, spoke contemptuously of the strike-breakers, who are scheduled to play their first games Oct. 4.
Injury list brings good, bad news to football team
Weiser said he had been working with the players on mechanical adjustments to help them improve.
"I think that when you're having problems like the kids are having, you've got to go back to square one," coach Kent Weiser said.
The Kansas women's golf team members will try to improve on their mediocre fall season when they go to Edmundson for the All College Tournament.
"Mechanically, we have made some small changes that have made the kids more confident," he said.
"During the fall season we try not to mess with the kids mechanically, but we're not going to get used to it. So far, the hands-on system hasn't worked, so we've worked on some things."
Weiser said the team would have to play well to compete against Texas A & M, Southern Methodist, Lamar, Duke, North Texas State, Nebraska, Oklahoma and Oklahoma State.
By CRAIG ANDERSON
Staff writer
Heading into Saturday's game against Louisiana Tech, the Kansas injury list includes several players.
Three players will definitely miss the next game — junior cornerback Johnny Granderson, with knit knee ligaments; senior center Rob Foster, with knee ligaments; and safety John Autenreith, with an ankle sprain.
Sophomore wide receiver Quintin Smith, who sprained an ankle Saturday against Kent State, will probably play, said Lynn Bott, director of sports medicine. Freshman tailback Hatch-
ett, who suffered a lower-back bruise in the home opener, is also listed as probable.
The biggest news concerning injuries was the status of senior tackle Bob Pieper. Bott said Pieper was expected to play against Louisiana Tech. The six-foot five, 285-pound Pieper missed the Jay-Z game, the second one of a knee injury. The news about Pieper was especially pleasing Kansas coach Bob Valesente.
"We look at Pieper on the offensive line like the basketball team looks at Danny Manning," he said. "He means that much to our success. He'll make us a better team by being out there playing."
Valesen said the fan support they received last
week against Kent State was something else that helped make his team better.
Last Saturday's crowd of 33,700 at Memorial Stadium, he said, showed him that the football team did have dedicated fans.
"I appreciate all the fans, especially the students, who came out to see us play. he said." I很 recently exited when I walked on the field and saw the stands full of people cheering for us. I'm just so disappointed that we couldn't come through for them."
Freshman center Chip Budde said the crowd helped pump up the Jayhawks at the beginning of the game.
Playing time attracts freshman to KU
Rv CRAIG ANDERSON
Staff writer
Kansas freshman fullback Maurice Hooks was involved in a sort of tug of war game last spring when he had to decide where to attend college the next fall. Playing football at Omaha South High School in Nebraska didn't help ease any of the tension.
To the east of Omaha was the University of Iowa, with its tradition of contending for the Big Ten Conference title. Hooks' parents were well known in college basketball mainly because he already had a brother going to school there.
47
To the west of Hooks was the University of Nebraska. With the Cornhuskers' string of 18 straight years of going to a bowl game, it seemed assured that he would play for winning teams throughout his career if he went there. Hooks' classmates in high school wanted him to play there so they could watch him perform.
Hooks suprised them all and took the south route out of Omaha. He knew that while everyone else had an opinion about where he should go to college, only he would have to live with the final decision.
There were times during his senior year at South when he wondered if he would ever get the opportunity to play at any college. In fact he wanted to wonder if he would wanted to玩 play high school football again.
"I wanted to go somewhere where I could make a name for myself," said Hooks. "I knew KUW the best opportunity to do that."
The circumstances that led to Hooks' doubts occurred at an early morning pre-season workout. He had skipped the team's stretching exercises and went straight into the offensive drills. Running down the field, with no players around him, Hooks fell to the ground with
a burning pain in the back of one of his legs. The diagnosis from team trainers was a severely pulled hamstring.
Nebraska, which had earlier offered him a scholarship, now wanted him to join the team as a walk-on. Hooks decided that becoming a Cornhusker could be fun, but he wasn't before he got a chance to play for the varsity. He said he didn't want to wait that long.
oddenly, in what was supposed to be his most glorious season, Hooks found himself a spectator on the sidelines. It was during this time that self-doubt began to creep into his thoughts.
"When it first happened, I really considered giving (football) up altogether," he said. "When I started getting closer to the old school, though, old feeling of enjoyment football started to come back."
After missing the first three games of his final high school season, Hooks was back, but some self-doubt still stingered. He won against the scouts would stop looking at him because he had been injured.
It was the chance to play early in his career that helped Hooks decide to sign a letter of intent with Kansas. He also said coach Bob Valente impressed him as someone who was concerned with his players as individuals, not just as athletes.
Hooks didn't have wait long before he got extended playing time at Kansas. Last Saturday he was started the second half at fullback.
"I'm glad glad we've got him now," he said. "He's going to be a great player, he's just a super kid."
Valesente said he wasn't sure if Hooks had been overlooked by the scouts during his senior year.
Kansas freshman tailback, Maurice Hooks, runs downfield during a punting drill. Hooks and the special teams worked out Tuesday afternoon behind Anschutz Sports Pavilion. The Jayhawks face Louisiana Tech Saturday at Memorial Stadium.
"I was also glad that I played well because my family was watching the game," he said. "They were all kind of worried
when I left home about whether or not I would be able to play down here. I think they felt a lot better after watching me play."
Meeting starts dialogue among KU sports clubs
By ROBERT WHITMAN
The most important event surrounding yesterday's meeting between sports clubs' representatives, the Student Senate vice president and two members of the recreational services staff may have occurred after the meeting.
Some of the sports clubs' representatives gathered in the hall outside the meeting room in Robinson Center to discuss issues to discuss issues from the meeting.
"To my knowledge it's never been done before," KU Creep president Scott Klaus said. "If we are entering this new funding procedure, I think this will be the start of talking between sports clubs."
Scott Sites, a member of the KU Rugby Club who attended the meeting said, "Any kind of communication between sports clubs has been of a casual nature. We talked about our feelings on how this is going to affect us before. I had known some Crew members but never any of the top officers."
Seven sports clubs' representatives attended the meeting, along with Mary Chappell and Gordon Kratz, coordinators of sports clubs.
After Quincy outlined some of the proposed changes, she listened to questions and comments from club representatives.
The meeting was called by Stephanie Quinny, Student Senate vice president, to clear up some misinformation that had been circulated about the activities of the sports clubs' task force. The task force is investigating changes in administration guidelines and funding procedures for the clubs.
One of the questions concerned the proposal to make recreational services advisory board the first step in the budgetary process when sports clubs request Senate funding.
After the board hears the funding request, the request would go through the same process it now goes through in the finance committee and then to the Senate.
Quincy said the board would be made up of students who had an interest in sports. She hoped the board's opinion of the clubs' funding request would be given as much consideration as if the Finance committee had heard it themselves.
Klaus said the procedure that is now used, where clubs request funds directly from the Senate, was a good one. Going through another committee just added another layer to the procedure.
Klaus said after the meeting that he was satisfied with possible proposed funding procedure.
"I think we still have a chance to get the funding we have had in the past," Klaus said. "It's pretty much the same procedure, just a different twist. I think it's better going to accent it more. I also think the Finance committee. The sports clubs can talk to someone who knows what you're talking about."
The possible proposed funding procedures deserved to be put in effect and given a chance to work, Stites said.
"I'm more than willing to give them the benefit of the doub," Sites said. "At this point, I think the task requires the best interest of the of clubs in mind."
Sites, who represents Rugby Club when it works with the Senate, said he liked another idea proposed by Kratz — the creation of a sports clubs' council. If created, the council would be composed of all sports clubs' presidents and could be a united front presenting the concerns of sports clubs to the recreational services advisory board.
12
Thursday, September 24, 1987 / University Daily Kansan Sports
Sports
Hunter
Continued from p. 1
dealing with rules interpretations as well as dealing with the Big Eight and NCAA. There are a number of areas where my legal skills have been a benefit."
Some everyday applications include contract agreements, including television and radio, and the legal responsibility of running a non-profit organization.
"Having his law background makes him so much more valuable to us," Johnson said. "He made my job
Correction
much easier. Gary has a lot of strengths."
With his background and the rapid expansion of the field, Hunter said sports law might be a career choice for the future.
"I might decide some time in the future to get into sports law and litigation," Hunter said. "Serving as an associate athletic director would serve me well. I think it would be excellent experience."
Because of incorrect information supplied to a Kansas reporter, the method by which one person is appointed to recreational services advisory board was incorrectly
reported.
Reported:
The person is appointed by the University Affairs Committee, a committee of the Student Senate.
Scoreboard
Baseball
American League
Kansas City 9, Seattle 0
Toronto 6, Baltimore 1
Detroit 4, Boston 0
Cleveland 8, Oakland 6
Minnesota 4, Texas 2
Milwaukee 8, New York 7
California 10, Chicago 6
National League
Pittsburgh 2, St. Louis 0
Philadelphia 5, Chicago 0
San Diego 6, Cincinnati 4 (13)
New York 4, Montreal 4
Atlanta 5, Houston 4
San Francisco 9, Los Angeles 8
BUM STEER "BLUE RIBBON" BBQ
$1.00 Off
Any Sandwich or Dinner
Friday-Saturday-Sunday
(Not good on delivery or other offers)
2554 IOWA ST.
841-SMOKE
PRE-MEDS:
KU Med representatives will be on campus for individual visits with students on the following Mondays: September 28
October 12
October 19
Contact the Pre-Med secretary, 106-C Strong Hall, 864-3667, to make an appointment.
Office hours: MWF 10:30-2:20
TR 8:30-11:30
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
PRE-OPTOMETRY:
University of Missouri - St. Louis Optometry School representative will be on campus October 28. He will visit with students in the afternoon; he is a guest speaker for the Pre-Med club at 7:00 p.m. that evening.
Contact the Pre-Med secretary for details, 864-3667 or call Pre-Med reps. at 843-3425 & 842-3863.
Sub & Stuff
Sandwich Shop
5 p.m.-Midnight
We Deliver!
841-DELI
Sub&Stuff
Sandwich Shop
ECM Center Events
Sept. 25: Friday Free Movie
*Hosers**
7:30 p.m.
Sept. 27: Sunday Evening
Worship & Supper
5:30 p.m.
Sept. 29: Tuesday Seminar
"Liberation Theology"
4:30 p.m.
Sept. 30: Wednesday
University Forum
"Musical Life in
Poland Today"
Daniel Politoške
speaker
11:40 a.m. lunch
12 noon speaker
1204 Oread
ECM Student Christian Centre
Sponsored by
ECOCEMANIC INSTITUTES:
The United Methodist Church
The Presbyterian Church (USA)
The Church of Israel
The Church of the Brethren
BUM STEER
DELIVERS
"HOT" BBQ FAST (5-10 nightly)
841-SMOKE 2554 IOWA ST.
SUA
FILMS
Bringing up Baby.
SUA FILMS
BUM STEER DELIVERS
"HOT" BBQ FAST (5-10 nightly)
841-SMOKE 2554 IOWA ST.
SUA FILMS
Bringing Up Baby
Thursday, Sept. 24
7:00 p.m.
Bringing up Baby.
Mild-mannered scientist Cary Gan loss a rare dinosaur bone. Katharine Hepburn is missing her pet leopard, Baby. Silly situations and great acting lead to another classic romantic comedy. PLUS: "Breakdowns of 1936," Hollywood out-takes! (1938, 10 min/BW)
Explore New Ideas,
at
THE
ROCK
CHALK
BAR
706 MASSACHUSETTS STREET, DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
...
Explore New Ideas, Happenings, and Events
at
THE ROCK CHALK BAR
Tonight!
The
L.A. Ramblers
12th and Indiana
"Trust your
842-9469
UDK
65¢
1/4-Pound RUNZA HAMBURGER
sister! "
Now for a limited time get our award-winning
¼-pound, freshly ground hamburger for just 65£!!
That's half off our regular price ($1.30). Try the
best-tasting, freshest burger in town today.
Come on and get a taste
Coupon Expires October 4, 1987
One coupon per customer
per visit
Not valid with any other offer
10.30 a.m.-10.00 p.m.
2700 Ileana Lawrence
RUNZA
DRIVE INN
RESTAURANT
Welcome Back
Students!
1/2 PRICE
SWEATER SALE
Buy one sweater at current ticket price and
receive a second sweater of EQUAL VALUE
or LESS at 1/2 PRICE!
Plus...
show us your Student I.D. and receive an
Extra 10% Off Entire Store!
Discount expires October 12, 1987
MAURICES
Where Fashion Doesn't Cost A Fortune
Mon.-Fri. 9:30 a.m.-8:30 p.m.
Sat. 9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Sun. 12-5 p.m.
Welcome Back Students!
YOUR MONEY,
CLIP A COUPON!
SAVE
Aard Vark
It's Here! SUA SPECIAL EVENTS'
CAFE
A Great New Place to Dance.
(KUID Required)
Friday, September 25, 1987
9 p.m. - 1 a.m. in the Kansas
Room of the Kansas Union (6th floor)
Bring this ad, or come with 2
or more people, and get in for $2.
$3 admission charge.
featuring Alan Smith
Lawrence Floral & Gift
Friday Happy Hour
5 til closing-cut
flower ½ price-
Cash & Carry
843-3255
939 MASSACHUSETTS ST.
太
I Can't Believe It's YOGURT!
Frozen Moutt Stores
Enjoy smooth, creamy
Frozen Yogurt
I Can't Believe It's
YOGURT!
Frozen Yogurt Stores
97% Fat Free!
--Free Samples--
Louisiana Purchase Shopping Center
OPEN. 11 a.m. 11 p.m. Daily
Noon 11 p.m. Sundays
We Will Beat Any Advertised Price Leading Edge Model "D" $ ^{\circ} $
Dual floppy system 20 month warranty Local Service &Support
sale ends Sept. 30th
$89500 sale ends Sept. 30th
TASCADE
COMPUTER
TASCADE
COMPUTER
Leading Edge Authorized Dealer & Service Center
MICROTECH 25th & IOWA 841-9513
Holiday Plaza
BODITONICS
Patient Positioning System
STOP SWEATING BODITONICS
is the answer to losing inches without knocking yourself out.
Your workout will take less than an hour and it will leave you refreshed, instead of needing to take a shower in the middle of your busy day.
The professional Toning System consists of seven tables that strengthen and tone your muscles, and help break down "cellulite".
Ask about our student rates located in the Louisiana Purchase Shopping Center 841-7070
50 to 60% OFF
Marks
JEWELERS
You would think, "what a bargain,' and that is what the so-called jewelry discounters want you to believe. The truth is that the mark up is so outrageous that you are not getting a deal at all.
Knows the truth. We've shopped Kansas City and the discount stores and found that our everyday prices are usually 10 to 20% less than their sale prices.
It is your decision: outrageously inflated prices that leave you wondering what you have gotten into, OR honest reliable service and prices backed by 97 years of experience. Come in and see us at
Marks JEWELERS
Marks JEWELERS
817 Massachusetts
843-4266
University Dalkv Kansan / Thursday, September 24. 1987
13
Classified Ads
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Gay and Lesbian Services will throw a picnic on Saturday, September 28th, 1 p.m.-7 at Centennial YO food and sports equipment. Be provided by Dymzn. Com and join the fun-ITS FREE!!
GOOD AT MATH? LIKE COMPETITION? If so,
do you want to play this game at 8 a.m. on
thursday at 8:45 a.m., or contact Prof. Daniel
Katz, 2D Strong Hall (664-1433), for more info.
PULMAN MATHEMATICAL COMPETITION.
MUSEUM GIFT SHOP Museum of Anthropology Univ. of Kansas
PLAINS INDIANS Quills and Beadwork
Heading home for the holidays? FLY CHEAP
us pow. Carpenters Travel. 834-5698.
Mon.- Sat. Sun.
10-3 1-4
Let's go skiing over Christmas Break! Suncake Tsis Ski Annual College Winter Ski Breaks to Vail River Creek, Steamboat, Breeckerbridge, and the Mount Shasta ski area (parties/picnics, races and more from only $15M) Optional round trip air and charlotte hikes. A complete color skie break brochure 1-800-321-9111
SERVICES
Wednesday, Sept. 23
Dinner at 5:30 p.m.
Hilllet House
RSVP required.
Services at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday, Sept. 24
Services at 9:30 a.m.,
7:30 p.m.
Friday, Sept. 25
Services at 9:30 a.m.,
7:30 p.m.
KOSH HASHANAH SERVICES
Hillel שני
Services held at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center. For more info, call 749-4242.
Members of Delta Sigma Phi on KU campus,
please contact Dave Brayles, 843-3895.
Moving Sale- Records, tapes, rock posters, turntable, books, furniture, more. Saturday 8 a.m.-3 m.
104. Connecticut, 841-7083
Organizing campus war games club. Tournants, players index, games exchange. Interested? Call Rob at 841-4177 anytime
Womys's Dance, Saturday, September 28th. 8:30
p.m. to 12:30 a.m. Lawrence Arts Center, 9th & Ver-
mont. $4.00
PRE-BUSINESS SOPHOMORES
Apply Window 3 Strong Hall
Applications for School of Business for Spring, 1988 Due Oct. 1
ENTERTAINMENT
for more information call 864-3844
At your request is Lawrence's Best and Most Affordable D.J. Sound and Lighting for Any Occasion. 841-1405
Don't blow your cool! *Hoodoo Gurus* from Australia are comin' to town. Tickets at SUA and CATS $ 90.40
Jimmy and Tummy, Partners in Rhymes, you've played with the music of classic Classics to contemporary music. It's all about fun and laughter.
vark Cafe*. Don't miss it - Friday night from 9-11. Don't miss it - The Great Gift. From Metropolitan Park.
Rent a hot tub for your next party. Call Tub-to-go,
841-2691.
"****."
Bill Harris, At The Movies
7:30 & 9:30
5:30 Mat.
Friday
*$2.50
THE
BIG
Easy
R
642 Mass.
749-1912
ULTIMATE ENTERTAINMENT
Ultimate Mobile DJ System For All Occasions.
Phil at 843-3300.
FOR RENT
1 bedroom cottage. $225.00 plus utilities. Deposit required. NO PETS. Near campus & downtown.
843-3147.
2 bedroom apartment close to campus.
Reasonable, clean. 843-5231
APPLE LAPE APTS. Contemporary studio available at Apple Lane. On KU bus route. Launch facilities. Ample parking. Water and cable paid. $285.00 per month. Call 643-9404 for apples
BRAND NEW completely furnished 4 bedroom
appli available immediately. On the bus route and
in walking distance of KU. Call 749-4226 or
8 4 2 4 4 5 5 4
Cottie little room in coy little house. Prefer foreign student Japanese-speaking female or German-speaking male. $150. Utilities paid. Call 841-0714.
Furnished two bedroom apt. one block from the University with off-street parking. No pets.
Furnished 2 bdroom apt, some utilities paid, offsite parking, 1 block from Hotel. No pet.
HOUSE FOR RENT Share large 5 lb/m²/bath house CLOSE TO CAMPUS with LAUNDRY in house BORN to berm or study. Two funneling and response berms. (guy) needs 2-4 more people to share rent and bills at 14th and Kentucky. Contact Darryt at 306-985-1278 www.darryt.com 1278. N Tippea, Wichita, KS 67214.
Not satisfied with where you're living? Naimshi Hall has all one female space available for impaired individuals. You can choose a individual lease liability, "All-U-Can-Eat" meal plan, weekly meals made easy, and room service. We excel at the best of the housing options at KU! For more info, or come by Naimshi Hall, 1800 Naimshi Drive, Pittsburgh, PA 15217.
Rent 1/3 of three bedroom two-baths $10 per
2 units. No deposit. On bus route. Call Maria
656-789-4567.
SUNFLOWER LOOKER Room available as
new location 749-0871, ask for Ann, Deb, or
great location 749-0871, ask for Ann, Deb, or
Gregorian House.
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA
SUNRISE PLACE 9th & Michigan
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.
E. M. F.
ublacea a two-story house—a home, not a room!
*for effect 2* Call days. 841-5797.
1966 Fender guitar with case, Bill Lawrence blade pickup, black good, package cost, $175. Call 864-264-62.
1924 Honda Motorcycle CB350. Perfect condition. Must sell!! Call 864-641-81.
1979 400 Yamaha. Very good condition. Must sell.
$475 OBO. Call Luke at 864-4924/841-9689.
1984 Honda Nightawk S 3,000 miles 2 helmets
and walkbags. Must sell. Call 841-4963
An absolutely Awesome Array of Antiques, collectibles and noat stuff we have: hardback and 1/2 price paperback books, full line of new comic books, the latest antique jewelry, the Indian, and costume jewelry (glitter and good staff); the right vintage clothing for any occasion; fine art prints; the miniature, miniatures, flesta, and the best selection of antique furniture in the area. Quintana Flora Market, 811 New Hampshire, Open Sat. & Sun.
Close out sale! We have several odds & ends that will be offered direct to public at wholesale prices. Bun beds $4, loveseats $60, coffee tables $35, pillows $15, waterbeds $18, sofa & chairs $37 & much more. Hurry-supply is limited. Inspect at Mark & Quaint Furniture Warehouse, 6th & New York.
Equalizer w/spectrum analyzer $100, AM/FM
Equalizer w/buscover $200 Must sell
943-4403 Anyone
943-4403 Anyone
FOR SALE-ALL SPORTS TCK177! Higher offer
takes it. Call in evening. @TCK177
For Sale **Bison concert tickets.** Call 814-2276 at kemper. Very good seats.
For Sale: King-sized watered complete with
linens and linens. Must-sell best. Call
748-5299-6300
For Sale. Yakima load warrior. New Phil Wood
Call Mark 841-9991. Call Jack Nicklaus golf
Call Mark 841-9991.
FUJI MOUNTAIN BIKE Perfect condition The $390 mountaineer bike. (nagelatable), $792, ask for Lancer $1,499.
**5.99**
PASSENGER BIKES
FUJI MOUNTAIN BIKE Perfect condition The $390 mountaineer bike. (nagelatable), $792, ask for Lancer $1,499.
H. P. PROGRAMS. Five easy to use programs for the HWET Packard II C1 calculator. Clearly presented step-by-step key-in instructions with visual aids in addition to textual decimal to binary conversion, synthesis division and more. Send $2.10 (check m.o.) to: Wm. Kullmann, Dept. 1, P Box 1400, Rolla, MO
- MOTHALL GOOD USED FURNITURE *
* 1234 E. ST, 794-608. Saturday 10:3 p.m.
521 E. ST, 794-608.
Mountain bike. Specialized Hard Rock. Extra
price. Call 842-7765. Ask for Chris
Namibian Contracts for sale. Will pay $160 security deposit. Contact Frank at 748 234
Okkyo TX3 receiver, $200. 175 Bradly GT, $200.
TAX43 TX3 door carpet, $43. 10 apiece bike GT, $200.
TAX43 TX3 window, $89.
*****New Cordless Bell Phone****** Only
600, retail 1319. Call 814-9248 or 749-7207
Emergency-Loack backpack with Biology books and notes. "Test Wednesday the 23rd!" Please call 846-6417-Keep after 11 a.m. Ask for *?ate*.
PEIGEIGT 12 SPEED TOURING BIKE
CALL 841-1388, OR LEAVE MESSAGE
CALL 841-1388, OR LEAVE MESSAGE
Racing bike 1867 Biancio 59 cm, $40. Ross is naughty! Inoculated bikes in race cars. Call 843-1573.
Suzuki GS 4096, great condition. Must sell soon.
$750 or best offer. 841-7767
Turntable, CD player, amp, tuner, equalizer.
749-3025
210 Computer, 2 drives, 192K, lots of software.
Z-100er. For all $490. Please call 841-6712
Sale: sofa sleeper and 10-speed at 739 Massachusetts Miller Furniture.
months guarantee. Prices start at $14.85
Lawrence Vacuum & Sewering Center, 916 Main.
FOUND: Set of keys on railing outside Haworth Hall on Thursday night. To claim, come to 119 Staff-filch Flat.
1947 Pentac Siraf sari jacket, Air cruiser, tilt-
AMFM cassette stereo. Runs great. 845-1736.
1918 Olds Omega-good condition, A; stereo,
crise, and more. Price contact. Calligraphy 748-1427-
70 VW Beetle; excellent condition. No rust, heat
work, radio, white. LA WINCHEY. #750.
AUTO SALES
180 Chevrolet Monza; very clean, A/C/AM/FM
904-5734; great gas mileage; $100/best offer
604-5734
1972 Oldsmobile Cutlass. Runs superyellow-incandescent, exhaust. pre-exhaust. 4600 KOB. Call 841-7613, 6-p.m. weekdays and weekends. Ask for Tereme.
'9 Honda Civic; runs, needs engine and body
Call 841-7942 for 4. p.m. and 7. p.m.
Berthe XI/9. 1984. Fun sports car! 5-lip,
leather interior, power window, NEW stereo,
amplifier, tires and more. Look great! Must
see!
'9 Honda Civic; 841-4609 3015, 841-4742
>bends
1974 TB8 New motor, new paint, in Shawnee:
1-631-6647.
1985 Super Beastie convertible; nav; top, paint;
bottom; back panel; console; 36" screen; complete
restoration; $420.00 CAD | C Dave at
dave@dave.com
ORDER NEW 1988 CARS-TRUCKS-
ORDER NEW 1988 CARS-DELERT. DELLER
88344-5409
CARS SELL for $15 (average!) Also leap,
to a lower availability. Avail now: 608-600-601
S-798 for sale
LOST: Black leather jacket. Heavy sentimental value. Reward. Please call 841-6890.
5-hour internetmarketing Monday Thursday 8-9 and Saturday nights. Flexible schedule. Lennex location-carpool from Lawrence available. For interview, call Mr. Murray at 769-4920.
HELP WANTED
LOST-FOUND
$10-669 Weekly/ up mailing circulars! Rush self-addressed stamped envelope! Opportunity, 108 Wilshire Bld., Box 226, Dept. Q, Beverly Hills, CA 90211.
Nune up your import car. $35. Parts and labor insatisfaction, guaranteed. Call Aaron.
centers are accepting employment applications for waitresses, waiters, bartenders, and dishwashers able to work day and week and work with children. Apply in person at 8.126 Orad. EOE.
Babysitters needed for four-year-old in our home. One block south of Watkins Library. All schedules considered. Call 841-417-
Lost: 2 ladies rings; union restroom; September
Please call 749-311-0 or return to KU Police.
CITY OF LAWRENCE. EQUAL OPERATIONFUNTY
EMPLOYER M/F/H. SPECIAL POPULATIONS
MANAGEMENT. $7.5/hour. Part-time position in instruc-
turing and preparing recreation activities for hann-
dens, seniors, students, high school or High School Graduate and prefer some with
experience working with children. Job will be
through September 30, 1987 at: 1st Class, 2nd Floor,
C1 Club, Room 210, 6th & Massachusetts.
Apartment Leasing Agent, part-time position, of skills and leasing experience desired. Send resumes to Shafer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS, 65545.
Cook wanted for fraternity. Experience necessary. For more information, call 841-6728.
Country estate owner needs weekend help. Housecleaning or outside maintenance work. $3.75hr starting pay. Call 841-6829days or evenings and evening names and phone number.
FREE- Trip to Daytona plus commission money. Go to Florida' *Ga* for free, take advantage of promoting the 1 Spring Break trip. If interested, call designers of Travel. 1-843-459-6704
GOVENMENT JOBS. $16,904-459,290/yr. New Call 800-687-6000 or visit www.govenment.org for current information.
INFORMATION HOST: KANU. The University of Kansas, seen experienced broadcast presenters in the early days of the internet and information magazine-produce interview segments and spot and extended reports. One of the most challenging experience is required. Applicant must possess a pleasant speaking voice and the ability to communicate effectively with the receiver. Previous public radio experience is preferred, though not required. Salary competitive. Apply online at www.kanu.edu.
Need extra money? Part-time work next week (2023/06/14) in the International resort in the Karasan region of Vietnam, with a salary of €58 per month.
HIRRING! Government jobs-your area
$15,000-$68,000. Call (922) 838-8885. Ext. 4055.
MORNING EDITION HOST: KANI! THE ANXIETY
municate ideas in a credible but informal manner, and not through phone calls, though not required. Salary competitive. Send letter, audition tape or air check, resume for job offered. Send resume to News Director, KAUN Radio, Broadcasting Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 6654-2672. Apply online. Application deadline is October 7th, 1878. EOAA
Part-time days. M- 8 f. a.m. to noon. Also each Wednesday afternoon 1 p.m.-5 p.m. at the local financial institution. Some listing. Dependability and ability to perform in a pressure atmosphere. m ault. Call (212) 467-3900.
morning 6 a.m. noon $4/hr after trained. 2
tuesdays 6 a.m. noon $10/hr after trained.
immediate 8 a.m. $4-25/hr after trained.
apply between 10 a.m. and weekday mornings.
Part-time housecleaners want 8-16 hours.
You enjoy cleaning and are meticulous. Buck-
off! You may apply for any of these.
Most be available over breaks. Call 842-6284.
PART-TIME Help apply at Munchers Bakery
Prefer graduate students. One sales/cleaning
mornings 6 a.m./noon 14-hour after trained.
bakers' helper 11 p.m.-4 a.m. or 4 a.m. to ap-
line.
*Part-time time sales clerk for gift shop. Non-amacker. Hours vary. Send salary request to hours will vary. Send salary $35.00 /hr. Apply in person at Arbuthous Hallmark, 23rd and Iowa. Special Project - the week of September 28th. Email resume to arbuthus@miller.com.
60, week 19, special packaging project with a local manufacturer. We have 20 openings on the a.m. to 4 a.m, 4 p.m. to 12 a.m, and 12 a.m to 3 a.m. shifts. Must be able to work the full shift and Contact Manpower Contemporary Services Employer. Wmph 718-740-8900. Equal Opportunity Employer.
Wanted: Male personal care attendant for 27-year old male quadruplegar. 2 1 3 mornings a week. Will train the right person. For interview, call 842-7949.
Volunteers needed. Volunteers in court is look for volunteers interested in working with children who are court-involved. Call Ann at 841-7900, ext. 363, afternoons.
Student Programmer (Using Dbase IIus, HpTeer, "Gender" and "Documentor") - must love software and involve maintenance of existing programs, new software packages and hardware enclosures, schedule. Make application: Room 205. Physical Plant Building (Facilities Operations) - must be proficient in scheduling
Want your own business? Now is the time to start earning as an Avon representative. Call Julie at 843-0934 evenings.
SKI KEYSTONE for Thanksgiving, November 29-25. Low package includes, air/hotel, ski rental/transfers/fit tickets. Call 843-5698 Package available without air.
Work Stady-Clerical in medical office.
Must be available some afternoons. Accurate.
Secretary/Receptionist application.
1121 W. 51th, Suite 204. References required.
CONFIDENTIAL LOANS made without credit check or prior credit. For information, call 843-4344.
ROLL OUT
THE BARREL
MISCELLANEOUS
Refill your "HAWK" glass only
We have a new store that you can get cash on almost anything of value. Also, good buys on cameras, stets, etequipment (auto & camera), lighting equipment. Jawk! Jawk! Pawn & Jewelry, 100 W. St., New York, NY 10019.
Girlfriend Isa R. - Happy 21st Birthday. Love,
M.T,D>
Monday thru Thursday
Looking for two chicks adventurous enough to answer this ad. If you can peel a banana without using your hands and grease down that twister glitter—a give-buzz. RG-941-8167.
$1.00
It Could Only Happen At...
Happy Birthday, Danny! You will always be my tiger! I love you very much! Forever and always! Dabble
PERSONAL
Crippled SIG Ep-Interested in your injury and
leave attentive. Leave not at Maillist Library
desk. PRINT
Mike the Pike-case to golf on Friday. It'll be just me and you.
J-Ayahawk-Hey woman! Really enjoyed dancing with you! Let's let it again soon! U R Great-Kilroy
THE HAWK·1340 Ohio
Mbp McI- P love you a humour! Happy... two year! Love, love your sweetie, Kendra. I love you more than words can say. You're my best friend in me. Thanks for being my best friend. KW
LLM, the last two years have been the best in my life "Please Don't Let Him Steal Your Heart Away" (Phil Collins), Love Always, CJP
Happy 22nd, Lee. We love you very much!
Luke data, and Brendan!
TESS-that mysterious bird with big brown, eyebrows? Nothing too sentimental, just thanks for being you. Happy Nineteenth. Kate. Welcome to the church. Yea, yeah! yearl! remember: Grandma at 6:30 a.m., the double-decker bus, cruising in the Rolls, Key West. "it fell like it, but I don't think I'd" Love
dog Dog, Happy birthday, you geek. You make me so happy. I’m yours forever but keep your big toe away from me. I love you! Robble. Robble. Buddle.
To the gorgeous blonde who caught my eye while walking by with her parents at the game Saturday. Would like to meet you. C. 843-7739.
Are you looking for a wild, nighty starm of
one to two or two for two? call DANNY R.,
843-192-05N. NOIW!
Preston C (Sigma Snau). We engage a smile and smile at you. If you're on a harder, you'll notice someone's interested in you.
Don't steal 'em from Uncle Ed!
Vintage Sunglasses are Classical
Bike Workshops - Our mechanic will teach you
how to ride a bike, maintain it, and maintain beakers
up your road bike. Costs $15 each.
Screens $15 each. Saturday, 10 a.m., begins
$19 each. Sunflower, 84 Massachusetts,
84-5000.
Vintage Sunglasses are Choice! Assorted color frames and lenses.
BUS.PERSONAL
V V
The Etc.
Shop
Find your
style at
732
Massachusetts
843-0611
HEADACHE, BACKACHEN, ARM PAIN, LEG PAIN Student and most insurance accepted. For complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Mark Johnson 843-9379.
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-7821. Confident help/help pregnancy
GREENS
PARTY SUPPLY
808 W. 23rd
Sept 23-Sept 29
Michelob 6 pk. $2.99
Coors Light 6 pk. $2.69
Miller Lite 12 pk. $5.29
Old Milwaukee Light 24 pk. $7.39
Old Milwaukee 24 pk. $7.39
Busch 12 pk. $3.98
Old Style 12 pk. $3.69
Wiedemann 12 pk. $3.19
SK FREE AT VAIL/BEAVER CREEK!! 4 days
SK free at Vail/beaver creek. add extra nights. just $150
and free skiing. Add extra nights. just $150
Ski: Winter Park, *Park 119*. Thanksgiving trip leaves
Tuesday night on sleeper bus. Stay in Snow
Bask condominiums 2 nights. Also, 2 day ski,
lift and lift tickets. For information, call
843-415-8
LAWRENCE'S
FINEST
SELECTION OF
RECORDED MUSIC
HOURS:
Mon-Sat 10-8
Sun 11-6
DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
844 MASSACHUSETTS
913-749
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
HARPER
75% OFF
SALE AFRICAN
ADORNED
for unusual jewelry
5 E. 7th 842-1376
Capture that golden tan with a boudoir portrait from Photos Plus. Call Mike or Gracie at 749-3768 evenings or weekends.
PENNYLANE
GROSSETS • COMPUTER DISKS • RECORDS • VIDEOs
COMPUTER CONSULTING Tutoring and programming for elementary computer science students. Supervise engineering, projects and other works. Reasonable prices for individuals and groups.
**STUDENTS!** Order your school 'S' shorts to
their room. **S** shorts are available at:
outside warehouse, 10:30-29, 23:42-34,
26:58-38.
Halloween is Coming!
Over 150 items to rent
other unique items to buy
including punk wigs and feather masks.
Sunflower Mk. Blake Workshop-Learn how to
create an email marketing campaign, 8 p.m. begins September 17, $89
or $149, 6 p.m. begins September 17, $89
804 West 24th Street
Lawrence, XS 65048 841-6320
For all your Printing,
Typesetting, &
Coving Needs!
Resumes - Cover Letters - Thesis -
Stored on a disk for fast/easy
"CRIMSON SUN PHOTO" is looking for young women interested in developing a modeling port-io. 15% over cost. Call 841-8690
Do you need a tutor in math? Then call 843-9554
after 6 p.m.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
Graystone Athletic Club
2500 W. 6th Street 841-7230
Special Student Membership $150 per semester
Racquetball, Tanning
Exercise Equipment
Kingston Printing
Mastercard & Visa Accepted!
FREE PREGNANCY COUNSELING for the individual &/or couple as well as for their families. Additional counseling services available on a monthly basis. Catholic Service, 320 Maine, 814-0377. Catholic Service, 320 Maine, 814-0377.
North
219th Street
Kinger's
Land Near
Fond
New York
New York State
240th Street
at airline counter prices no extra service charge
Airline Tickets
Leaving Town?
Make your travel arrangements on campus
See Maupintour travel Service for:
complete travel arrangements
* Eurail and Japan Rail Passes
* Car rental—Hotel confirmations
* Travel breaks holidays
* Travel insurance
ON CAMPUS LOCATION in the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
GRAF/X: Scientific and statistical illustration, maps, drawings, slides, editing aid, also watercolor/acrylic. Phone 841-2561.
Maupintour travel service
749-0700
JAM FAVORS for all your party favor needs.
Hats, tails, shirts, glasses. If you have a unique favor idea, call us and we'll find it for you. 843-8700.
KIMS ALTERATIONS - QUICK SERVICE Suits
KINS. Jeans. Zippers. All types of alterations.
2020 F West 25th St N. 842-3123 (Birdon Food A 42).
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Extrachrome processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W design. Art & Design Build Room 26. 844-4767
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $8/hr, 843-9032
(p.m.)
MUSIC " " MUSIC " " MUSIC " " MUSIC
Red House Audio-Mobile Party Music, E-Back
P.A. and Lights, Maximum Audio Wizard.
Call Record 749-1275.
TYPING
Sewreasure Alliades' dresses can be made in town. You choose your favorite designs or styles from the latest fashion magazines, I will make them for you. Call 911-844-8440
vices. Overland Park...913-491-6878
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-236.
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing. Judy. 842-7945 or Lisa. 841-1915.
R. NOW. PAPERS-THESSES-RESUMES.
WRITING LIFEILINE 841-3460.
2 Smart Word Processing. Spelling Corrected.
Very Reasonable. Call Foster 749-2740.
A valid professional tone! Term paragraphs.
24 hour typing service. Professional word storage on letter quality printer. 843-7643
AAB absolutely Fast Typing In Back) Dependable,
Responsible Rates, Late Night Typing Available.
Kathy 841-2900 days; 749-5284 eve.
A-1 reliable professional typing: Term papers, Theses, Resumes, etc. Reasonable IBM Electronic Towerwriter 849.129.6
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS,
MOMMY'S TYING is back from Australia !!
842 3379 at 9 pm, please.
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term papers, theses, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter
printing, spelling corrected. 842-7247.
KU CRESEATY Typing and word processing.
Affordable, fast, accurate. Spelling corrected,
letter quality. Pickup on campus. Monica
841-8266. Evenings weekends.
For professional typing/word processing, call Myra 841-4500. Fall special $1.20/page, double-space, pica.
PROFESSIONAL TYPING 842-4988 before 10 p.m.
Quality Typing includes excellent spelling, punctuation, grammar, editing. Failable fast-reliable services.
Quality typing or word processing for theses, dissertations, resumes, term papers, applications. Professional editing, composition available. Have M.S. Degree.
theWORDOCTORS. Resumes, papers, theses, dissertations, commercial. 843-3147.
BOSTON TICKETS NEEDED (2) Any row. Will pay handsome! Call Brett-843-1207.
WRIGHT'S TYPING SERVICE" Term papers,
themes, miscellaneous, IBM Selectric. Spelling
notes.
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing, manuscripts, resumes, theses, letter quality printing, etc. 843-5062
WANTED
Female roommate wanted. $140/month plus 1/3 utilities. Nice apartment, own room, on bus route. 749-4379.
Female roommate wanted. $155 per month plus 1/3 utilities. No deposit needed. Trailridge, 841-9288.
Female upperclassman, desires to share 2 bikes with male students. Works on electricity and phone. Played on KU bus routes.
Male or female grad student, or mature
undergrad to share a new 2 br apartment 2 blocks
from the Union. $180 plus 1/2 utilities. Call
841-4705.
Roommate needed for townhouse at 9th and Michigan. Private room $175 and 1/3 utility room $200.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Roommate wanted for 2 bedroom apartment Furnished but bedroom. Rent negotiable and 1/2 utilities. Call after 11 p.m. 749-1887
- Policy
Classified Information Mail-In Form
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
Doll Doll Count as 3 words
In BILL 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.
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
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| 16.20 | 3.35 | 5.00 | 7.05 | 11.30 | 16.55 | 20.75 |
| 12.25 | 3.90 | 5.80 | 8.10 | 12.60 | 18.10 | 22.60 |
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| 31.35 | 4.95 | 7.35 | 10.20 | 15.25 | 21.25 | 26.25 |
001 announcements 300 for sale 500 help unanticipated 800 services offer.
002 entertainment 310 auto sales 100 personal 800 logging
003 technology 400 fundraising 100 support
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ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Date ad begins ___ Make checks payable to:
Total days in paper ___ University Daily Kansan
Amount paid ___ 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Censusification ___ Lawrence, KS 66045
14
Thursday, September 24, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Sports
Enthusiasm lagging on KU baseball team
By DARRIN STINEMAN Staff writer
Staff writer
Although the Kansas baseball team's enthusiasm for the fall season was sky-high at the beginning of practice, coach Dave Bingham said the Jayhawks were measurably closer and around going into their fourth game.
"Actually, I felt like we've gone backwards." Bingham said. "After we first started, I thought we had a great deal of enthusiasm and everyone was hungry to learn. I think we've just lost the edge a little bit. The newness is gone."
Bingham said he wouid much rather have the team hit a full now in the dress-rehearsal fall season than the real show begins in the spring.
spring.
"I'd like to think that fall ball is a
good time for us to go through some problems; to have some backseats," he said. "I think the challenge for our students is to find them a sense of enthusiasm we started with."
This week has been a better practice week for the Jayhawks, Bingham said, as they prepare for a home game against a community College at 3:30 p.m. today.
Although he described Cloud County as a "middle-range" junior college baseball power, Bingham said he wasn't taking anyone lightly.
Kansas will again be playing a 15-inning scrimmage-like game to allow the teams to use three starting pitchers. The system is designed so that a pitcher can be used as a starter at the beginning of each five-inning segment, and relief pitchers can be used at the end of each segment.
Bingham to be assistant coach on U.S. International Cup team
By DARRIN STINEMAN Staff writer
Kansas baseball coach Dave Bingham has been selected as an assistant coach for the United States International Cup team that will play in a two-week tournament in Havana, Cuba, next month.
As a former assistant on the 1984 U.S. silver medalist Olympic team and the coach of the bronze medal-winning U.S. team at the world championships in Cuba in 1984, Bingham will bring international coaching experience to the International Cup team.
"I think that it's a great honor to be involved with the U.S. team," Bingham said. "I think experience will be my biggest contribution because I've been on five other U.S.A. teams. It's not like running your own college program — international baseball is completely different from college
baseball "
The 20-member team, which will include Oklahoma State's Robin Ventura, will be headed by Stanford coach Mark Marquess. Ventura was college baseball's player-of-the-year last season.
Bingham is likely to be a coach on the 1988 Olympic team as well. He said the United States Baseball Federation decided last December that baseball coaches would be the Olympic team coaches, but nothing is official vet.
Marquess, who has twice coached with Bingham in international competition, said there was a "strong likelihood" that the International Cup coaches had needed be the Olympic winner and that a decision was expected in November.
"I feel very lucky to have him as a part of this team," Marquess said. "He's a very talented coach."
for your home.
fields
712 MASS • 842-7187
for your home.
fields
712 MASS • 842-7187
JOIN THE JAYHAWK
FIGHT FOR LIFE
RED CROSS
THE BLOOD DRIVE
Blood is life...
Pass it on!
SIGN UP TO BE A DONOR!
Sept. 29, 30 and Oct. 1
9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. each day at Wescoe, Summerfield, and the Union.
Blood Drive Oct. 6, 7, 8.
Sponsored by Panhellenic Assoc. & Interfraternity Council.
The Second City
Touring Company
Thursday, Oct. 1
7:30 p.m.
at
Woodruff Auditorium
(Kansas Union)
Sponsored by SUA Fine Arts
tickets sold at SUA Box Office
SUA
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
EAGLE
RED CROSS
BLOOD DRIVE
Blood is life...
Pass it on!
The Second City
Touring Company
COLLEGE ROCKS
SUA STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
Congratulations New Initiates of Sigma Delta Tau
love,
Your Sisters!
Baby Bear
Avalon Apartments
offers you:
- One or two bedroom apartments.
- Gas and water paid.
- Extra storage space available.
- Applianced kitchen.
- Gas and water paid.
- Off-street parking.
- Laundry facilities.
- Close to KU and Hillcrest Shopping Center.
- Rental Furniture available from Thompson-Crawley.
9th & Avalon Rd. 841-5797
Avalon Apts. Located: 4 blocks east of Iowa on 9th to Avalon Rd.
Leasing Office located 111 W. 8th, #101.
from Thompson-Crawley.
- On KU bus route.
- On KU bus route.
DON'T MISS Mose Allison SATURDAY SEPT. 26th
PMS
Prospective Management
of property management
services
119.128.7500
www.prospectmanagement.com
at
The Jazzhaus
926/2 Mass.
"Alison comes to us after, literally, thirty years of digging and his reputation is international, his influences far reaching." *Musicians News* "So cool, so decisively hip, uncomplicated and spaced away... Mose was my man. I felt him to be the epitome of restrained joy. He was a man who loved the world, who right so much that I felt it was the voice of the gentle giant. The man, the musician, with the strength to change the world, but the humility and the character to stand alone, like his own life and await his natural time." *Peter Townshend: The Who* "While he sings slainly," *Musicians News* "Alison has always been a man who knows where you are." *New York Times*
ALSO:
THURS. SEPT. 24- Homestead Grays
FRI. SEPT. 25- Lonnie Ray's All Stars
27 YEARS OF SOUND EXPERIENCE
27 YEARS OF SOUND EXPERIENCE
27 YEARS OF SOUND EXPERIENCE
CUSTOMER APPRECIATION SALE
Boston Acoustics
THE NATIONAL SALES MANAGER AND KIEF'S GOT TOGETHER FOR A VERY SPECIAL BOSTON ACOUSTICS OFFER FOR A LIMITED TIME!
Good thru Fri. 9/25
Boston Acoustics
A60 Series II
$99 each
The Boston Acoustics line delivers exceptional performance at surprisingly low prices. Extraordinary bargains considering today’s stereo prices!
KIEF’S DISCOUNT RECORDS
AUDIO/VIDEO
the GRAMOPHONE shop
AUDIO BOOK
Trumpet
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS AUDIO/VIDEO the GRAMOPHONE shop
25th & IOWA
LAWRENCE, KS
(913) 842-1811
Fry day
Details page 6
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details page 6
Friday September 25,1987 Vol.98,No.25
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
KU's enrollment increases at half last year's rate
By MICHAEL HORAK
Staff writer
The number of students attending the University of Kansas has increased for the fourth straight year, but the rate at which new students are entering the University has slowed, enrollment figures released yesterday indicate.
Those figures differ sharply from figures released a year ago that showed KU had 1.048 new students on all campuses, a 4.2 percent growth.
Total enrollment this fall at KU was 28,720, an increase of 1.6 percent. Overall, the University has 461 more students.
Administrators said they were passed KU was experiencing slower growth.
Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, said. "We can handle this kind of enrollment increase without compromising educational quality.
"We are still straining at the seams from previous years of growth, but we are getting back into a better level."
6.
Sciences in Kansas City, Kan. decreased by 23. The student count at the college is 2,414.
Enrollment at KU's Lawrence campus was 24,519, up 574 students from last year, an increase of 2.4 percent.
The 20th-day enrollment figures released yesterday are the official measure. UU's enrollment for the purpose of the 20th day of classes was Monday.
KU's off-campus enrollment in programs at the Regents Center in Overland Park, the Capitol Complex in Topeka and the University of Kansas School of Medicine — Wichita was down 90 students. A total of 1,787 students were enrolled off-campus sites.
We can handle this kind of enrollment increase without compromising educational quality. We are still straining at the seams from previous years of growth, but we are getting back into a better level.' - ludith Ramal
executive vice chancellor
Although growth at KU has reduced by almost half since last year, the increase in the number of students at KU was still greater than any of the seven Regents schools or schools in the Big Eight.
Robert Lineberry, dean of liberal arts and sciences, said he expected growth in his department but that it
was near the saturation point.
This fall, Lineberry's school grew by 10 percent increase from a year ago.
Lineberry said, "We are still busting at the seams, particularly in the foreign languages, which are awfully crowded.
Judith Ramaley
"Sure, we can hire more teaching staff, but we can't make Wescoe Hall any bigger. We're typically running up to room capacity in some cases. And sometimes we're even running beyond it."
Enrollment at the College of Health
More students walk up the Hill
Of the 14 professional schools at the Lawrence campus, seven experienced, five experienced growth and two had only marginal student enrollment.
this fall's 20th day enrollment figures show 461 more students enrolled on all campuses than last fall - a 1.6% increase.
The breakdown
Lawrence campus enrollment - 24,519.
Med Center enrollment - 2,414.
Off-campus enrollment - 1,787.
Enrollment in the Big 8
Fall main campus enrollment figures show most Big 8 schools increasing over last fall but three decreasing.
KU Increase of 574, or 2.4%.
KSU Increase of 449, or 2.6%.
MU* Increase of 268, or 1.2%.
ISU Decrease of 724, or 2.7%.
OU Increase of 397, or 1.9%.
OSU Decrease of 606, or 2.9%.
CU Increase of 379, or 1.7%.
UN-L* Decrease of 433, or 1.8%
1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987
*preliminary figures
Allied health, business, engineering, fine arts, journalism, law and social welfare decreased in enrollment. Architecture and urban design, education, pharmacy and the graduate school had increases.
The schools of education and architecture and urban design were behind liberal arts and sciences in biggest increases.
Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said KU's growth will be difficult to manage with current budget conditions.
The School of Business and the School of Engineering suffered the largest decreases, both having 66 fewer students than last year.
The growth KU has experienced in enrollment over previous years has not been financed by the state, Brinknan said.
"To grow beyond this would be a problem," he said.
Brinkman attributed the smaller enrollment growth, in part, to policies the University started last spring.
Setting earlier deadlines for admissions applications made enrollment more manageable and cut down the number of students trying to get into
KU at the last minute, he said.
Ward Brian Zimmerman, KU budget director, said the University would ask the state for adjustments in its budget to accommodate the 484 additional students on the Lawrence campus.
Zimmerman said the University would send its 20th-day figures to the state so state officials could calculate fees the additional students paid. After that, the University could ask the state for additional money.
approve any budget adjustment
Zimmerman said KU would probably
receive its adjustment next spring.
"Last year we did not know about our adjustment until April. In fact, it even told us if we were going to get it, he said. 'I'm really confident about it.'
The Legislature would have to
Keith Nitcher, KU director of business affairs, said it was too early to try to calculate how much KU could be reimbursed.
Alliance seeking support
Kansan reporter Jennifer Rowland contributed information to this story.
Staff writer
By VIRGINIA McGRATH
The New Alliance Party, which terms itself a black-led, multiracial, pro-gay national political party, is the leader in the 1988 presidential election.
The party's vice presidential candidate and a campaign aide are in Lawrence gathering petition signatures to get the party on the ballot.
The party's presidential candidate,
Lenora Fulani, an activist from New York, will run under the motto "Two Roads Are Better Than One.
Mike Pellettiere
The motto refers to the party's plan to support the Rev. Jesse Jackson during the Democratic Party nomination process. They assume Jackson won't receive the nomination, but it would be porters to vote for the New Alliance Party as a third party in the general election, campaign officials sav.
The party was founded in New York in 1979. It became a national organization in 1984, and launched a campaign to get a presidential candidate on the ballot. The party failed to get on the national ballot that year because it collected enough signatures in only 33 states.
Pellettiere and Phil Pinheiro, the campaign's public relations director, will begin a petition drive today or Monday in Kansas to get the party on the ballot in this state. They plan to collect most of the signatures in Lawrence, Topeka and Kansas City, Kan.
Mike Pelletière, vice-presidential candidate for the party and regional coordinator for the campaign, said yesterday that to be placed on the ballot would require a difficult process that is unfair to parties seeking third-party status.
They need 2,500 signatures of registered voters. But the state requires that they turn in 5,000 signatures, some of the signatures are not valid.
In each state, they must get signatures amounting to 2 percent of the
See ELECT, p. 6, col. 1
EDISON
0 LANE METAL
21
EDISON
GOLDDRUM SS
WALZE
ITALIAN BINDLE OF
ARTISTIC VARIANCE
19678
ITALIAN WOOD
ITALIAN BINDLE OF
ARTISTIC VARIANCE
539
PIONEER OF NACARA
India, New Zealand
Presented at the International
Exhibition of Artists in
New York, 1967
558
PIONEER OF NACARA
India, New Zealand
Presented at the International
Exhibition of Artists in
New York, 1967
Lisa Jones/KANSAS
Cylinder recordings, stored in special cardboard tubes, are one form of recorded music found in the Archives of Recorded Sound in Murphy Hall.
Sounds of the past have a home at KU
By MICHAEL MERSCHEL
Staff writer
This week, she said, she has been preparing to accept 20,000 opera and vocal recordings. That donation, from an Oregon collector whose wife is a KU graduate, will bring the total number of recordings in the archives to more than 90,000.
The wall-to-wall, floor-to-ceiling shelves of records make the rooms below the Gorton Music Library in New York a must-visit library room — at first glance.
But step in a little farther, and the sight of wind-up phonographs, some with 3-foot horns for speakers, and the atmosphere becomes less academic and more like a grandparent's attic.
Johnson said she had run the archives since 1982, when she was given permission to convert two junk rooms below the music into a sound archives, starting with about 45,000 donated recordings.
Yet, the Archives of Recorded Sound are not just a storage space for old records and players. Ellen Johnson, librarian in charge of the archives, said the collection of mostly opera, jazz and concert band recordings is the largest of its kind in the Midwest.
Johnson also is putting the finishing touches on her part of a project she has worked on with researchers from Yale, Stanford.
the Library of Congress and others from around the world.
The researchers are trying establish standards for cataloging and preserving recordings. Johnson's task has been to determine what kind of recordings other team members said he it wasn't easy because some of them are Yale, don't know themselves how many recordings they have.
The type of recordings vary as much as their subjects. In addition to standard-sized records, the library has oversized discs, quarrelsome cassettes, cylinders recordings and tape boxes, 8-track and reel-to-reel tapes.
As well as opera, jazz, and concert band recordings, Johnson said the KU sound archives includes poetry, drama and theater recordings and speeches by Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft and other historical figures.
Material in the archives that has been transferred to reel-to-reel tape can be checked out by students.
For each specialized type of record, the library has a special phonograph, ranging from the state-of-the-art electronic turntable used for most recordings to an acoustic, wind-up model for albums that play from the inside of the disc to the outer edge.
James Seaver, professor of history, donated more than 25.000
1987
Robert Eberwein, assistant archivist, files some records onto the shelves of the Gorton Music Library.
recordings to help start the archives.
Seaver, host of the KANU radio program, "Opera is My Hobby," since 1952, said the rare recordings in the archives, such as performances conducted by the composers of important works at the turn of the century offered students opportunities for new generations did not have.
KU has largest increase in Big 8
By JENNIFER ROWLAND Staff writer
The University of Kansas is the fastest-growing school in the Big Eight, enrollment figures released yesterday indicate.
Enrollment at KU's Lawrence campus increased by 574 this fall. Kansas State University had the highest enrollment in all of Eight, increasing by 449 students.
The University of Oklahoma in Norman and the University of Colorado in Boulder also reported enrollment increases. Oklahoma State University in Stillwater and Iowa State University in Ames lost students. Enrollment figures for the University of Missouri-Columbia and the University of Nebraska Lincoln will remain unofficial until mid-October. Preliminary figures indicate a student loss for UNL and an increase at MU.
Iowa State had the greatest enrollment decrease, 724 students. Officials at ISU attributed the decrease in applications from high school graduates
K-State's 449-student increase is the school's largest gain in three years. Officials attribute the increase to concentrated recruitment efforts.
The University of Oklahoma reported a 1.9 percent increase and the largest freshman class in the institution's history, 397 more than last year, OU Registrar Milford Messer said.
Messer said Oklahoma's failing economy had strained the university's budget, which meant the enrollment increase was accompanied by fewer faculty and crowded classrooms.
The University of Colorado hit an all-time high in enrollment this fall, up 379 from last fall. Richard Harpel, director of planning, said the increase reflected a jump in out of state student enrollment.
Harpel said the 1.7 percent increase meant housing shortages at Colorado, which could make it necessitate add residence halls to the campus.
The University of Missouri's first day count for this fall was 21,386, but officials estimate 22,800 will be the next week. Tim Sullivan, assistant registrar
Oklahoma State University's enrollment decreased 2.9 percent from last fall, one of the largest reported declines in the Big Eight. Nestor Gonzales, public information officer at Oklahoma State, said he wasn't sure why enrollment decreased by 606 students, but that it might be because of a faltering state economy.
Unofficial sixth-day enrollment figures from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln reflected a 433-student
See GROWTH, p. 6, col. 1
---
2
Friday, September 25, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Investigation causes ministers of black homeland to step down
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Six Cabinet ministers in the black homeland of Transkei resigned yesterday because of an investigation implicated the prime minister; Transkei officials said.
For several hours, South Africa's state radio reported that the military had seized control of the district and occupied domestel homeland and placed at least
Biden savs he has no complaints or ill will
eight Cabinet ministers under house arrest. The South African Broadcasting Corp. later revised and said no coup had occurred.
Matanzima was accused last week of accepting a $500,000 bribe.
The SABC said Prime Minister George Matanzima was outside the homeland yesterday receiving an important event in the city of Port Elizabeth.
DES MOINES, Iowa — Sen
Joseph Biden, D-Del., said he had
no complaints or ill will yesterday
as he began shutting down his
Democratic presidential campaign.
it."
Biden withdrew from the race Wednesday following disclosures that he had plagtarized parts of his suit, and represented his academic record.
"I'm a big boy," Biden said. "Every other time in my life when I've faced something where I've lost, I have learned a lesson from
Biden yesterday dismissed suggestions that a rival candidate leaked the disclosures.
New tax forms must be filed before Oct.1
WASHINGTON — Less than a week before the deadline, millions of U.S. workers still have to file a new Form W-4 to adjust their tax withholding to conform with the overhaul federal tax code.
Under the law, enacted a year ago, workers must file a new W-4 with their employers before Oct. 1.
Those who fail to comply could find their take-home pay sharply reduced.
The Internal Revenue Service,
updating a survey completed by the Roper polling organization in late July, estimated that about 80 percent of workers have filed withholding forms this year.
Public library moves to shelfless building
CLOET. Minn. — Moving day for the Clouet Public Library went like clockwork except for one detail: There were no shelves.
Shelves for the new library were
supposed to arrive last week, but librarian Mary Lukarika was told the delivery might be delayed. By the end of the war it was too late to postpone the move.
From staff and wire reports.
Nuclear protests continue
The Associated Press
Culinary workers picket weapons test at government site
MERCURY, Nev. — A nuclear weapons test rocked the desert and shook buildings 105 miles away in Las Vegas as peace protesters joined striking workers who had vowed to shut down the nation's testing program.
Energy Department officials said yesterday's test was successful because the radiation produced from the test was contained in the ground.
The test, code-named Lockney, was detonated without incident, said Energy Department spokesman Barbara Yoerg.
The test was announced as having an explosive force of around 150,000 tons of TNT, nearly 12 times the force of the bomb dropped on Hiroshima.
Some 50 union pickets and a handful of anti-nuclear protesters who
gathered on a road near the site's main gate site were unable to feel the blast. 46 air miles away. An antique bomb was also blasted the blast on a citizens' band radio.
The blast registered 5.6 on the Richter scale at the National Earthquake Information Center in Golden, Montana, and at 13 test, Tabaka, registered 5.7.
Lockney the 12th announced shot at the test site this year. Not all tests are announced for security reasons.
The blast caused only a shudder at the test site control point, 281/2 miles from ground zero. Yeerg said. It was felt more distinctly in Las Vegas, where managers of high-rise buildings had been warned not to have workers in precarious positions at the time of detonation.
ing," said Wendy Fisher, an employee of a law firm in the Valley Bank Building, one of the city's taller structures.
Officials in the control tower at McCarran International Airport also reported feeling motion from the blast. A resident of the high-rise Regency Towers apartments reported chandeliers swaying.
Members of the Culinary Union, Nevada's largest labor organization, had vowed to shut down the secret government site when the worm infected. 15. The 167 culinary workers provide food services at the site.
"It felt like the building was mov-
Also on strike are 121 bus drivers who transport about 3,000 workers to the site daily from Las Vegas. The drivers, who went on strike Aug. 15, have since been replaced.
Ship explodes in Persian Gulf
The Associated Press
MANAAN, Bahrain — Shipping experts said yesterday that a small research vessel exploded and sank in the northern Persian Gulf, supporting the U.S. Navy's contention that Iran has mined the busy waterways.
U. S. and Kuwaiti officials meanwhile denied reports that one, and possibly two, U.S.-escorted convoys were steaming through the gulf.
Also yesterday, Iraq's official news agency issued Iraqi warplanes flew 96 combat missions into Iran during the day and that Iran had shelled the port city of Basra, killing 12 civilians.
Iran's official news agency denied the report.
The two, who last week announced in Washington an agreement in principle on a treaty to eliminate shorter and medium-range nuclear missiles, did not comment to reporters as they met at the meeting for the meeting at the U.S. mission.
Secretary of State George P. Shultz and Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze yesterday turned their attention from arms control to trying to end the Iran-Iraq war.
might be room for negotiation in the Persian Gulf war.
British Foreign Secretary Sir Geoffrey Howe said yesterday there
Each side blames the other for starting the conflict. Iran said it began with an Iraqi invasion in September 1980. Iraq said Iran started the war weeks earlier with cross-border artillery attacks.
According to U.N. Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar, who went to Iran and Iraq on a peace mission earlier this month, Iran is willing to observe an undeclared truce while the panel investigates the cause of the war.
Congress works to invoke act in Gulf War
WASHINGTON - President Reagan yesterday rebuffed congressional calls to limit U.S. forces in the Persian Gulf, defended the attack on an Iranian mine-laying vessel and said he considered the incident closed.
The Associated Press
The president sent a report on Monday's ship attack to Capitol Hill as lawmakers negotiated behind the scenes on legislation dealing with U.S. policy in the vital region and the War Powers Act.
"The actions taken by U.S. forces were conducted in the exercise of our right of self-defense." . . Reagan a letter to the House and Senate.
Critics are fearful that the president's policy of placing Kuwaiti oil tankers under the U.S. flag and escorting them with Navy warships will draw the United States into the Iran-Iraq war.
Reagan's report was the formal response to congressional calls for implementation of the War Powers Act. All week, the White House has argued that efforts to curb the U.S. role in the gulf were unwarranted and an infringement on the president's authority.
Reagan termed the latest incident as "limited defensive actions" taken in accordance with international law in his position of command-inclief.
The University Daily Kansan Appreciates Your Business!!
Tandon wins state contract
See PCs on campus, September 10
Lawrence, KS - Success in the OEM (Original Equipment Manufacturer) market has prompted Tandon Corporation to enter the microcomputer market. Available at Computer Outlet (804) 615-3250 or via the Tandon line has increased increasingly popular on campus.
Since the late seventies, Tandon Corporation has been known as the leader in the microcomputer disk drive market. To maintain their position as a market leader, they have redirected their market focus to meet new requirements of computer manufacturers and endusers, including the introduction of an IBM-compatible computer.
Tandon went to the top to ensure the success of their microcomputer launch. Four IBM veterans, who were closely involved in the development and manufacturing of the IBM Personal Computer, were hired to manage the engineering and marketing divisions. This dedication to a quality product has allowed Tandon to make significant inroads into the PC marketplace.
In March, the State of Kansas signed a contract with Tandon Corporation to purchase PC/AT-compatible machines. The PCA is functionally equivalent to the IBM PC/AT at almost half the price.
With an 80286 microprocessor, an optional 80287 co-processor, and keyboard selectable clock speeds of 6 and 8 MHz, it offers comparable performance. The PCA was rated "operatively compatible with IBM PC/AT" by Future Computing, which is the highest compatibility rating given. The University of Kansas has
The Tandion PCA comes with 1 MB of RAM and a wide selection of hard disks for about half the price of a comparable IBM.
found that a computer with these features and benefits is definitely a good buy, especially at state contract prices.
Tandon also has a PC/NT model which is ideal for word-processing and data entry. Both Tandons are a good choice for anyone who needs the security of a brand name and nearby dealer ser.wareworkmanship in an affordable price', says Mark Mushby, Computer Oulet Sales Representative, "Overall, it is a good value."
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, September 25, 1987
Campus/Area
3
Local Briefs
Lobbying post with University to be filled soon
The University expects to hire a new government affairs specialist within the next few days, Vickie Kline, general counsel, said yesterday.
KU created the position this year. It involves lobbying the Legislature, among other duties.
Thomas said that KU advertised the position statewide, and that about 100 people turned in applications. She said that over the summer, administrators interviewed six finalists, three of whom were women. None of the finalists were minorities.
The new position assumes the lobbying duties of the position of University executive secretary, which was last occupied by Richard von Ende. Von Ende resigned last September after pleading guilty to two federal cocaine-related charges.
Thomas said that the new position was not the same as that of University executive secretary, and that the chancellor would decide whether to hire a new executive secretary.
Report says cyclist caused accident
According to a KU police report, an accident Monday that involved a bicycle and a bus on Jayhawk bleach was caused by the bicycle.
Janell Danischek, Winfia sophromore, said she was riding a bicycle in the front of Wescole Hall near the curb when a pedestrian crossing the street suddenly stopped in front of her, according to the report.
Danitschek told police she swerped farther into the street to avoid hitting the pedestrian, and her left handelbear caught the front right doorjamb of a passing bus. She fell to the ground and sus-
sied a sprained ankle and brushes on her head, the report said.
Political cartoonist to give presentation
KU police Lt. Jeanne Longaker said neither Danischek nor the bus driver was cited for the accident.
Lee Judge, political cartoonist for the Kansas City Times, will present a show and answer questions about his sometimes controversial work.
Judge will speak at 3:30 p.m. today in 100 Staffer-Flint Hall. The program, which is free and open to the public, is being sponsored by the chapter of the Society of Professionals Journalists, Sigma Delta Chi.
Pro-life Conference will begin tonight
Right to Life of Kansas is holding its annual Pro-life Conference today and tomorrow at the Marriott West, 320 W. 14th Street, in Overland Park.
The conference begins at 7 tonight with several anti-abortion films.
Correction
Due to a reporter's error, information was incorrect in a story in Wednesday's Kansan. Bob Geldof will not be the featured performer of Hunger Project's teleconference on Nov. 14. The teleconference is being organized by Hal Uplinger, the producer of the Live Aid programs.
From staff and wire reports.
Senate helps dance company after voucher mixup
By BRAD ADDINGTON
Student Senate financial officers said yesterday that misuse of vouchers by the University Dance Company was an isolated incident and that the problem had been resolved.
staff writer
Spencer Colvin, Senate administrative assistant, and Matt Kerr, Senate treasurer, were confronted in late May with $595.12 worth of the dance company's unpaid bills from fall 1986 and spring 1987.
The Finance Committee met Tuesday night to consider revoking the company's revenue tax plan.
The Senate has paid the bills using funds from the dance company's University account. Both the Senate Finance Committee and the House Finance Committee are proceeding problems in making purchases.
the Senate that would require the company to submit monthly budget reports. Usually, revenue code status groups only submit annual reports. The Senate then waits for Senate during its next regular meeting Oct. 7.
Janet Hamburg, professor of dance and faculty adviser to the dance company, said, "I'm really pleased with the Student Senate bill that will certainly are anxious to prove ourselves again."
that it has the ability to manage its budget. Groups with revenue code status request money from the Senate once every two years. Non-revenue code groups, which are the bulk of groups seeking financing, must request money every year.
Hamburg said the company had elected Katie Lynch, Lenxa freshman, as the new business manager and was used by her to represent the company's bookkeeper and the dance department's executive secretary.
A student organization can be placed on revenue code status if the Senate determines that the organization provides a bread, tangible benefit to the University community and
Hamburg said last year was the second year that the company had revenue code status. She said this was the first time in its nine years of existence that the company had had procedural problems in using Senate money.
Colvin said the Senate wound up with the company's unpaid bills because the dance company did not follow the correct procedure for making off-campus purchases.
The merchant then sends an invoice to the treasurer, who sends an A-form to the compiler's office. Further processing occurs at the campus office where it issues a check to the off-campus merchant.
Most student organizations make off-campus purchases by presenting to off-campus merchants advanced authorizations signed by the Senate treasurer.
Revenue code groups such as the dance company don't use advanced authorization forms, however, and are responsible for sending A-forms directly to the controller's office.
Colvin said the dance company used advanced authorization forms without the authorized signature of the Senate treasurer to make off campus purchases. The company was supposed to use A-forms for the purchases and send these forms directly to the comproller.
"The problem was just inactivity," Hamburg said. The company had sufficient funds in its account, but the money was not getting to the merchants, she said.
A man in a white shirt stands among rows of empty tables.
Louay, Fakih, Beirut, Lebanon, sophomore, mops the cafeteria floor in Oliver Hall. Fakih was working yesterday.
Pull up a chair
Rock Chalk board selects theme for show
By a Kansan reporter
The theme for Rock Chalk Revue this year will help it be a more creative show than last year, said Jennifer of the Rock Chalk Advisory Board.
Malecki, New Ulm, Minn., junior,
said this year's theme, "The Untold
Story. We a broader story." Malecki
would use last spring, "Out of the Frying Pan and
spring," "Out of the Frying Pan and
Into the Kitchen."
The theme is a phrase for each group to interpret as it sees fit, Maleeki said. Last year, the theme was so narrow that the acts weren't much different from each other, she said.
The revue, a night of music, dancing and skits, will go on stage March 3, 4 and 5 in Hoech Auditorium. Five performances by student groups will
Groups wanting to appear in the show need to get in touch with one of the show's directors and submit a detailed description of their act by Mailcase said.
be featured, chosen from the 14 groups that have applied so far.
The groups selected to appear in the show will be announced Nov. 23.
The rest will be used for the overhead costs of the show, such as publicity and getting Hoy ready for the event, and to pay honorarium to the student.
Half the money from ticket sales will be donated to the United Fund.
Performing groups pay their own costs, and performers are not paid, said Christina Martin, Lenexa junior, a member of the show's business committee.
Liberty Hall is showing 1st-run film
By JULIE McMAHON Staff writer
The movie is "The Big Easy" from Columbia Motion Pictures. It stars Dennis Quaid as a homicide detective on the trail of corruption.
Liberty Hall is showing a major motion picture from a big studio, and some people are curious about how the theater got the movie.
Heavily advertised first-run movies, such as "The Big Easy," usually are shown in one of the Commonwealth Theatres in Lawrence. But this week only one showing at the 422 Massachusetts SL., an independent theatre that shows foreign and less-known movies.
Charles Oldfather, who owns Liberty Hall, said that he heard a rumor that a Commonwealth theater somewhere in the United States stopped showing a high-return Columbia movie too soon, so Columbia stopped distributing films to Commonwealth Theaters throughout the United States.
Ray Boyce of Columbia Motion Pictures in New York said the dispute was just a rumor because no official announcement had been made about it. He also declined to comment further.
Hal McClure, head film buyer for Commonwealth Theaters in Kansas City, Mo., said Commonwealth and Columbia were currently trying to resolve the dispute but declined to comment further on the subject.
Gary Mackender, programmer at Liberty Hall, said the sneak preview of "The Big Easy" on Sept. 18 did well, but not any better than usual.
He said Liberty Hall had never had a first-run Columbia movie before, but to get "The Big Easy" he called it "The Easy and said that he wanted to book it.
Watkins clinic tests students for tuberculosis
"The Big Easy" opened Sunday and runs through Oct. 2. The movie will not be shown tomorrow.
By AMBER STENGER
Staff writer
Watkins Hospital offers treatment for the several hundred KU students who may carry inactive tuberculosis bacteria.
Last fall, 151 KU students underwent treatment for inactive tuberculosis at Watkins. This fall, 48 people have begun treatment. Between 14 million and 20 million Americans have inactive tuberculosis.
To find all the people who carry the inactive bacteria, Watkins has started a new policy. Every student who goes into the hospital for any type of treatment and has never had a skin test will be tested.
Tuberculosis is a disease that develops in the respiratory tracts and can release lethal toxins in the body. Although a cure was found in 1951, tuberculosis is diagnosed in 25,000 to 30,000 Americans each year. Of those patients, the current burden had been carrying inactive tuberculosis without knowing it.
Yockey said that inactive tuberculosis was characterized by three
Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins, said students could get free tuberculosis tests and medication from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. every Tuesday without having an appointment, going through the pharmacy or having to wait.
things: a positive tuberculosis skin test, a negative chest X-ray and no symptoms. Tuberculosis symptoms weight loss and lack of appetite.
The bacteria can be transmitted only through the breath of a person who has active tuberculosis. People have inactive tuberculosis cannot transmit the disease.
"If someone walks into an area where someone with active tuberculosis has coughed, or recently coughed, those bugs are brought in and into the 20-20 minutes, the bacteria go everywhere in your body." Yockey said.
The bacteria need an environment
rear in oxygen to live. Within a few days, all the bacteria in every part of the body except the tops of the lungs are killed by the body's natural defense mechanisms and lack of oxygen.
"But the bugs that land on the tops of your lungs are there forever. They become inactive, dormant, asleep." Yockey said.
A tuberculosis skin test will be positive six weeks after the bacteria is inhaled. Positive tests indicate the presence of bacteria, but there is one exception.
Many countries use a tuberculosis vaccination called BCG for small children. People cured by BCG continue to test positive for tuberculosis. Watkins has stopped treating international students who test positive because of BCG treatment.
Yockey said that when people test positive, two things could happen. There is a 95 percent possibility that the tuberculosis will stay inactive forever.
"However, there is a five percent chance that those bugs will wake up, multiply and divide, and the next day the person will become ill."
---
Watkins offers students with inactive tuberculosis free treatment. Isoniazid, or INH, will kill inactive bacteria if taken every day for one year.
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Friday, September 25, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
White House pressure
One year ago, many United States corporations began putting serious economic pressure on South Africa through disinvestment — pulling entire companies out of the country. Unfortunately, the sanctions have been mostly a disappointment rather than a threat to the apartheid regime.
Even worse, the sanctions have seemed to critically damage the economic status of many blacks and the headway they were making in upper-level management positions.
U. S. companies such as General Motors, Ford, IBM and Exxon had profitable businesses in South Africa, while many blacks were obtaining clout in the economic system through strong unions and management positions.
But as the U.S. companies began to pull out because of pressure at home, some of the businesses regrouped and dropped their integration policies.
Is disinvestment from a handful of U.S. companies worth the hardship blacks must endure?
A more important need is for the White House to take the sanctions seriously and press for political and economic pressure. The white rulers must understand that the United States means business and that the pressure must not only come from corporations but from the nation as a whole.
Isn't it time a democratic government like the U.S. actively denounced a system so appalling to its beliefs?
Buy and fly
Has Dole gone bananas?
Controversy has arisen over Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole's campaign finances, though it is more a question of propriety than legality. Nevertheless, it appears that the affair may damage his standing with some voters.
Virtually all of Dole's transportation during his presidential bid has been via private corporate jets, provided by companies and individuals who support his candidacy. This itself is not a violation of Federal Election Commission rules; Dole is required to pay the equivalent of first-class commercial air fair for each trip.
The cost of such trips, however, is much greater than what Dole pays. In essence, he is receiving extraordinary benefits not available to all candidates, and the additional cost does not count toward the spending limits imposed by the FEC. It is as though Dole's campaign is allowed to spend more than those of his rivals.
This is unfair.
While it is Dole's right to travel by private jet, it is unquestionably a contribution to the Kansas senator's campaign and should be treated as such with regard to campaign expense rules.
It would be easy to dismiss this affair if Dole had not tried to thwart efforts to reconsider the spending guidelines that favor him. He voted against proposals that would have ended a Republican filibuster and brought campaign expense issues before his peers.
This was a vote for his own interests and against fair campaign rules.
Crowned beauty
Once again, we've crowned a new Miss America. There she is, folks: take a good look — that's what she's there for.
Of course, sponsors of the Miss America pageant say she is there to win valuable scholarship money. The pageant does award more than $5.5 million annually in scholarship money to more than 80,000 women on the national, state and local levels. But the method of awarding these scholarships is outdated and sexist.
The competition is a beauty pageant. If it is going to continue to support the old-fashioned idea of women as beauty objects, so be it. But it should not masquerade as a scholarship pageant.
The new Miss America, Kaye Lani Rae Rafka, is a registered nurse and plans to obtain a master's degree in oncology and hematology. But what does her appearance in a bathing suit have to do with her academic ability? For her talent, she hula danced in a midriff-baring costume. Hula dancing and a bare stomach have no place in a competition for an academic scholarship. Talent scholarships are awarded, but these too should not be combined with parading down a runway.
Award scholarships based on merit to those who so deserve. A beauty pageant is not the forum to reward intelligence and talent.
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
News staff
Jennifer Benjamin ... Editor
Jull Warren ... Managing editor
John Benner ... News editor
Bath Coopland ... Editorial editor
Billy Streff ... Campus editor
Brian Kaberline ... Sports editor
Dan Ruettlmann ... Photo editor
Bill Skeet ... Graphics editor
Tom Eblen ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Bonnie J. Hardy ... Business manager
Robert Hughes ... Advertising manager
Kelly Scherer ... Retail sales manager
Kurt Messermith ... Campus sales manager
Greg Knipp ... Production manager
David Derfelt ... National sales manager
Angela Griffin ... Classified
Ron Weems ... Director of marketing
Jeanne Hines ... Sales and marketing adviser
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Pictures depict Biden's demise
JIM BERGMAN
A CONFERENCE ENVOKED!
PRESIDENT BIDEN
I HAVE A DREAM...
THAT SOMEDAY, EVERYONE
IN OUR FINE NATION
WILL FORGET ABOUT
THIS WHOLE RAGIARISM
ORDEAL. IT ALL
HAPPENED FOUR
SCORE AND SEVEN
YEARS AGO ANYWAY!
Biden
KLINE UDK
JIM BORGMAN
CALIFORNIA
EMPRESSING!
PRESIDENT BIDEN
I HAVE A DREAM...
THAT SOMEDAY, EVERYONE
IN OUR FINE NATION
WILL FORGET ABOUT
THIS WHOLE RAGIARISM
ORDEAL. IT ALL
HAPPENED FOUR
SCORE AND SEVEN
YEARS AGO ANYWAY!
Biden
Kline UKK
Biden
Kline UDK
MR. BADGER by A.D. Long
GREAT QUOTATIONS
Where's the senator's speech
for next week-end in Iowa?
Comin' right up.
BIDEN '88
FOR PRESIDENT
"Ask not what your country can do for you. Ask what you can do for your country." Hmmm...
I've heard that somewhere before.
John F. Kennedy, 1961.
9-17-97
That's plagiarism!!
But it sounds great!
Look here, you! No more Neil Kinnock speeches, Bobby Kennedy speeches, FDR speeches, or Mario Cuomo speeches. Write some original Joe Biden speeches!
Spoil sport.
Hey. Distribution
O. K. THIS is the Iowa campaign speech, and THIS is a transcript of Bork's confirmation testimony. Make sure the senator doesn't get them mixed up.
IOWA DEMOCRATS
IOWA PUMP
100% VOTE
1 Person
Contradiction of terms
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
When I chose to attend the University of Kansas, I did so because of the fine academic programs the University has.
I found that most of the programs are top-rate except for the University's SIMPL math programs.
The University's Self Instructed Mastery Plan math program is an example of what happens when the faculty's arrogance gets in the way of the students' quest for knowledge.
Theoretically, the student is given a chapter to study. The student then studies on his own. If the student has a problem with the chapter, there are tutors and lectures to help "guide" the student.
...practice, however, the SIMPL program is ineffective. This is because the faculty obviously feels above teaching the students. Instead, the student is left alone, with nothing but an old textbook, a test schedule and a prayer — not a book, a journal or a "tutoring" available, if you consider tutoring to be two teaching assistants in a classroom with 30 confused people. The only thing more pathetic
than the SIMPL program is the attempts of the students to learn in this fashion.
In other words, the KU's SIMPL math program is a conflict of terms.
William G. Belden, Colby freshman.
Cosmetic class
Now don't get me wrong. I'm really all for a tougher admissions policy for Kansas high school students. And I think that it's a really good thing that the student advisory committee to the Regents has gotten together their own proposal to propose to the Regents. But I simply cannot stand idly by after reading the article in the Sept. 17 Kansan. They have three items they propose. The first two make perfect sense. I agree totally that they need years of English, math, science and social studies or college-level summer courses with a 2.0 grade point average.
But to require them to take make-up courses is just plain ridiculous. I don't care whether the make-up courses are high school or college level. I mean, sure, we should all be up on personal hygiene and everything, but I think forcing a class on high school students is just very unnecessary. Look at me. I'm a second-year graduate student, and I made it just fine without any make-up courses. I hardly ever even wear any make-up. Well, maybe occasionally on a weekend, but it's nothing I couldn't handle myself. I don't need any course on it.
I'm all for this new liberal attitude and everything, but maybe it would be much wiser
to just require this course for incoming freshmen girls. It could be very beneficial for them, especially with this new fall rush and all. We could just recommend it for guys. After all, we could all use a helpful hint. But to require it just doesn't seem right.
Mark von Schlemmer, Leavenworth graduate student
I am writing to express my deep concern over the disastrous street in Stouffer Place. There are several big holes starting at the entrance of Stouffer Place and going up to the office.
I called Parking Services about fixing it and they told me to call the Department of Facilities Operations. They in turn told me to call the Student Housing Office. The Housing Office told me they did not know who was in charge of fixing the Stouffer Place street.
Rough road
I have almost hit a child and two cars at
daily times when I have been trying to avoid
the blaze here.
I hope somebody who is responsible for fixing the street in Stouffer Place will read this grievance and see to it that some action is taken before a tragedy occurs. By the way, this poor condition in Stouffer Place has existed since last summer.
BLOOM COUNTY
Rashid Malik, Dhaka, Bangladesh, Ph.D. student
JUMPIN'
JEHOSAPKAT!
WHO ARE
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5
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Little Wonder
DOMESTIC
TRACTORS
9-25
©1987 Universal Press Syndicate
Darren's heart quickened: Once inside the home, and once the demonstration was in full swing, a sale was inevitable.
University Daily Kansan / Friday, September 25, 1987
Campus/Area
Black Panhellenic to resume parties
By JAVAN OWENS Staff writer
Black Panhellenic groups once again have permission to have parties at the Kansas Union as a result of night between the groups and KU personnel.
The eight groups of Black Panhelenic's greek council will have a combined party Oct. 3. It will be the first time the group has had a party at the Union since its Union parties were suspended about a month ago.
At a meeting, the groups and KU officials agreed to several measures, including more police officers on duty, a group adviser and a student patrol group at late-night parties at home to help curb violence and vandalism.
Last night's meeting was prompted by an incident at an Aug. 29 Alpha Phi Alpha party at the Union. That night, a KU student was stabbed in the hand and $260 in property damage occurred at the Union.
Black Panhellenic leaders met with Jim Long, director of the Kansas and Burge unions, and Ann Eversole, director of student organizations and activities. Vernell Spearman, director of minority affairs, and KU police officials Capt. James Longaker also participated in the event.
Black Panhellenic is an umbrella group for four fraternities and four sororites. The groups regularly fund-raising parties at the Union.
The fraternities and sororites presented a proposal to create a greek patrol, a student group that would monitor parties. The students also posted posting rules of conduct to inform party-goers of improper behavior.
Oliver proposed that two police officers be present at Union parties attended by 300 or fewer people. More officers would be present at larger parties. KU police would train the greek patrol group.
Eversole suggested the students have an adviser or alumni member of their organization present at parlor. Eversole said although the groups reached general agreements, they still needed to work out some details.
100
Saturday, September 26, 8:00 p.m.
Monday, September 28, 8:00 p.m.
Wednesday, September 30, 7:30 p.m.
Friday, October 2, 8:00 p.m.
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By Giacomo Puccini In English
PHONE: 816/471-7344 FOR TICKETS
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Single tickets priced from $5.00
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The Kansas Relays Are Coming!!
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The National Endowment for the Arts The Missouri Arts Council U.S.AIR The official Lyric Opera and
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Applications are now being accepted for the Student Relays Committee.
This committee is instrumental to the organization and administration of one of the nation's oldest and most prestigious Track and Field Meets.
Lawrence
Floral & Gift
BECOME PART OF THE TRADITION!
Working with the Kansas Relays can be an exciting and rewarding experience. Applications will be accepted through FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25. Interviews will be conducted the following two weeks. Stop by the Kansas Track Office, Room 143 Allen Field House today and fill out an application
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PRE-MEDS:
KU Med representatives will be on campus for individual visits with students on the following Mondays: September 28
September October 5
October 19
Contact the Pre-Med secretary, 106-C Strong Hall, 864-3667, to make an appointment. Office hours: MWF 10:00 a.m.
Office hours: MWF 10:30-2:20
TR 8:30-11:30
★★★★★☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
PRE-OPTOMETRY;
University of Missouri - St. Louis Optometry School representative will be on campus October 28. He will visit with students in the afternoon; he is a guest speaker for the Pre-Med club at 7:00 p.m. that evening.
Contact the Pre-Med secretary for details, 864-3667 or call Pre-Med reps. at 843-3425 & 842-3863.
IN US!
KANU
NATIONAL
GAMES
V
H H H H
CELEBRATING 35 YEARS
Put on your party hat—KANU is celebrating 35 years of public radio and we want you to be a part of the celebration. Our Birthday Party Programming is electrifying the airwaves and you're invited to attend special LIVE anniversary events or tune your radio to 91.5 FM to join in the fun!
An afternoon of great music — Bluegrass star Dan Crary, virtuoso jazz pianist Makoto Ozone, and classical instrumental trio Sabinigundi will perform for you Sunday, September 27, from 1 to 4 p.m. during our FREE, LIVE birthday party concert broadcast in South Park, 12th and Massachusetts, Lawrence. You'll also be treated to recorded birthday greetings from special guests.
3
A Special Halloween Tread- While the ghosts and goblins are howling outside, join us inside for the "Goodtime Radio Revue" LIVE from Liberty Hall, 7th and Massachusetts, Lawrence, at 8 p.m. Saturday, October 31. KANU's live music and variety show will feature house band Bluestem, pianist B.Crahan, the Novellas and the Imagination Workshop. Rachel Hunter will host the show. Tickets are $3.
Eight Days of Fanfare—November 7,14. KANU will broadcast eight days of special 35th anniversary programming (see program guide for listings) during our Fall Fanfare '87 Fund Raising Drive for station operating funds. KANU's goal is $10,000 in individual contributions. If you enjoy KANU your support is sincerely appreciated to help us reach our goal. To make a tax deductible contribution call (913) 864-5100 or night on the eightday fanfare.
KANU 35th Anniversary Sponsors: Casbah;
JL's Grocery; Maupinintour; Admark, Inc.;
Underwood Retail Liquors
KANU91.5FM
HIV
It's Here! SUA SPECIAL EVENTS'
Aard Vark
CAFE
A Great New Place to Dance. (KUID Required)
Friday, September 25,1987
9 p.m. - 1 a.m. in the Kansas
Room of the Kansas Union (6th floor)
Bring this ad, or come with 2 or more people, and get in for $2.
$3 admission charge
rock dance funk
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featuring Alan Smith
6
Friday, September 25. 1987 / Universitv Daliv Kansan
Growth
Continued from p. 1
decrease, a 1.8 percent decline
decrease a 1.8 percent decline.
Regents schools also showed an increase.
Wichita State University has 17,052 students this fall, up 209 from a year ago. This is the third-highest semester enrollment WSU has ever had.
The student count at Emporia State University was up 210, a 4 percent increase that reflects a 25
Elect
Kansan reporter Michael Horak contributed information to this story.
percent increase in freshman enrollment.
relations, said the 402-student decrease was partly because fewer high school students from western Kansas applied there, and partly because of a decrease in transfer students.
Fort Hays State University suffered the largest student loss of the Regents schools. Bob Lowen, director of Fort Hays State university
Continued from p.1
Pittsburgh State University's enrollment remained virtually unchanged at 5.445 — a 26-student increase from last fall.
total votes cast in the previous gubernatorial election in that state. So far, Pellettiere said, the party has collected enough signatures in Montana, Alaska, Utah, Nevada and Arizona
"Election laws are very undemocratic." Pellettiere said. "Independents have to petition in every state.
It takes 1.3 million votes to get on the ballot, and the majority parties don't have to do that."
with. That is wrong because so many people are dissatisfied with the present two-party system, he said.
One of the most significant issues of the campaign is fair elections,缓冲 said. He said the rules for electing representatives depend on party were difficult to comply
"The two majority parties are not being representative of the majority of the people," he said. "People don't care about it and budget at the cost of social services."
Dole's hometown gets ready
The Associated Press
RUSSELL — Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole's hometown of Russell is quietly preparing for the announcement of his presidential candidacy.
Dole's state campaign co-chairman, Lilian Papay of Great Bend, said yesterday that Dole staffers had made three trips to the central Kansas town to pave the way for the announcement.
The latest trips were made Tuesday and Wednesday. The staffers will meet again with Russell residents charged with preparing for Dole's arrival next week, Ms. Papay said.
No date for Dole's announcement has been set officially, she said, but speculation centers on Nov. 9 as the date for the announcement. That date, she said, is circled on her calendar. But she warned that the announcement date is contingent on
what happens in Washington.
"The senator wants to get the Bork question completely behind him before making the announcement," she said of the confirmation hearings for Robert Bork's nomination to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Peter Williams, a Russell lawyer, is coordinating the work of the committees appointed to oversee various aspects of the announcement. "All I know is we have had contacts and have been told the senator has a great deal of interest in announcing in Russell."
He said there is no guarantee when the announcement will be made or if it will be made but agreed speculation centered on Nov. 9. Earlier, he said, Dole staffers had planned on an October date.
"Locally, we have gotten a variety of people organized to do everything from blowing up helium balloons to
setting up stages," he said.
Plans call for the announcement to be made in the center of Russell's Main Street, in front of the old Dawson drug store, where Dole once had the weather is bad, the announcement will be made in the high school.
"We plan to give him a good send-off, a send-off that will make him feel good and show him that the people of America can lead them to lead the nation," Williams said.
"There is a lot of t-crossing and idoting yet to be done," he said, "but the thinking has already been completed. Only the physical work has to be done, and that is the easiest. You have to remember that Russell is a community that prepared for the Ford-Dole announcement with two days notice. We could be ready tomorrow."
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Sun. 1-5
From the KU Weather Service
Mon.-Sat. 9:30-5:30
Thurs. 9:30-8:30
738 Massachusetts
DISCOVER
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WEATHER Lawrence Forecast
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TODAY
Sunny and Warm
HIGH: 80°
LOW: 54°
Today will be mostly sunny and warm.
Tonight, skies will remain clear with mild temperatures. The high will be around 80° with the low in the mid-50s.
5-DAY
SAT
Sunny
83/55
HIGH LOW
SUN
Sunny
85/56
MON
Party cloudy
81/54
TUE
Showers
77/53
WED
Partly sunny
79/53
North Platte
83/47
Sunny
Omaha
77/52
Mostly sunny
Rain T-Storms Snow Flurries Ice
Goodland
84/51
Sunny
Hays
85/53
Sunny
Salina
83/55
Sunny
Topeka
81/54
Sunny
Kansas City
79/53
Mostly sunny
Columbia
78/53
Mostly sunny
St. Louis
77/52
Mostly sunny
Dodge City
85/55
Sunny
Wichita
84/57
Sunny
Chanute
83/56
Sunny
Springfield
83/55
Sunny
Forecast by Kevin Darmofal.
Temperatures are today's high and tonight's overnight low.
Conditions are forecasted for this afternoon.
Tulsa
86/59
Sunny
VISA
On the Record
A pair of prescription sunglasses, a pair of tennis shoes and other miscellaneous items valued at $325 were taken Wednesday from a car parked in the 500 block of 23rd Street, Lawrence police reported.
■ A diamond ring valued at $200 was taken Tuesday from an apartment in the 500 block of Fireside Drive, Lawrence police reported. A key was used to enter the apartment.
Five oak chairs valued at $29.75 were taken between September, 15 and Sept. 16 from the fifth floor of Blake Hall, KU police reported.
A gold watch, a gold wedding ring and a gold and amethyst ring valued together at $1,560 were taken between Sept. 7 and Sep. 9 from the purse of a Lawrence resident, Lawrence police reported.
A car stereo valued at $300 was taken Monday or Tuesday from a car parked in the 2500 block of W. 6th Street, Lawrence police reported. The car sustained $70 in damage.
Tires and wheels valued at $748 were taken Tuesday or Wednesday from a business in the 1400 block of W. 22nd Street, Lawrence police reported.
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KU AND LAWRENCE EVENTS
CALENDAR
Friday 25
3:30 p.m. — “Nothing in Common,” an SUA band, at woodfruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Also at 7 and 9:30 p.m. and on Saturday at 3:30, 7 and 9:30 p.m. Afternoon showings $1. Evening showings $2.
7 p.m. — Theater auditions for "Amahl and the Night Visitors" at Craton-Preyer Theatre stage in Murphy Hall.
4 p.m. - Baseball stadium dedication Old-timers game at 4 p.m. Dedication at 6 p.m. Alumni-varsity game at 6:45 p.m. All at Quigley Field. Tickets available for $$ from varsity team members and at 217 Allen Field House.
Q
Open call for principal roles. Open call for student chorus roles at 9 p.m. Sign up for audition time at 434 Murphy Hall.
7 p.m. "Opera Is My Hobby," with James Seaver, on KANU-91.5 Fm.
7:30 p.m. "Hoosiers" at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. No charge.
8 p.m. — K.U. International Folk Dance Club at St. John's Gymnasium, 12th and Kentucky streets.
i 9 p.m. -- Observatory Open House (if the sky is clear) at Clyde W. Tombaugh Observatory, 500 Lindley Hall. Call 864-1366 for more information.
Saturday
26
9 a.m. — Band Day Parade Downtown Lawrence from Sixth and Massa-schuets streets to 11th and Massa-schuets streets.
9 a.m. — “The Vintage Jazz Show” with Michael Maher, on KANU-91.5 FM.
10 a.m. — “The Jazz Scene” with Dick Wright, on KANU-91.5 FM.
30 p.m. — KU Football KU vs
Louisiana Tech at Memorial Stadium. Band Day.
6 p.m. - KANU-91.5 FM fund raising reception and dinner at Liberty Hall. Noah Adams, star of new variety show on National Public Radio, to speak. Tickets available for $40 at KANU studios.
Sunday
27
1 p.m. — KANU-91-95 MF birthday party at South Park. Appearing are Dan Crazy, founder of Sunday night blue hue jazz concert show, and Makoto Ozone, jazz pianist.
2 p.m. — KU Baseball KU vs. Barton County Community College at Quigley Field.
2 p.m. — Exhibit opening of "Tom Klaverkampery" paintings and drawings at the Art and Design Building gallery. Will show through Oct. 11.
3 p.m. — The KU Concerts KANU-
91.5 FM.
7 p.m. — Theater callbacks for "Amahl and the Night Visitors." Callback lists posted by noon today at the Green Room in Murphy Hall.
Monday
3:30 p.m. — International student reception at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union.
7 p.m. — St. Lawrence Catholic Center Renewal at St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Rd. For current sessions each night until Thursday.
7:30 p.m. — "Continuity and Change in the Art of Aaron Siskind." a lecture by photographer Aaron Siskind
and Carl Chiarena, Fanie Allen Knapp professor of fine arts at the University of Rochester at the Spencer Museum of Art. Reception following in the Central Court.
8 p.m. — Society for Fantasy and Science Fiction, at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union.
8 p.m. -- Visiting Artists Series featuring Thaddeus Brys on cello at Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
29
Tuesday
9 a.m. — "introduction to SPSX-X on the VAXVMS System," a mainframe seminar, at the Computer Center. 11:30 a.m. — French Table at Parlor Union. Every Tuesday all semester except Tuesdays before Thanksgiving.
2:30 p.m. — "Beginning the Job Search: Getting down to the Basics," a University Placement Center program, at 149 Burge Union.
4 p.m. — "The Larger Context of East-West Artistic Relations," a lecture by Torv Hagg, University of Kyiv at the Pine Room in the Kansas "A"
Complex, 23rd and Iowa streets. Also on Thursday at the same time.
5 p.m. — Tryouts and practice for the KU Men's Soccer Club at Shenk
6:30 p.m. — KU Hispanic-American Leadership Organization meeting at the International Room in the Kansas Union.
7 p.m. — "Portrayal of Women in Texas" by Emily McIntyre, EA Taylor Women's Resource Center, at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
7 p.m. — "Constitutional Origins of the Judiciary's Present Day Power," a lecture by Philip Paladun, professor of history, sponsored by the KU History Club, at the Wainut Room in the Kansas Union.
8:30 p.m. — KU Fencing Club at Robinson Gymnasium. Also on Thursday at same time.
Wednesday
10 a.m. - Retirees Club coffee at Adam Lounge in the adams Alumni Center
30
11:45 a.m. — "Musical Life in Poland Today" a University Forum by Daniel Politakos, professor of music at the Royal College of Music, 1204 Oread Ave. Call 844-4933 by Sept. 29 to make luncheon reservations.
6:30 p.m. — Campus Christians
10 a.m. — Search, Screening and
information, in an affirmative action
workshop on the Internet.
7 p.m. — KU Democrates meeting at Kansas Room in the Kansas Union. p.m. — "Basilus Quartet," an SUA team, plays in the Kansas Union. Team tickets are $2.
meeting at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union.
7:30 p.m. — "Continuity versus Creativity in Afro-American Culture," an African studies study by Merwyn C. Burrell, University of Kentucky. The Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union.
11:30 a.m. — Latin American studies brown bag lunch featuring Donna Luckey with a slide presentation on a Lollipop, Glofto Costa, Rica, at 208 Strong Hall.
Thursday
3 p. 3m. — "Grey Gardens" and "in the Street," documentary films, at Spencer Museum of Art auditorium. Also at 3 p.m. on Sunday.
9 a.m. — "Programming in dBase III," a microcomputer workshop, at the Computer Center.
4 p.m. — "Understanding eusocial behavior · Alice through a small door," a lecture by David Fletcher of Bucknell University at 1085 Haworth
1
6 p.m. — Latin American Solidarity Rice and Beans Dinner featuring a Christian Institute speaker at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Aroad Ave.
7 p.m. — “Greed,” an SUA film, at mordn. — The Baltimore in the Kansas State University.
7 p.m. — "The American Past,"
7:30 p.m. - "Second City" program by SUA, at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Tickets $5 for KU students, $6 for public only at SAU office.
7:30 p.m. - Japan Caravan with panel from Japan on trade and economics at the Kansas Room in the Kansas University.
with Calder Pickett, Clyde M. Reed listinguished professor of journalism, on ANU-91 FM.
8 p.m. - Amsterdam Guitar Trio at Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall. Tickets $5.50 and $4.50 for KU students at Murphy Hall box office.
7:30 p.m. — Jayhawks for UNICEF at Parior A in the Kansas University.
8 p.m. - Scenes from German literature by German actor Rolf Gunther at Swarthout Realtal Hall in Murphy Hall, to public at KU students, $5 for public at Murphy Hall box office or the department of German language and literatures.
Drinking Myth of the Week
GIVE HIM BLACK COFFEE.
THAT'LL SOBER HIM UP.
Sure, in about five hours. Cold showers don't work either. Only time can get the alcohol out of the system, as the liver metabolizes the alcohol. Slowly. There's no way to hurry it.
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JOIN THE JAYHAWK FIGHT FOR LIFE
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Blood is life
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Sept. 29, 30 and Oct. 1
9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. each day at Wescoe, Summerfield, and the Union.
Blood Drive Oct. 6, 7, 8.
SIGN UP TO BE A DONOR!
University Daily Kansan / Friday. September 25. 1987
Sponsored bu Panhellenic Assoc. & Interfraternity Council.
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8
Friday, September 25, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Joe's glazed doughnuts keep late-night customers loyal
JOE'S BAKERY
Above, late-night doughnut-seekers flock to Joe's Bakery, 616 W Ninth St. Right, founder of Joe's Bakery, Joe Smith, glazes a caramel apple, Smith, who has retired and turned the business over to his son, Ralph, opened the shop in 1952.
Photos by L.A. Rauch
BROOKLYN CAFE
By ELAINEWOODFORD
Special to the Kansan
It usually hits at 11 p.m. You've finished one paragraph of the 15-page term paper that's due at 8:30 a.m. tomorrow. Suddenly, you realize that the inspiration you need — a little piece of heaven — is warm and waiting for you down at Joe's Bakery.
Congratulations — you're about to take part in a 35-year-old KU tradition, the Joe's Run
DQTM
Joe's Bakery, 616 W. Ninth Street, is a KU institution, its student customers say.
But Ralph Smith, owner of the bakery, with his hands full of warm doughnuts and a smile on his face, says, "I really don't know what an institution is. It's just my business."
Ralph's father, Joe Smith, opened the shop in 1952 to sell baked goods to local customers. As time passed and larger bakeries from Topeka and the Kansas City area threatened his business, he turned to baking more doughnuts and cookies for college students.
The shop's hours — six days a week from 6 a.m to 3 a.m. — have made it a hit with late night studios.
"For a little bakery, it still amazes me," Ralph Smith said. He has owned the bakery for eight years since his father retired. Even though Joe is退休, he still comes down to the store at least once a day "just to see how things are going." Ralph Smith said.
The cramped shop has always been Smith's second home. He moves with the ease of long familiarity among the appliances in the kitchen area behind the store front, where the temperature is several degrees higher and the sweet smell of baking doughnuts is even stronger than it is in front. Smith said that he didn't notice the aroma anymore — except when something was being burned — "and then it's really noticeable."
Ralph, 30, has been in the bakery business all his life. He started out washing dishes and progressed through the years to counter clerk, doughnut master, pastry chef.
"Sometimes, though, these doughnuts don't look very good to me." Smith said as he flipped cut dough from the floured board into his waiting hand. His personal favorite from the shop isn't even a pastry. He prefers a roast beef pie and popped in the microwave after he gets home from a day of work at 3:30 a.m.
But working at Joe's isn't always the sweet life. LaVerta Logan, an eight-year veteran of the doughnut business, said that all kinds of people came into Joe's. "Ever since the drinking age went up last year, people have been a lot more human," Logan said.
Smith doesn't worry about employees eating all the profits, because there isn't time for them to stand around and eat. But they can have all the broken
As it has through the years, Smith's most popular item remains the 19-cent hot glazed doughnut.
Patricia Domann, a KU alumni and Lawrence resident, remembers going down to Joe's from Gertrude Sellars Pearson-Corbin Hall in the early 1970s for the big doughnuts.
"I remember the doughnuts, hot and very greasy, and of course, the lines."
Domann said. "There were always lines, no matter when you went."
How many doughnuts does a hungry community consume in one day? Smith starts preparing dough at 5:30 p.m. in anticipation of the steady crowds that start lining up about 8 p.m. Suprisingly, the process takes only 15 minutes to complete.
He uses his father's original recipes but has added a few twists of his own. He has also introduced several new items to the menu, including bear claws.
"I've never really counted just how many doughnuts that I made," Smith said, "but I start out with 175 pounds of flour. By the time I add the rest of the ingredients, the first batch weighs over 200 pounds."
He has also introduced several new items to the menu, including bear claws. At 11:35 p.m. on a recent Monday, more than 50 people stood elbow to elbow in the bakery. What is it that compels people to come to Joe's at all hours of the night?
"It is a ritual we have," said Jan Buchhoe, Overland Park senior. "I hate to admit it, but we come down here because we bored." Buchhoe said she had seen the video on her phone.
"It's a legend," said Trevor Stone, Tulsa, Okla., sophomore
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, September 25, 1987
9
Campus/Area
Women's farm role redefined
Dave Niebergall/KANSAN
Denise O'Brien, director of the Rural Women's Leadership Development Project of Prairiefruit Rural Action.
By BEN JOHNSTON Staff writer
Staff writer
Farm women are abandoning their traditional roles and becoming involved in political efforts to improve the profitability of family farms, a farm activist said yesterday afternoon.
Denise O'Brien, director of the Rural Women's Leadership Development Project of Prairiefire Rural Action in Des Moines, Iowa, spoke to about 40 people in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. The lecture was by the KU women's studies program and the School of Social Welfare.
O'Brien, who with her husband farms 200 acres in southwest Iowa, said farm women could be influential supporters of family farms by becoming involved in the political process. Many farm women are becoming involved in politics for the first time, O'Brien said.
"There has been an awakening of women that they can create farm policy," O'Brien said. "It used to be that women were the cow belles or the dairy maids or part of other groups that were marketing farming and exploitive to women.
"Now farm women are starting to go beyond their comfortable little groups." O'Brien said.
Prairiefire is a coalition of 22 farm,
church, labor and citizens' groups that educate farmers about issues such as paying off debts and how to obtain food stamps. However, the main purpose of the organization is to shape farm legislation, O'Brien said.
"We try to persuade politicians by educating them about the problems and issues involving the family farmer, and what we think can be done about it," O'Brien said.
She said one piece of legislation the group liked was the Gephardt—Hark-in farm bill, which is stuck in Congress. The bill was introduced by Rep. Richard Gephardt, D-Mo., and Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa.
"The Gephardt-Harkin Bill is a good bill because it was written by
farmers," O'Brien said. "The bill was developed by farmers at meetings all over the country."
O'Brien said she was frustrated by the lack of progress federal and state governments were making to enact legislation that was beneficial to the farmer.
"It took 10 years during the Depression in the 1920s and 1930s to get policies changed," O'Brien said. "We've been at it for five years, and it may take us 10 years to accomplish what we want. So far our victories have been very small."
O'Brien said Congress' inaction on the Gephardt—Harkin Bill exemplified how government had failed the family farmer.
Citizens' group aims to bring public vote on trafficway plan
By VALORE ARMSTRONG Staff writer
Staff writer
At least two residents won't let the City of Lawrence go ahead with a plan for a trafficway without see-see residents get a say in the matter.
Mike DuPree, Lawrence resident, has formed an organization called Citizen Action for Responsible Environments whose first objective is to secure a public vote on the proposed South Lawrence trafficway. DuPree's concern is that Lawrence residents are uninformed about an issue that could have a great effect on the city.
"There's a tremendous amount of information available that's not made known to the public," DuPree said. "Getting the approval to vote also will involve information dissemination."
DuPree, who is coordinator of CARE, said that by reading reports of the Environmental Protection Agency, the Kansas Department of Transportation and other agencies, he concluded that media coverage of the issue was limited.
city and Douglas County to court complaining that public approval was not involved in the decision to lend bonds to finance the trafficway.
Leslie W. Blevins Sr., Lawrence resident, filed a suit in Douglas County District Court earlier this fall. He contended that the $4 million in general obligation bonds issued by the county to finance construction of the trafficway were illegal because their issuance was never voted on by Lawrence and Douglas County residents.
Don Stroele, attorney for Blevins,
said. "We are arguing that they could not issue these bonds without a vote." He wrote the right to petition for a vote.
The city and the county contend that Blevins has no case.
Another resident has taken the
The county's stance is that Blevins cannot claim personal injury and therefore has no grounds to sue. They said that the bond Blevins has cited included money earmarked and already spent for several projects and not just the trafficway. The county said that money had already been spent and could not be recovered.
The next court date for the case is Oct. 26.
Howard Hill, a former city commissioner, said the environmental concerns involved in building a trafficway should be addressed.
"But I don't think they should submit this to a general vote for the following reason — it would be difficult, but safe. And we have to have a trafficway."
"That's the reason state law doesn't require it," he said about a public vote on the issue.
Historically, Hill said, roadways fail when put to a public vote because the public usually cannotitate the need for such projects.
And if the city waits until the need for a trafficway becomes obvious, it's probably five years too late by then, Hill said.
DuPree's group is scheduled to meet Monday at 8:15 p.m. in the NorthRoom of the South Park Recreation Center, 1141 Massachusetts St., for an organizational meeting.
DuPree said he was not sure how many people would attend the meeting.
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10
Friday, September 25, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
KU prof dies at 85
By MARK TILFORD
Staff writer
Arthur Byron Leonard, University of Kansas professor emeritus of zoology and former chairman of the zoology department, died Wednesday at Valleyview Care Home in Lawrence. He was 85.
Mr. Leonard's specialty was pearls, and he specialized in snails and mollusks.
He donated his body to the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kankan.
After earning a bachelor's degree in education in 1931 from Central State Teacher's College in Oklahoma, he received a graduate student in zoology at KU.
He earned a master's degree in 1933 and a doctorate in 1937. He became an associate professor that year at KU.
He retired in 1972
Mr. Leonard went daily to the University after his retirement, his wife, Alice, said yesterday.
Bernard L. Weiss
Arthur Byron Leonard
He also was given an honorary doctorate from that university during that year's graduation ceremony.
He received those honors for a modern biological sciences program.
Mr. Leonard was born April 11, 1902, in Manhattan. He married Alice Smith on Dec. 23, 1934.
Mr. Leonard was a Fulbright Scho-
olar at the University of Bologna,
Italy, in 1966-77.
Memorial services are pending at Rumsey Funeral Home, 60 Indiana St.
Survivors include his wife; three sons: David of Medford, Ore., Stephen of Lawrence and Bryon of Oxford. He was the grandfather of Masla, Okia, and three grandchildren.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
"Nobody else speaks your language."
8 a.m.-5 p.m.
Sports
University Daily Kansan / Friday, September 25, 1987
11
Game 3
Kansas Jayhawks
Coach Bob Valesente
Record: 0-2
KU
Louisiana Tech
Builds
Coach Carl Torbush
Record: 0-3
T
Last Week: The Kent State Golden Flashes spoiled the Jayhawks' home opener with a 31-17 victory.
Probable Starters:
Offense:
Last Week: The Bulldogs were defeated last Saturday by Mississippi State 14-13 at Starkville, Miss.
WR - 1 William Vaughan, 5-11, 185,
LT - 70 Jim Daves, 6-26, 280,
LG - 70 Jay Allen, 6-3, 255, Jr.
LG - 84 Budge, 62, 2, 290,
RB - 84 Boudoir, 62, 2, 290,
RT - 85 Bryan Howard, 6-5, 285,
TE - 89 Brad Wedel, 6-5, 230,
OB - 14 Kelley Donohoe, 5-11, 175,
TE - 89 Terrell Terell, 5-11, 190;
RB - 24 Mickey Rourke, 5-11, 190;
RL - 34 Romine Carewell, 6-0, 190;
PK - 29 Lola Klemp, 5-10, 195.
LE - 2 Rod Wight, 6,0-175, Sr.
LT - 75 Todd Lassl, 8,5-290, Jr.
LG - 64 Mike Endley, 6,3-250, So.
LG - 10 David Peretz, 6,1-240, So.
RT - 80 Michael Turner, 6,2-290, Sr.
TE - 85 Pam Gannady, 8,2-220, So.
OB - 13 David McKinney, 6,2-215, Br.
RB - 32 Garant Powell, 6,1-190, Sr.
RB - 10 Marlon Barker, 6,1-180,
P - 1 Faddy Doyle, 5,1-110, Sr.
PK - 1 Mahta Stover, 5,117, 170.
Defense:
LE- 90 Eldridge Avery, 6; 235, 28
LE- 91 Tim Adams, 6; 255, 28
LE- 97 David White, 6; 245, 28
LLB- 113 Riley Clinton, 6; 235, 28
LLB- 139 Clayton, 6; 235, 28
MLB- 19 Curie Moore, 6; 220, 28
RLB- 25 Dickens Broeden, 6; 230, 28
RCB- 16 Mit Garner, 5; 110, 20
RCB- 16 Mit Garner, 5; 110, 20
BC- 8 F守民 Menton, 6; 200, 28
MS- 32 Mavin Manton, 6; 410, 21
P- 48 Rich Reigh, 5; 110, 180
LE— 90 Mike Williams, 6-1, 200, Jr.
LN— 79 Mike Wood, 5-8, 240, So.
NG— 66 Courtney Wallace, 6-0, 280, Jr.
RE— 66 James Blackinlaw, 5-11, 220, Sr.
LB— 45 Eldorne Osborn, 6-0, 205, So.
LB— 43 Glenell Sanders, 6-0, 225, So.
LCB— 23 Napolien Farrow, 5-10, 190, Rs.
RCB— 20 Warsey Swain, 5-10, 185, Rs.
LSB— 27 Richie Sims, 5-11, 190, Sr.
P— 7 Barry Hickgroundh, 6-1, 190, Fr.
Series: This is the first meeting between the Kansas and Louisiana Tech football teams. In fact, this will be the first time the Bulldogs have faced a Big Eight Conference opponent.
History: Bulldog coach Carl Torbush was an All-American football and baseball standout at Carson-Newman and played professional baseball for one season for the Kansas City Royals minor league organization.
Coverage: The Kansas-Louisiana Tech game will be carried locally by the Kansas Jayhawk Network. The game can be heard in the Lawrence area on KLZR (106 FM) and KLWN (1320 AM). Kickoff is scheduled for 1:30 p.m. in Kansas' Memorial Stadium. Radio station KJHK (90.7 AM) will also provide coverage of the game.
'Hawks must beat Louisiana Tech to avoid tying second-worst skid
Bv CRAIG ANDERSON
Staff writer
Another day of reckoning will be upon the Kansas football team tomorrow when they play the Louisiana Tech Bulldogs at Memorial Stadium.
"It's time for us to put up or shut up." Kansas coach Bob Valesente said. "We're the best practice team I've ever been around. When we play on Saturdays, though, we tighten up. It makes us look slow and indisecive."
Kansas players said they had good practices again this week. Based on the Jayhawks first two games against Auburn and Iowa, the team will be guess how the team will play and tomorrow.
"Everyone has been hitting harder this week in practice," Isham said. "I think the way we've been practicing this week will carry over into the game."
"It seems like the coaches have been on us more this week to get us to push ourselves," he said. "Everything has been more intentional. I'm sure we'll be a different team."
Kansas will be out to its current nine-game losing streak that spans the past two seasons. If Kansas loses tomorow against the 0-3 Bulldogs, it will tie the second-longest losing streak in Jayhawk football history. The streak would equal a 10-game losing string that occurred during the 1978 and 1979 seasons. Kansas' longest losing streak ever was 17. That spanned three seasons between 1953 and 1955.
"I know the streak is there," said senior guard Steve Isham. "I also know, though, that we have more talent on this team than our team that was 6-6 two seasons ago. We have more depth at all positions. I realize that the team still has to prove that on the field."
Freshman fullback Maurice Hooks said the coaching staff was doing its part to get the team ready for the game.
The biggest change the offense has to make is an improvement in its running game. In Kansas' first two games, the team has rushed for 97 yards in 42 carries. Junior tailback Darryl Terrell is the leading individual rusher with 37 yards, but has averaged only 2.6 yards a carry.
If there was any spark in the running game during Saturday's loss to Kent State, it flickered briefly early in the third quarter. That was when Hooks and fellow freshmen tailback Frank Hatchett started the second half in the backfield together Hatchett rushed for 27 yards in seven carries before suffering a lower-back bruise. The 5-foot-10 and 183-pound tailback should be able to play against Louisiana Tech, said Lynn Bott, director of sports medicine.
67
I know the streak is there. I also know, though, that we have more talent on this team than our team that was 6-6 two seasons ago. We have more depth at all positions. I realize that the team still has to prove that on the field.'
Steve Isham
"I'm going to look at them a lot more this Saturday," Valesente said of Hooks and Hatchett. "They could give us a lift."
senior guard
The lack of a running game last week is still is a concern, said offensive coordinator Gary Huff. He said the backs ran hard against Kent State. He said he was disappointed, though, because the veteran Kansas offensive line hadn't been aggressive enough.
A healthy Bob Pieper would help cure some of the offensive line's woes, Valesente said.
Bott said Pieper, a 6-foot-5 and 285 pound senior tackle, would be able to play tomorrow. Pieper had started 23 straight games at tackle before missing last season because of a broken foot. This season he was sidelined with a knee sprain and missed the Jayhawks' first two games.
In an attempt to shore up the ground game, Kansas will use a two tight end formation during the game to get extra blocking. Senior Brad Wedel, who moved to this week, and sophomore John Baker will be the primary tight ends used in this set.
its running game to only 134 yards. Tech lost the game 14-13.
In Tech's first game at Baylor, their defense was equally impressive, giving up only two touchdowns in a 14-3 loss. Valesenko said that kind of team Louisiana tech would have
"I'm sure they'll be fast and aggressive," he said. "They're capable of beating anything."
Valesente said he wouldn't put too much emphasis on how Louisiana Tech would play
"I'm more concerned about us than what they are going to do," he said. "I'm looking for discipline and intensity from us. It is critical for our players to become more excited about playing football for the University of Kansas."
Some Jayhawk players won't be in action tomorrow because of injuries — junior cornerback Johnny Granderson with torn knee ligaments; senior punt snapper Rob Poster with a concussion; and freshman Autreineth with an ankle sprain. Grandemin and Autemeith had been on the second team last week before their injuries.
Cross country meet will provide big test for women's team
By MIKE CONSIDINE
Staff writer
Susan MacLean and her Kansas women's cross country teammates face their first big test tomorrow in the Illinois Invitational.
The Jayhawks have finished second in each of their first two invitations but have not run against high-caliber competition. Teams that at Illinois include Nebraska, Northweston, Purdue and the host school.
"A lot depends on positioning in the first mile," Coach Chiff Rovello said. "Some of our girls are not used to big meets where they have to go out, from the start. If we can handle that well, we should finish fairly high."
MacLean said, "I heard the course was flat and, with the good competition, it should pull me through for a walk. I hope the team is pulled through, too."
MacLan finished fourth at the Husker Invitational and second at last week's Jayhawk Invitational. The fourth-best hightest ever by a Kansas freshman.
"Last weekend I had to take the lead," MacLean said. "This weekend I know I'll have people ahead of me. That'll be a help, I think."
The Fergus, Ontario, native said she had started too quickly because of nerves and because she was diddled up. She but more hilly Canadian courses.
MacLean recruited Kansas rather than the other way around. She considered Dartmouth, but couldn't afford tuition. So MacLean, who plans a career in sports medicine, shopping for colleges that had medical schools and also offered track
cal schools and also offered track.
Ravello offered a scholarship with
their name.
MacLean said she chose Kansas to be home the campus reminded her of her.
"I was really surprised," she said. "I expected it to be flat. My friends think it's all cornfields."
MacLean also felt at home because Rovello's training methods were like those of her high school coach, Allen Keele. Last year, coached by Keele and Frank Corning, MacLean led Central Wellington District High School to the provincial championship.
"It wasn't a question of whether she could run," Roveto said. "But half-milers generally don't put forth the effort to become good cross country runners."
MacLean's early success at KU was surprising because she was billed as an 800- and 1,500-meter runner.
The Illinois Invitational should give an accurate reading of the team's performance.
"I can't wait to get there and go," senior Trisha Mangan said. "I think everyone's got the feeling that this is the race. We're all ready to run."
The men's team will send a partial squad to the Cavalier Cup Invitational at Johnson County Community College.
Coach Bob Timmons said the meet will help determine the fourth team to qualify.
"It gives us a chance to get a good look at the rest of the athletes and see who ought to be filling in," Timmons said.
Jayhawks trounce Cloud Co.
By DARRIN STINEMAN
Christmas has come early for the Kansas baseball team.
The Jayhawks took advantage of endless mises made by Cloud County Community College last week at Thunderbirds 38-at 148qley Field.
"The amount of runs was deceiving," said Kansas coach Dave Bingham.
Despite that fact, the evening was by no means a waste of time for the Jayhawks. The team has been struggling offensively this fall, but Bingham said he saw some improvement in the victory.
“At times tonight, we really found ourselves,” he said. “It’s something we’re still working on. I think it was a good night for us.”
It was definitely a good night for sophomore third baseman Jeff Spencer, who had three hits in five at-bats with a home run and four runs batted in. Junior catcher Justin Fischer hitting with three hits in four at-bats, including a home run and a long double to center field.
Spencer's homer came with two on and two men out in the final inning. When the ball descended into the trees in left-center field, the Kansas dugout let out a roar as if it was a game-winning hit.
KANS
In a way, it was. Bingham said the team went into the bottom half of the inning pretending they were two runs behind to simulate a game situation. When a team is leading by more than 20 runs, it may have to get a little imaginative.
Fred Sadowski/KANSAN
KU pitcher Brad Hinkle delivers a pitch against Cloud County Community College. KU beat Cloud County 35-8 in a15-inning game yesterday at Quigley Field.
Bingham said Cloud County was the weakest team Kansas has faced this year, and "I'd just as soon spot all those clubs four
runs and see if we can come back.
Winning is an attitude. If you
believe you can win, you've got a
chance to win."
Kansas again played a 15-inning
Volleyball team heads to Iowa State for second conference encounter
By ROBERT WHITMAN Staff writer
When the Kansas volleyball team lost three home matches last weekend, coach Frankie Albizt said she wasn't sure if the队 was ready for its Big Eight Conference matches.
Staff writer
But the next conference match is tomorrow, ready or not. The Jayhawks, 4-7, will travel to Ames, Iowa, to play Iowa State in a 7 p.m. contest and their second conference match of the season.
The first conference match was a three-game thrashin' in Allen Field House at the hands of nationally ranked Nebraska. That match started a five-match loss streak for Kansas. The latest loss was Tuesday against Central Missouri State, the
The Jayhawks will also playNorthern Iowa at 1 p.m. Sunday in Cedar Park.
The point of playing a tough non-conference schedule is to harden the Jayhaws for the Big Eight matches, she said.
"I hear they're doing really well," she said. "Iowa State is always on their home floor, no matter how good they are. They have a rowdy crowd and went five games with last year and the last one was really close."
"It's a little early for us, but there's nothing we can do." Albiz said. "We played a little better against Central Missouri State."
No. 1 rated team in NCAA Division II.
In fact, all the games were close. The Cyclones won the match 12-15,
15-11, 15-11, 14-16, 14-16
But Albizt said Iowa State should give the Jayhawks a tough match.
The conference matches are
important because the Big Eight tournament seedings are based on the record of head-to-head matches between conference schools. Since seven schools in the Big Eight have volleyball teams, the team with the best record gets a bye in the first round of the conference tournament. Oklahoma State does not have a volleyball program.
It is most likely that Nebraska, the only nationally ranked team in the Big Eight, will be seeded number one. The national championship fight is for the remaining six spots.
The teams that finish fourth or fifth will play each other in the conference tournament to see who plays Nebraska in the semifinals.
Kansas was third in the conference's regular season with a 5-5 record, but had to defeat Oklahoma in Norman in five games to do so.
Talks to end NFL strike stall; both sides report frustration
The Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA — Talks aimed at ending the NFL strike stalled yesterday with two key management negotiators heading home, the weekend's games wiped out and the two sides as far apart as ever on free agency.
The owners' chief negotiator said that six to eight weeks of hard bargaining remained if the free agency issue was resolved.
On day three at the picket lines, confrontations continued as players at three camps tossed eggs and beer bottles and smashed windows of vans carrying substitutes to work. One player, Green Bay's Charles Martin, was arrested and charged with disorderly conduct.
Talks recessed yesterday evening and were scheduled to resume at 9:30 a.m. today.
"Neither side moved from their position," he said. "If this is the only issue that is prolonging the strike, then it could be a long one."
Jack Donlan, the owners' negotiator also gave no indication that an end to the deal.
"There's nothing further to talk about," Tex Schramm, president of the Dallas Cowboys, said before the team defeated the Pittsburgh Steelers' president.
Union head Gene 'Upshaw said, "They told us, as far as free agency, that if it was 30 years they would not buy freedom. So we got problems."
The union wants unrestricted free agency for players with more than four years' experience; the owners have offered only to reduce the compensation teams receive when players go elsewhere.
"I think I've been saying for about two weeks we've got from six to eight weeks of real hard bargaining on a lot of issues and I honestly believe that we could get there on those issues except for the issue of free agency." he said.
While it may take as long as two months to finalize a new contract, the strike could be settled immediately if payment in principle is reached. Donaldson said.
"We've got to get to work," he said,
"but that doesn't mean players can't be playing. I love to see them back."
Donlan and Upshaw continued to bargain into last night.
"At this point we have not made any progress," Upshaw said after nearly eight hours of talks. "Management does not expect that they will not compromise at all."
---
12
Friday, September 25, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Sports
Cards win 3-2 in ninth extend lead
The Associated Press
ST. LOUIS – Pinch-hitter Lance Johnson's bases-loaded force play grounder scored Willie McGee with St. Louis' second run of the ninth inning as the Cardinals beat the Pittsburgh Pirates 3-2 last night.
The victory increased St. Louis' lead to $3_{1/2}$ games over the secondplace New York Mets and reduced its magic number to seven for a third divisional title in six years. The Mets lost 5-4 to Montreal in New York. The Expos are four games out.
Dan Driessen grounded a single to right field off reliever Jeff Robinson, 8-9, to start the Cardinals' ninth. Curt Ford pinch ran for Driessen and advanced to third when McGee singled off second baseman Jose Jensen. A third field Jim Gott relieved and Terry Field hit a double to tie the score.
TEXAS
After John Morris was intentionally walked to load the bases, Johnson, who was pinch hitting for Tony Pena, hit a hard smash to third. Darnell Cole's only play was to force Pendleton and McGee scored to give the Cardinals their 49th come-from-behind victory of the year.
KU rugby players Chris Wilburn, left, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore, and Pat Samuel, Prairie Village sophomore, hit the ground during a tackling drill. The rugby teams were practicing at Shenk Complex, 23rd and Iowa streets, yesterday evening.
Bobby Bonilla's two-run pinch double in the seventh inning had given the Pirates a 2-1 lead.
Ricky Horton, 8-3, picked up the victory for St. Louis.
Rugby players to be on all-star team
By a Kansan reporter
Some members of the Kansas Rugby Club will travel to Dallas this weekend to play in a tournament as members of a Heart of America Conference all-star team. Jayhawk
coach Rick Renfro will be in charge of the team.
The tournament will be used to pick players to be on a western territorial team that will play later in the season in a tournament again!
Sports Briefs
After winning its first tournament of the season last week, the Kansas men's golf team will try to keep the victories rolling when it returns from Brook, Ill., for the Butler National Intercollegiate golf tournament.
Butler National up next for golfers
The 54-hole tournament will be played at the Cog Hill Country Club in Oak Brook, and will run from Sept. 27 to 29.
best tournaments in the country without a doubt," said Coach Ross Randall. "It should be a good test for us."
In addition to host Illinois, the field will include Oklahoma, Missouri, Duke, North Carolina, Michigan, Purdue, Arkansas, Tennessee, Virginia, South Carolina, Kent State, Ohio, Louisville, Temple, and Kentucky.
Butler National is one of the
Scoreboard
Baseball
American League
Toronto 4, Detroit 3
Minnesota 4, Texas 0
Milwaukee 7, Boston 6
Chicago 4, Oakland 2
territorial teams from around the country. The winner of the national tournament will then get the chance to play against the winners in Australia, among other places.
National League
Kansas Rugby Club members expected to be at the trials include Paul King, Scott Stites, Tom Kirk, Pete Knelsen and Larry Clark.
National League
St. Louis 5, Pittsburgh 2
Montreal 5, New York 4
Cincinnati 5, San Diego 4
Philadelphia 3, Chicago 2
Atlanta 8, Houston 7
It's going to be really tough to go down there and make the final team, because there are going to be a lot of great players in the tournament." Stites said. "The players who make the team will be great athletes."
The Kansas varsity and club teams will be in action tomorrow against the Kansas City Rugby Football Club. Stites said the depth of college players on each squad would keep both Jiahawk teams competitive, even though some of the members would be going to Dallas.
The games at Shenk Complex, 23rd
and Iowa streets, will begin at 1:30
PM.
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Gay and Lesbian Student Services and Dymnz are co-sponsoring a "Farewell to Summer" bash. Saturday, Sept. 26 at Centennial Park 11:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m. Keg provided by Dymnz BYOFood and sports equipment
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THE AMSTERDAM GUITAR TRIO
Give yourself a Dutch Treat!
A trio of talent is coming to entertain you
Presented by The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Chamber Music Series
8:00 p.m. Thursday, October 1, 1987
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reserved/For reservations call 913/864-3982
Public: $11 & $9; KU & K-12
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1
University Daily Kansan / Friday, September 25, 1987
13
Sports
Women's softball team to travel to Iowa tourney
By a Kansan reporter
The Kansas women's softball team hopes to end a four-game losing streak at this weekend's Iowa State Invitational.
The competition includes Creighton, which won the KU Invitational and the Kansas State, which won the KU Invitational 2. South Carolina State and the host Cyclones.
"Every weekend it's going to get a little bit tougher," coach Kalum Haack said. "As the teams get more games under their belt, that makes them a little bit better. Hopefully it'll do the same for us."
"We've had a little bit more intensity." Haack said. "We've been putting a little more pressure on them not to make mistakes in practice. Hopefully that will pay off."
Soccer team to play KSU
Kansas will play Creighton at 11 a.m. and Southwest Missouri State at 5 p.m. tomorrow. Kansas plays a Big Eight Conference doubleheader Sunday, facing Nebraska at 1 p.m. and the host school at 3 p.m.
The Jayhawks, 2-5, dropped all three games in last weekend's KU Invitational No. 2.
By a Kansan reporter
At least this year, the Kansas men's soccer team didn't schedule its game with Kansas State on the same field. The two school did battle in football.
The Jayhawks, 1-1, will travel to
a game for a 1 p.m.
township.
However, the first-year coach is optimistic after this week's prac-
Coach Glenn Shirtleth said some animosity did exist between the rival schools. But he said that in terms of skill, both players were nearly the same as any other match.
"It's just that losing is a little harder, if you do lose," Shirliffa said. "There might be some additional comments on the field like, 'Hey, I'm on Snob Hill?' or 'How long did it take you to get the cows off the field?'
On Sunday, Shirtliffe and 10 players will go to the Kansas State Penitentiary in Lansing to give a soccer clinic.
Shirlife said about 50 inmates would be at the clinic, which will be conducted from 12:30 to 2:30 n.m.
"We're going up there to teach them the basics," he said. "I'd definitely like to end the clinic with a friend. They don't have any official goals."
the schedule of the Kansas women's soccer club changed suddenly yesterday when Wichita State canceled its match with the Jayhawks, scheduled for tomorrow afternoon.
So instead of traveling to Wichita, Kansas, 0-1, will play its first home match of the season against Benedictine College at 11 a.m. tomorrow at Shenk Complex, 23rd and Iowa streets.
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ON THE PUTMAN MATHEMATICAL
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Members of Delta Sigma Phi on KU campus,
please contact Dave Brayles, 843-3895.
Heading home for the holidays? FLY HEAP.
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Moving Sale-Records, tapes, rock posters, turntable, books, furniture, more. Saturday 8 a.m.-3 p.m. 1044 Connecticut. 841-7083
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PRE-BUSINESS SOPHOMORES
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Organizing campus war games club. Tour naments, players index, games exchange. Invoice. Call Rohl 481-4177 anytime.
Reading for Comprehension and Speed Workshops
Tuesday, October 6, 13 and 29, 7-8:30 p.m. on
materials fee $15. Register, pay by fee $0 on
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121 Strong
SKI KEYSTONE for Thanksgiving, November
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Wommy's Dance, Saturday, September 26th. 8:30
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RSVP required.
Services at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday, Sept. 24
Services at 9:30 a.m.
7:30 p.m.
Friday, Sept. 25
Services at 9:30 a.m.,
Friday, Sept. 25
Services at 9:30 a.m.
7:30 p.m
ENTERTAINMENT
It Your Request is Lawrence's Best and Most Affordable D.J. Sound and Lighting for Any Occasion. 841-1405
Don't blow your cool! Hoodie Gurus from
AUS are con'm to town. Tickets at SUA and
AT&T 899-246-3710.
Jimmy and Timmy. Partners in Rhymes: you've seen them at the Up & Under, see them at your party. Classic to contemporary party music. It’s fun. B41-5551.
Rent a hot tub for your next party. Call Tub-to-go, 841-3691.
No-it's not the "Hard Rock Cafe," the "Aardvark Cafe." Don’t miss it—Friday night from 9 to 11 in the Kansas Room of the Union. Great D.J. from Metropolitan Sound.
ULITMAZE ENTERTAINMENT
ULTIMATE BIOS System For All Occupations
Phil at 842-3398
metropolis
mobile sound
1 DJ Service in Lawrence
Experienced Club & Radio DJ's
Music for all Occasions
DJ Ray Velasquez - 8417083-
FOR RENT
1 bedroom cabbage炉 $225.00 plus utilities. Deposit
no NO PETS. Near campus & downsay 843-317-8
843-317-8
2 bedroom apartment close to campus.
Reasonable, clean. 843-5231.
Cooy little room in coyy little house. Prefer foreign student Japanese-speaking female or German-speaking male. $150. Utilities paid. Call 841-0741
APPLE LAKE APTS. Contemporary studio available at Apple Lane. On KU bus route. Laundry facilities. Ample parking. Water and cable permit per month. Call 843-400 for appointment to meet.
For rent: 2 br apartment off street parking,
new paint. A/C: $260/month. 1-681-8709
An Absolutely Awesome Array of Antiques, collectibles and seat stuff we have: hardback and paper-backed books, children's books, Playbags, Penthouses etc. loads of antique, Indian, and costume jewelry (giltter and silver).
Furnished 2 bedroom apt, some utilities paid, off-street parking, 1 block from University. No pets. 841-550.
Furnished two bedroom apt. one block from the University with off-street parking. No pets.
sintique, antique toys, fine art glass, doll house furniture, miniatures, fiesta, and the best selection of antique furniture in the area. *Quantities Floor-to-Ceiling*. 811 New Hampshire, Open Sat. & Sun. 10-5.
HOUSE FOR RENT Reach large 5 brd/m² house CLOSE TO CAMPUS with LAUNDRY in
Out sale insult. We have several odds & edits that will be offered direct to public at wholesale prices. $24, dresser & mirror 87, odm & waterbars 138, foa & chain 387 & much more. Hurry-supply is limited. Inspect at Mark & Quiant Furniture Warehouse, 10& New Hamp
CANADA
Studio apartment for sublease. Full kitchen and
living area. 1425 Ohio-2 minutes from campus.
great location!
Must lease. Single room apartment $260 per month, low utilities, water paid. Bus route.
1984 Honda Nighthawk S 3,000 miles 2 beimets,
and saddlebags. Must sell. Call 841-6762.
For Sale: King-sized watered complete with hater and liner. Must sell-best offer. Call
For Sale. Bowie concert tickets, October 4 show at Kemper. Very cheap. Call 814-2276 after 5 p.m.
Sunrise Apartment
FOR SALE ALL-SPORTS TICKET! Highest offer takes it. Call in evening. 864-2079.
For Sale: Yakima load warrior New Phil wood sealated huts. Set of McGregor Jack Nicklaus golf clubs. Call Mark 841-399.
SUNRISE PLACE
Garage Sale, all must go or Goodwill it gets. 465
Anarkas, in Barkhead, 8:11, Sat./Sun.
chino, wood bowls, pictures, frames, clothes,
watches, grooming supplies, meat meals,
gurners, curling iron, asthys, etc.
1968 Fender guitar with case, Bill Lawrence blonde pickup, black, good condition, 875, Call 864-2644. 1972 Honda Motorcycle CB3503 Perfect condition. Must sell! Call 864-6418.
Offering luxurious townhomes and apartment living.
Stop by to see our show unit at 9th and Michigan or call . .
841-1287
for an appointment.
SUNFLOWER HOUSE. Rooms available as
members graduate in September. Low rates,
great location. 749-0671, ask for Ann, Deb, or
Tom.
Hamilton 37" x 60" Dial-a-light VR-20 drafting table with parallel. Best offer 942-9724.
Not satisfied with where you're living? Naimath Hall has 1 female space available for immersion. The 1 male space offers individual lease liability, excellent "All-U-Can-Dwell" meals paid, pool access and recognition as one of the best housing options at KU! For more info, call Naimath Hall, Naimath Dnath Drive, 843-8509.
Rent 1/3 of three bedroom townhouse. $100 plus
1/2 utilities. No depot. On bus route. Call Mari
A. A.
Mountain bike. Specialized Hard Rock. Extra
equipment. Two months old. Must sell $350.
Available.
decimal to binary conversion, symbolic matrix model to decimal conversion, ROLL-300, Kullmann, Dept. 1, P.O. Box 1460, Rolla, MN 55708.
FOR SALE
Equalizer w/spectrum analyzer $100, AM/PH
tunnel $495, subwoofer $200 Must sell
$344
**MOTHBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE.**
Monday-Friday 10-5 p.m. 50 p.m., Saturday 10-2 p.m.
512 E. 9th. 749-4961
I. P. PROGRAMS Five easy to use programs for the Hewlett Packard I.C. calculator. Clearly illustrates how to use these examples. Programs include: 2 by 3 matrix, 4 by 4 matrix, 5 by 5 matrix, and more. Send $2 10 (check/mc.) to: wm.auger.com
1983 36 1/2 foot Excel, 5th wheeler. Excellent condition.
Call to see the camper. 845-8017.
1979 400 Yamaha. Very good condition. Must sell
8475 40BQ. Call I:ike.at.364-8141/841.9698
Sublime a two-story house—a home, not a room!
Perfect for 2. Call days: 641-5797.
MUST SELL 71 Huawei Passport, Only 1,160
price. free helmet & lock 4100 or
buyer number 842-5634
Naimith contracts for sale. Will pay $160 security deposit. Contact Frank at 749-2338.
$ uOEUT0 12 SPEED TOUURING BIKE
CATA ONLY USET PUMP & BAR BAG
CAT1 ONLY USET PUMP &
TXS receiver. $200. 195 Bradley GT, $200.
bakejo. $200, dorm carpet I, 15-speed bike I, $200.
Sale: sofa sleeper and 16-speed at 739
Mississippi Miller Furniture
Massachusetts, Müller Furniture.
Susukk 804E, great condition
Must sell soon.
Racing bike biket 1867 Biancio 59 cm, $400. Rows in bikes in excellent condition. Cbk 843-1573
Turntable, CD player, amp, tuner, equalizer.
748-9023.
TREK 125 model 600 23" frame-$26, in storage for last year. Wool rug-maroon, 6/12 x 8/12, excellent shape-$25, 749-3668 after 2.9 p.m. 1/97-1/98 (Perry)
vaccums - save big money. Reconditioned with 3 months guarantee. Prices start at $14.96. Lawrence Vacuum & Sewing Center, 916 Mass., 843-1297.
AUTO SALES
1974 Pontiac Satri wagon. Air, cruise, tilt
AM/FM cassette stereo. Runs great. 843-1736.
$700.
1974 T16 New motor, new paint, in Shawnee.
1-631-664-31
Our outer convex convex new paint, in
paint color 1069. Complete restoration. $425.00 Call Dave at
518-735-2211.
1800 Chevrolet Monza; very clean, A/C/AM/FM
684-573-2000; $1500 best offer
884-573-2000
1981 Old Omega - good condition. AC, stereo,
cruise, and more. Price negotiation. Call 749-1427.
70 VW Beetle; excellent condition. No rust, heat
and moisture. White, NW Lawrence. $750
749-1877.
ORDER NEW 1988 CARS--TRUCKS-
OVER OVER COST DELBERT D
HISPANICHUM 8034-5499
CARS SELL for $15 (average) also jeep,
SUV, truck, vehicle available - 600-600-6007
for details.
'98 Honda Civic; runs, needs engine and
call. 81-794-8224 between 4 p.m. and 7 p.m.
X1/3 X1/3 1984 Fun sports car $5-speed,
leather interior, power window
leather interior, power window, NEW stereo,
amplifier, tires and more. Looks great! Must
sell. 31K, $600. 81-469 weekdays. 81-474 weeks.
Tune up your import car, $35. Parts and labor included, satisfaction guaranteed. Call Aaron, 841-4629.
VOLNO. 1982 244 DL, must sell-moving, low mileage. Excellent condition. 943-7445 after 5 p.m.
Emergency Lost backpack with Biology books
Akron, NY. Call 644-6417 before trying to leave. Aik.
Ask for phone number.
LOST-FOUND
16-hour telemarketing Monday, Thursday 9-4 and Saturday nights. Flexible schedule. Lexington location-carpool from Lawrence available. For interview, call Mr. Lacy at 748-4924.
FOUND: Set of keys on rattles outside Haworth Hall on Thursday night. To claim, come to 119
Need extra money? Part-time work next three months. Big profit potential for right person. Meet in the International room in the Kansas Union Sunday, September 7th at 1 p.m.
LOST: Black leather jacket. Heavy sentimental value. Inscr.皱纹羊绒衫 814-9609
10-60 weekly W&P mailing catalogs Rush fish
10-50 weekly W&P mailing catalogs Brownbird
Wildbay Blvd, B20. Dept, 228. Q, Beverly Hills, CA
Emms Alumini Center is accepting employment applications for waiters, waitresses, bartenders, shift workers able to work day and weekend in the office department. Applicant in person 8-5, 16:06 EOC.
Apartment Leasing Agent, part time position, of
Brown University to 119 Stauffer-Final Halt, Lawrence, KS.
Lost-professor's black attache case-important papers-papered - 749-2069 or Room 2 Bailey.
FREE-TRY to Bajaaya plus commission money, go To Giforida! Go for free, take advantage of promoting the 1 Spring Break trip. If interested, visit www.travel.bajaaye.com / Travel - 860-453-8703 immediately!
Part-time sale会馆 for gift shop. non-smoker: must be available to work 10-13:30, MWF, other hours. Class will be held in person at Arbethus Hallmark, 2nd and Iva. Student Program (Illinois DIIse DIIss)
HELP WANTED
GOVERNMENT JOB. $16,040-$59,230,yr. Now Hiring. Call 953-687-4000 Ext. R-9758 for current federal list.
*part-time days M. 8 a.m. to noon.* Also each Wednesday morning at 10 a.m. basic needs are located at local facilities. Some listing. Dependability and ability. Musl. 643-169 (8:00 a.m. to 10:45 a.m.)
Part-time housecleaners are 8-14 hours. You enjoy cleaning and are meticulous. Buckingham Park is interested in your talents. Must be available over breaks. Call 924-6204
Cook wanted for fraternity. Experience necessary. For more information, call 841-6728.
Country estate owner needs weekend help. Housecleaning and/or outside maintenance work. $375/hr starting pay. Call 841-6829/(days or evenings) and leave name and phone
Wanted: Male personal care attendant for 27-year old male quadriapalate. 2 to 3 mornings a week. Will train the right person. For interview, call 842-7949.
Want your own business? Now is the time to start earning as an Avon representative. Call Julie at 843-9634 evenings.
"Gentile, and "Documenter")-must love Diasse Maintenance of challenge. Work will involve maintenance of office facilities, forts, and research of newly released software packages and enhancements. 20-30 rooms. 400 bour, feeable. Make application. Room 205, Physical Plant Facilities (Operations) before 4:30 p.m.
MORNING EDITION HOST: KANU. The University experience experienced broadcast professionals in host of two international information magazine-product interview and information magazine-producing years' previous professional broadcast exposures required. Applicants must possess a pleasant speaking ability in a credible but informal manoeuvreulate ideas
Vist Work-Clerical work in medical office, must be available some afternoons. Accurate聘务. Secretary/Recipient activities. App- ing 1121 W. 51th, Suite 208. Reference required.
HIRING!
$15,000-$60,000. Government job--your area.
Call (602) 832858.EXT 4055.
Volunteers needed. Volunteers in court is looking
who are court-involved. Call Ann at 817-6700, ex-
cept when you are on vacation.
MISCELLANEOUS
CONFIDENTIAL LOANS made without credit check or prior credit. For information, call 843-4544.
Previous public radio experience is preferred, though not required. Sales competitive. Requires audition tape or air check, resume and three courses. Reqs. Master's from New Director, KANU Radio, Broadcasting Hall, University of Kannan, Lawrence, RSG 606-872-7100; Application deadline is October 7th, 1870. EA/AA
PERSONAL
Are you looking for a wild, steamy night of uninhabited pleasure for two? Call DANNY R., 843-1922. NOW!
Bill-You can run but you can't hide! Okay, we put this personal in for you, now you owe us ice cream! The Airforce Rangers!
Eggy and Shell, can't wait for this weekend!
Love, Boopey and Booiseed
Hey Milton-Norton Loves You!! Thanx for 6 great months!
--bass lessons. Basic Productions, 843-4243
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services.
Overland Park, IL 91401-4928
100
HAPPY BIRTHDAY RARY!
LOVE BRITCHES
J Ajayhawk 'Hew woman!' Really enjoyed dancing you. Let's do it again soon. U R Great-know.
LLM, the last two years have been the best in my
trip. 'The Fleet' Don't let Him Steal Your Heart
'Away'
Michael J., Happy Anniversary! It's been the best year of my life! I'm looking forward to a lifetime with you! I love you! I gina!
Mr. Happy, Please, Please, PLEASE!! Jaque
TESS--that mysterious blonde with big brown, eyebrows? Nothing too sentimental, just thanks for being you. Happy Nineteenth. Kate. TOM B. - Have a Sausal Birthday Tomorrow.
Happy 25th Scotty!
1973
Love, Silly Goose
BUS.PERSONAL
To the gorgeous blonde who caught my eye while walking by with her parents at the game Saturday. Would like to meet you. C: 840-7790
Bike Workshops-Our mechanic will teach you how to change flats, true wheels, maintain brakes and tires. Come early for $5 each. $ each. Saturday, 10 a.m., begins September 19. Sunflower, 804 Massachusetts;
75% AFRICAN
OFFER
ADORNED
for unusual jewelry
5 E. 7th
842-137-
HEADACH, BACKACH, ARM PAIN, LEG PAINT & student and most insurance accepted. For complete quality therapeutic call Dr. Mark Johns 943-878-3878
--bass lessons. Basic Productions, 843-4243
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services.
Overland Park, IL 91401-4928
100% COTTON SWEATERS
We are proud to offer
superior quality
its long tradition of
supernumeric quality
875-852-8500
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-821. Confidental help/free pregnancy testing
**STUDENTS:** Order your "school" T-shirts at all schools at kU represented. Look for PNSA table outside Wescot, 10,30-2, September 23, 24, and October 1.
DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
844 MASSACHUSETTS
913-749-4211
ALL-AMERICAN COTTONS
boat house row
732 Mass
843-0611
11-5:30 Mon.-Sat
8:00 p.m. Thu.
11-4 Sunday
**SRI FREE AT VAIL/BAER CREATE** 14-day packages, from $99 per person (include cocktail and do free skiing. Add extra nights, just $18.50 per person. Call 4-802-6755/4755!)
LAWRENCE'S
FINEST
SELECTION OF
CORPED MUSIC
Ski Winter Park, $190. Thanksgiving trip leaves
Thursday night on sleeper bus. Stay in Snow
Blazes condominium 2 nights. Also, 3 days
lift and lift tickets. For information, call
843-115-8.
PENNYLANE
CROSSETTS • COMPUT DISCS • INCORDS • VIDEOs
The
Ec.
Shop
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
Sunflower Mt. bike Workshop- Learn how to repair & adjust your Mt. bike- Thursday evenings, 8: 6 p.m., begins September 17, 45, 80 Massachusetts, Lawrence, 834-5000.
Kingston MP
Kingston Printing
Copying Needs!
Resumes - Cover Letters - Thesis -
Stored on a disk for fast/easy
Margaret. Printed on a Laserwriter - every copy an original!
Mastercard & Visa Accepted!
North
219 Street
Lant Nuur Park
New York
220 Street
THE ETC SHOP is open Sunday from 11-4. New shipment of cotton sweaters 732 Massachusetts.
SERVICES OFFERED
COMPUTER CONSULTING *Tutoring and programming for elementary computer science courses.* engineering, projects and other works engineering, projects for individuals and groups Call 841-579-0326
Capture that golden tan with a beowolf portrait from Photos Plus. Call Mike or Gracie at 749-3706 - evenings or weekends.
"CRIMSON SUN PHOTO" is looking for young women interested in developing a modeling portfolio. 15% over cost. Call 841-6939
Graystone Athletic Club
Grayson Athletic C.
Special Student Membership
Racquetball, Tanning
Exercise Equipment
2500 W. 6th Street 841-7230
DRIVER EDUCATION offered through Midwest
DRIVER EDUCATION offered through Midwest
drivers' license attainable, transportation
services, driver training.
GRAF/X: Scientific and statistical illustration;
maps, drawings, slides, editing aid, also water-
color/acrylic. Phone 841.263.263.
Is "parlez-vous" Greek to you? French-English bilingual clears the confusion! Quality tutoring. 842-3596
Do you need a tutor in math? Then call 843-9554 after 6 p.m.
JAM FAVORS for all your party favor needs.
Hats, shirts, pads, glasses. If you have a匀m que favor idea, call us and we'll find it for you.
843-8700
KIM+ ALTERATIONS-QUICK SERVICE Suites
2nd Floor West 58th St. 842-1031 KIM+ FIRST Floor West 21st Floor St. 842-1031 Behind Floor KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Eikuchure
services. PASSBOOK $6.00. Art & Design Building.
Halloween is Coming!
Over 150 items to rent-
other unique items to buy
including爪音wag and feather masks.
Barb's Vintage Rose
Barb's Vintage rose
927 Mass. M-5 10:30-5:30 Th. @l.B 841-2451
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $/hr; 843-9032
(p.m.).
MUSIC* **Music** *MUSIC***Music** *MUSIC*
R Red House Audio-Mobile Party Music, & track
P. A. and Lights, Maximum Audio Wizard.
Call Record 749-1275.
D1 now in Lawrence: inexpensive stck demos.
D3 sound and light company, private guitar and bass lessons. Basic Productions, 843-8243
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing. Judy: 872-7945 or Lisa: 841-1915
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
AABsolutely Fast Typing Is Back! Dependable.
Reasonable Rates, Late Night Typing Available.
Kathy 814-7400 drive 749-6240 avail
cessing on the quality printer. 843-7641.
2 Smart Word Processing. Spelling Corrected.
3 Web Design.
TYPING
24 hour typing service. Professional word processing on letter quality printer. 843.7643.
2 Smart Word Processing. Spelling Correction.
Seamstress: All ladies' dresses can be made in town. You choose your favorite designs or styles from the latest fashion magazines, I will make them for you. Call Sue, S18-3449.
A-1 reliable professional typing: Term papers, Theses, Resumes, etc. Reasonable IBM Electronic Typewriter 942.3246
ACT NOW; PAPERS--THESES--RESUMES.
WRITING LIFELINE 841,369.
1 plus Typing, Letters, resume, thesis, law typing,
etc. 13 years experience. Call Terry 842-6754
or 843-2671 evenings and weekends.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS
MOMMY'S TYPING is back from Australia !!
842-3378 before 9 pm. please.
For professional typing/word processing, call Myra. 841-4000. Fall special $1.20/page, double-space, pica.
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing,
Donna's Training, application, resume applications, mailing list Letter quality, and more.
KU SECRETARY, Typing and word processing,
fastest, affordable, fast. Spelling corrected,
letter quality. Pickup on campus. Monica
8414. Evenings-weekends
PROFESSIONAL TYPING 842-4868 before 10 p.m.
Quality Typing includes excellent spelling, punctuation, grammar, editing. Fast reliable service. Pickup/delivery available. 843-0247
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing, manuscripts, resumes, theses, letter quality printing, etc. 843-5662
Quality typing or word processing for theses, dissertations, resumes, term papers, applications. Professional editing, composition available. Have M.S. Degree.
WRIGHT'S TYPING SERVICE: Term papers,
theses, miscellaneous. IBM Selectric. Spelling
tests.
theWORDOCTORS. Resumes, papers, theses,
dissertations, commercial. 843-3147
BOSTON TICKETS NEEDED (2) Any row. Will pay handsome! Call Brett -845-1207.
- Policy
WANTED
Female upperclassman to share 2 hr
apartment at Harvard Sq. $300/month
1 electricity and phone Pool, on KU bus route
designated by the university.
Female roommate wanted. $155 per month plus 1/3 utilities. No deposit needed. Trailridge. 841-9288.
Male or female grad student, or mature undergrad to share a new 2 br apartment 2 blocks from the Union. $180 plus 1/2 utilities. Call 841-4705.
Roommate needed for townhouse at 6th and
4th floor. Private room $175 and 1/2 utilities
749-0192
Roommate wanted for 2 bedroom apartment
Furnished but beded.
Rent negotiated and 1/2
room.
U2 I'm going with your extra tickets (Please)
841-3856
Classified Information Mail-In Form
Words set in Bold Face count as 3 words
Words set in ALL CARDS BOLD FACE
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
Words set in BOLD format count as 3 words
Word sets in ALE CRPS or BOLD FACE count as 3 words.
Classified rates are based on consecutive day insertions only.
No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect
insertion of any advertisement.
No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising.
Blind box ads-please add $4 00 service charge.
Tear sheets are NOT provided for classified advertisements. Found ads are free for three days, no more than 15 words.
Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Daily Kansas.
Deadline is on Monday at 4:00pm 2 days prior to publication.
001 announcements 300 for sale 500 help wanted
001 entertainment 310 auto sales 700 personal
001 finance 310 auto sales 900 personal
001 gaming 310 auto sales 900 personal
Classified Mail Order Form
Address_
(phone number published only if included below)
Please print your ad one word per box:
ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Date ad begins in ___ Make checks payable to:
Total days in paper University Daily Kansas
Amount paid 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Classification Lawrence. KS 66045
---
14
Friday, September 25, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
K. U. STUDENTS & FACULTY Welcome To Lawrence Rent One Video Tape Get One FREE! WITH COUPON BELOW! AND TO
Eagle
KU
Dillons FOOD STORES
Prices Effective Thru Sept.29,1987.
Rent One Video Tape Get One FREE! WITH COUPON BELOW!
PULLMAN
WRITE AMOUNT HERE
Ripple Potato Chips beese Putis
Dillon Coupon
Rent One Tape
Get One
WRITE AMOUNT HERE
Limit 1 Tape With This Coupon.
Limit One Coupon Per Customer.
Coupon Good Thru Sept. 29, 1987.
Coupon Not Included In Double
Coupon Program.
FREE! WITH THIS COUPON
Dillon Potato Chips & Snacks
8 oz. Plain, Rippled, BAR-B-Q, Sour Cream, No Salt, 7.5 oz. Thick Cut, 8 oz. Baked Cheese Puffs, Fried Cheese Krisps, Nacho Flavored Tortilla Chips or 10 oz. Corn Chips
Rent One Tape Get One FREE! WITH THIS COUPON
FREE!
With Coupon
Dillon Coupon
Dillon Potato Chips & Snacks
8 oz. Plain, Rippled, Bar-B-Q, Sour Cream, No Salt. 7.5 oz. Thick Cut.
8 oz. Baked Cheese Puffs, Fried Cheese Krisps. 8 oz. Nacho Flavored Tortilla
Chips or 10 oz. Corn Chips.
Dillon Coupon—
Dillon Potato Chips & Snacks
8 oz. Plain, Rippled, Bar-B-Q, Sour Cream. No Salt, 7.5 oz. Thick Cul.
8 oz. Baked Cheese Puffs, Fried Cheese Krisps. 8 oz. Nacho Flavored Tortilla
Chips or 10 oz. Corn Chips
FREE!
With
This
Coupon
Limil 1 Pkg. With This Coupon.
Limil One Coupon Per Customer.
Coupon Good Thru Sept. 29, 1987.
Coupon Not Included in Double
Coupon Program.
ROCKY TOP
DIET
COLA
Savannah Flavor
ROCKY TOP
COLA
FREE!
Rocky Top Pop
Asst. Flavors 2 Liters 39¢ With Coupon
Rettmans
Limit 2 Bits. With This Coupon
One Coupon Per Customer:
Coupon Not Included in Double
Coupon Program.
-Dillon Coupon-
Rocky Top Pop
Assorted Flavors 2 Liter
Assorted Flavors, 2 Liter
Coors
Miller
Iron Lager
The Champagne of Beers
Budweiser
LIGHT
American Brewing Co.
12 Pack Coors, Coors Light, Coors Extra Gold, Budweiser, Bud Light, Miller High Lite, Miller Lite, Miller Genuine Draft, 15 Pack Stroh or Stroh Light $100 OFF With Coupon
39¢
With This Coupon
—Dillon Coupon—
12 Pack Coors, Coors Light, Coors Extra
Gold, Budweiser, Bud Light, Miller High Life,
Miller Lite, Miller Genuine Draft, 15 Pack
Stroh or Stroh Light
$100 OFF With
This Coupon
Limit 1 Pack With This Coupon.
Limit One Coupon Per Customer.
Coupon Good Thru Sept. 29, 1987.
Coupon Not Included In Double
Coupon Program.
$100 OFF With This Coupon
100
Any 12" Deli Pizza $100 OFF With Coupon
Patterson
Limit 1 Pizza With This Coupon.
Limit One Coupon Per Customer.
Coupon Good Thru Sept. 29, 1811
Coupon Not Included in Double
Coupon Program
—Dillon Coupon—
12" Deli Pizza
$100 OFF
Limit 1 Pizza With This Coupon.
Limit One Coupon Per Customer.
Coupon Good Thru Sept. 28, 1987.
Coupon Not Included In Double
Coupon Program
With
This
Coupon
One
One Whole 8 Piece Golden Fried Chicken or One Whole WondeRoast Chicken $100 OFF With Coupon
—Dillon Coupon—
One Whole 8 Piece Golden Fried
Chicken or One Whole WondeRoast Chicken
Dillon Coupon—
One Whole 8 Piece Golden Fried
Chicken or One Whole WondeRoast Chicken
$100 OFF
Limit 1 Chicken With This Coupon.
Limit One Coupon Per Customer.
Coupon Good Thru Sept. 29, 1987.
Coupon Not Included in Double
Coupon Program.
With
This
Coupon
$100
$100 OFF With This Coupon
Limit 1 Chicken With This Coupon.
Limit One Coupon Per Customer.
Coupon Good Thru Sept. 29, 1987.
Coupon Not Included in Double Coupon Program.
---
Del Monte Golden Ripe Bananas 19c Lb. With Coupon
Dillon Coupon— Golden Ripe Bananas
Rollins
Dillon Coupon—
Golden Ripe Bananas
Del Monte
19¢
With This
Lb. Coupon
Limit 1 Lb. With This Coupon.
Limit One Coupon Per Customer.
Coupon Good Thru Sept. 29, 1987.
Coupon Not Included In Double
Coupon Program.
With This Coupon
Any 6" Blooming or Foliage Plant or 8" Hanging Basket $100 OFF With Coupon
—Dillon Coupon—
Any 6" Blooming or Foliage Plant or 8" Hanging Basket
$100 OFF
With This Coupon
Limit 1 Plant With This Coupon.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Monday September 28,1987 Vol. 98,No.26
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Figures reflect change
Enrollment fluctuations vary between schools
by MICHAEL MERSCHEL and MARK TILFORD
Staff writers
Although the University of Kansas' total enrollment increased for the fourth straight year, KU's professional schools experienced a wide variety of enrollment change, according to figures released last week.
Some of the changes were delivered out to others were a surprise, official announcement.
Changing job markets, new admissions requirements and other reasons resulted in drops in three schools, increases in two others and generally steady enrollment in the rest.
A lack of professors forced the School of Social Welfare to limit the number of students in some classes, from 734 to 624, on campus from 713 to 624, a 7.2 percent decrease.
Ann Weick, acting dean, said the school had several faculty positions open that it planned to fill by next year. Without the limits brought on by the faculty shortage, Weick said, the school would have continued as a traditional college, caused enrollment to increase 42 percent between 1981 and 1986.
But Weick said that even when the positions were filled next year, the school probably would not expire as the same increases it had in the past.
"We are not prepared for that rate of growth to continue," she said.
The School of Business and the School of Engineering dropped 66 students each.
The drop represented a 6.6 percent decline in business enrollment. But, according to John Tollefson, dean of business, those figures were expected with the school's new competitive admissions policy.
The policy began this fall for students who applied in the spring for admission to the school.
Dave Nibergall/KANS
Enrollment in the school had grown from 807 in 1983 to 1,150 in 1985. Last year's enrollment was 993.
"Clearly our faculty have been overwhelmed," Tollson said. "But rather than complaining, they have been doing their work."
The School of Engineering had a 3.5 percent decline.
Mulinazzi said the problem with varying enrollments came through financing for the school's departments.
"It really doesn't surprise me that we're down a little bit," said Tom Mulinazzi, associate dean of engineering and director of graduate studies. "I think it follows a trend of schools around the nation."
"We have a problem of internal allocation." Mulinazzi said.
"The demand for computer and electrical engineers has been tremendous, while the demand for petroleum chemical engineers has been down."
It is difficult to allocate money to the school's departments according to the number of students wanting to enroll in those departments, he said.
We try to do some reallocation of course throughout the school; Mulnazaft and
For example, introductory courses that can be assigned to any department are assigned to departments with less demand, he said.
The School of Education posted its first enrollment increase in several years, jumping 54 students to 822, a 7 percent increase.
Ed Meyen, dean of education, said the increase was because of public concern about teaching and changes in school policies. He made it more attractive as a career.
THE STREET OF THE RINGER'S CENTER
Top, high school band students crowd the field at Memorial Stadium for a special KU Band Day presentation. Five thousand high school musicians participated. Bottom, Kathlene Schmidt, left, band director at Wathena High School, and Sherry Deaton, the band's bus driver, watch bands clear the field after their halftime performance.
See ENROLLMENT, p. 6, col. 1
KU for Band Day High schools join
Jim Larson/KANSAN
Staff writer
By MICHAEL HORAK
Staff writer
"Score," explained a trumpet player as she lifted her instrument out of its black case, "isn't the number of points we make, it's the music we have to play at half-time."
For about 5,000 people at Saturday's football game, the only score that mattered was the one clipped to the end of their instruments.
W.H.S.
Monday Morning
Many of these musicians, from the more than 75 Kansas and Missouri high school bands that participated in KU Band Day, had never played in front of a crowd as large as that in Memorial Stadium.
As the minutes ticked away, their tension grew.
this many people before.
Few of the band members clapped when KU blocked a punt and scored two points midway through the second half, and no one paid attention when a saxophonist in the middle of the Junction City band rendered a version of his school's fight song.
"I'm nervous, and I'm scared I'll mess up," said Heidi Schowalter, a Halstead clarinetist in the ninth grade. "I've never played for
The scoreboard served an important function for many of the band members who squeezed into the north bowl of the stadium — it let them know how long they had to run. The same fielded the field for the halftime show.
Everyone was waiting for the announcement that came a minute later from a short man with an official-sounding voice.
"Let's suit up, it's time to get going." he said twice.
A metamorphosis took place. Band members pulled uniform jacketts — blue and white, green and purple, red and black — out from under their seats and tapped them over T-shirts and tape sleeves using plastic polyester pants covered blue jeans and khaki shorts.
Glittery, red-feathered cowboy hats, floppy blue berets and fuzzy black hats like those worn by English Parliament guards replaced Royals caps and sun visors.
In only five minutes, the north bowl had become a spectacle of color. The greens were separated from the blues by the reds. The yellows and the purple sat beside
each other
And then a few off-key musicians joined the Junction City saxophone player in warming up for the half-time show.
The next announcement came over the loudspeaker like a command given to bird dogs: "Bands, take your positions."
It took only five minutes for the musicians to comply. They spilled out of the stands like ants escaping from a hole.
"The only thing that goes through your mind now is don't
screw up," said Scott Seirer, a Halstead trombone player.
Then a silence fell over the musicians, and drums from the KU band began to beat. The time on the scoreboard had ticked down to zero and KU was ahead by 3 points.
But that didn't matter to the band members. The only score that went through their minds before the phrase, "I'm a Jayhawk."
And then about 5,000 musicians began to play.
Automatic tellers moved off campus
Bv IULIE McMAHON
Staff writer
The man at the automated teller machine outside the Kansas Union uttered an expletive and repunched the keys of the machine, but it still wouldn't return his card.
As he stormed off, the next person in line moved forward. That person, Lori Swan, Blue Springs, Mo., freshman, said, "hope it不会 keep my card. This is the first time I've used it, and I don't know what I'm doing."
She studied the instructions, paused some keys and received her money.
three local banks have taken their teller machines off campus.
"That was easy," Swan said.
Automated teller machines are convenient and sometimes frustrating. But some of their convenience has led to problems at the University of Kansas because two of
"We moved ours to Checkers because Checkers doesn't have restricted access," said Ruby Froels. President of Lawrence National Bank.
The teller machine at the Kansas Union was difficult for Lawrence residents to get to because of restricted driving on campus, she said. The teller machine at the Lawrence National Bank has three other teller machines in Lawrence.
Bank officials said that not enough people were using the teller machines to justify leaving them on campus.
the machine had to be changed, said Susan Garlow, marketing officer at Firstbank.
"We would have been required to pay several thousand dollars to modify the machine or buy a new one," she said. "Analysis of the teller message couldn't justify the money; there wasn't enough volume of activity."
Firstbank of Lawrence had a teller machine at the Burge Union until Jan. 30. But the bank's teller machine system was modified, and
She said the bank notified its customers of the change and received two payments.
"但 those that got upset, got really upset," Garlow said. "For students and faculty, it just happened to be part of their daily routine."
Garlow said the bank told unhappy customers that they could use their cards at FirstBank's two remaining branches. The Bank is the first National Bank of Lawrence's
four teller machines, which include one at the Kansas Union, because both banks use the Plus System. The teller machine at the Kansas Union is the only remaining machine on campus.
The Plus System is an international system that allows a bank customer to complete a transaction on another bank's teller machines if they have the Plus System. It patches the transaction directly to the customer's bank.
Nursing numbers decline
By AMBER STENGER
Staff writer
Enrollment at the College of Health Sciences at the University of Kansas Medical Center decreased slightly this year, with the School of Nursing accounting for most of the decrease.
Total enrollment decreased from 2,597 last fall to 2,586 this year. In the school of nursing, enrollment fell from 2,641 this year to 231 students this year.
Within the nursing school, the number of people entering the program shows the greatest decrease. Rita Clifford, assistant dean and director of student affairs of the school of nursing, said the school had received enough applications to fill its first-year class of 150 although only 141 people were accepted. However, she said she was concerned about the decrease in the number of applications.
In the fall of 1984, 260 people applied to the school and 160 were accepted. The class enrollment was limited. This fall 201 people applied.
Clifford said several factors had led to the decrease in applications. Those include increasing career opportunities for women, increasing costs for nurse education and society, that nursing is a woman's occupation.
The medical degree program also had a decrease, but its decrease was decided by the state. The Kansas Board of Regents and the College of Medicine set the first-year class to 175 students. Two years ago, the class size was 200.
However, Clifford said enrollment probably would increase next year because a nationwide nursing shortage has been receiving much publicity.
Una Creditor, associate dean for admissions in the school of medicine, said the limit was related to the cost of medical education.
"We feel our resources would better accommodate 175 students," Creditor said. "We still have more applicants than we can accent."
The number of Kansas residents applying to the medical school has decreased. In 1977, 396 Kansas residents and 472 non-residents applied to the school of medicine. This year, 108 residents and 778 non-residents applied.
Walter Gehbach, director of student admissions and records, said the decline in the number of applicants from Kansans concerned him because the majority of the school's students were residents. He said the costs of medical education were keeping people from applying.
This year, 142 residents and 36 non-residents were accepted.
"An individual with a degree in engineering or computer science is in high demand. That person will average, let's say, about $30,000 per year," Gehlibach said. "That person has earned $210,000, while the med student is probably $100,000 in debt. There is more than a quarter of a million dollars difference at that time."
In 1970, medical school tuition was $500 a year. This year, residents pay $5,770 and non-residents pay $11,740 a year.
Gehilbach said the threat of malfunction suits and litigation also was discouraging students from enrolling in medical school.
The Med Center graduate school's enrollment fell by two students. Last year there were 534 students and this year there were 532 students. Since 1983, graduate school enrollment has dropped by 52 students.
Not all schools in the College of Health Sciences had enrollment decreases, however The School of Health Sciences has the largest increase in enrollment.
Dukakis tied to Biden demise
The Associated Press
However, officials of the Dukaix campaign and the New York Times denied the report. The Des Moines would not confirm or deny the report.
NEW YORK — A videotape containing clips of speeches by Sen Joseph Biden and a British labor leader was given to two newspapers by someone connected to the campaign of Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis, Time magazine reported.
The tape showed portions of a speech by Biden that used verbatim quotes from a speech by Labor Party Leader Neil Kinnock. Did not
attribute the words to Kinnock
The resulting furor over the unattributed words, as well as reports of law school plagiarism, led the Delaware senator to withdraw from the Democratic presidential race last week.
The similarity between the speeches by Biden and Kinnock were noted several weeks ago by the Times and the Register.
Time magazine said in its Oct. 5 issue that the Register implied its source was an "attack video." A Registrar member told colleagues the video was supplied by the Dukakis campaign.
Register editor James P. Gannon said yesterday, "I don't have any comment on our sources."
Time magazine also quoted what it called a reliable source as saying that someone connected with Dukan's campaign gave the video to the Times.
The Times denied that the campaign supplied a video. "Nobody spoon-feed us the story," said Craig Bentley, the Times Washington bureau chief.
Paul Tully, Dakakis' political director, told Time magazine that it was not the campaign that provided the tape.
A. M. A. S. M. S. P. T.
Dukakis rips Reagan plan
Gov. Michael Dukakis
The Associated Press
WICHTH — The Reagan administration's actions in Central America are "one of the worst flascos in the history of American foreign policy." Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis said yesterday.
"The junta was breaking the law, doing things in secret and (Schulz) and the Secretary of Defenses didn't know a thing about it." Dukis said.
In a speech at a fund raiser for former Lt. Gov. Tom Docking, Dukakis said the Reagan administration had operated a "junita" in the White House, which is now an administration officials such as Secretary of State George Schulz.
This page has no content.
"That isn't respecting the rule of law, and it isn't respecting the Constitution."
Dukakis was the principal attraction at two receptions yesterday in Wichita intended to retire much of the last $15,000 in debt Docking has left from his unsuccessful campaign for Kansas governor last year.
Docker endorsed Dukakis for the 1988 Democratic presidential nomination, calling Dukakis a leader who was a charakter and executive experience."
Docking and his campaign aides said they hoped to raise between 100,000 and 150,000 people.
2
Monday, September 28, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Soviets, New Yorkers exchange questions during radio talk show
BUFALO, N.Y. — Callers from western New York and all over the Soviet Union swapped questions and answers yesterday on an inter-ethnic talk-in talk show, discussing topics from music to higher education.
country could ask questions that could be answered by callers in the other country.
The two-hour show was broadcast over three upstate New York radio stations. The show used translators so that callers in one
Schroeder to reveal candidacy plans today
Many of the questions from Soviet callers revolved around the kinds of financial assistance available to U.S. citizens from the US. U.S. callers asked about Soviet citizens' individual freedoms.
DENVER — Rep. Patricia Schroeder, D-Colo, is poised for the plunge in the 1988 Democratic presidal fray and will announce her political aims today in her home state.
has philosophical and monetary support.
Schroeder has spent most of the past three months traveling from state to state to determine if she
Schroeder, 47, denied as late as Friday that she had come to a decision about her candidacy. She has promised a hard-hitting, formidable candidacy if she decides to run.
Zaccaro to face trial on extortion charges
NEW YORK — John Zaccaro faces trial this week on influence-pedding charges, the most serious allegations against him to arise in three years of inquiries since his wife, Geraldine Ferraro, ran for vice president.
Zaccaro is accused of trying to
extort a bribe from a cable television company seeking a contract in his borough of Queens in 1881. The case stems from the corruption scandals that have gripped the city, starting with Queens, for 20 months.
Miss America stresses her moral values
PORTLAND, Maine — Kaye Lani Rae Rafko, the newly crowned Miss America, said she wanted to be known as "a professional with moral values."
Speaking to reporters Saturday
at a festival sponsored by a supermarket chain, Rafko, a nurse from Monroe, Mich., admitted that she was not a straight-A student, but added, "I had achievable goals and I worked hard at them."
Iraq demands cease-fire attacks Iranian oil tankers
MANAMA, Bahrain — Iraq said its war jets attacked with missiles four tankers shuttling oil along the Iranian coast in a 20-hour span ending yesterday, as Baghdad kept up pressure on Iran's vulnerable oil lifeline
The attacks coincided with a new warning by Iraq of all-out war if Iran fails to accept a cease-fire demanded by the United Nations.
The Associated Press
Irran replied that it would pursue its holy war against Iraq's secular government until President Saddam Hussein was toppled.
Shipping officials based in the Persian Gulf confirmed the first three Iraqi attacks.
The tankers were identified as being among about 16 that Iran uses to ferry crude oil from the Khrang Island oil terminal at the northern end of the Gulf to safer terminals in the south.
Iran also accused the United States of mistreating 26 Iranian seamen who were repatriated to Teheran yesterday after U.S. helicopter gunnels attacked and disabled their minelayer landing barge in the Gulf
Iran's official Islamic Republic News Agency said that the U.S. Navy kept the captured Iranians bound and imprisoned below decks on U.S. warships, and that the Americans tried to induce the prisoners to defect.
"For political propaganda purposes, the Americans offered to give the crew members political asylum, but they were met with a negative response by the Iranians," said Ali Rabiizadeh, an Iranian navy petty officer.
In Washington, the State Department said that it did not know of any offer of asylum, but all that 21 iranians returned willingly on Saturday along with the bodies of three comrades killed in the U.S. attack
A U.S. Navy demolition队 blew up and sank the 1,662-ton Iran Ajr on top of it before its crew was handed over to Iranian diplomats in neutral Oman.
Women considered for Dole's job
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Reagan's advisers are concentrating increasingly on several women already in key government posts as potential successors to former Transportation Secretary Elizabeth Dole, congressional and administration sources said.
From The Associated Press.
The administration is said to be under pressure to make a selection soon so the department can deal more effectively with a variety of pressuring transportation issues, including continuing turmoil in Congress over how to make airlines provide better service.
the Cabinet post Oct. 1 to join the Republican presidential campaign of her husband, Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole.
Among those most frequently mentioned by congressional and administration sources for the $99,500-a year job are:
Wendy Lee Gramam, 42, an economist and senior official of the Office of Management and Budget. She also is the wife of Sen. Phil R-Texas, co-author of the Gramm-Rudman deficits-reduction legislation
Patricia Goldman, 45, a moderate Republican who is vice chairman of the National Transportation Safety
Board and who among the contenders is considered the most knowledgeable about aviation issues. The NTSB investigates airline and other transportation accidents. She is the widow of former Sen. Charles Goodell. R-N.Y.
■ Martha Hesse, 44, chairman of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, who has championed increased competition in the energy industry and has been a strong advocate of cutting back government regulation. She is a former Chicago computer software consultant, and she was a senior official in the Energy Department.
Dole announced she would leave
New book no eulogy for Casey
The book also describes Casey as an action-oriented man who was "struck by the overall passivity of the president." And the book says "he never had, although a student of President Reagan, nor 'figured him out.'"
WASHINGTON — The late CIA Director William J. Casey turned to the Saudi Arabian government for money and help when it became clear that his own effort to create a secret anti-terrorist force was not going to work, according to excerpts published yesterday from a forthcoming book by Bob Woodward of the Washington Post.
Woodward, in excerpts published in the Post, also provides details of what he says was Casey's deathbed confession of his knowledge of the diversion of Iran arms profits to the Nicaraguan contras.
The Associated Press
Gasey's impatience with the CIA reached a peak in 1983, when the administration was anxious to assert itself in the Middle East after terrorists had bombed U.S. facilities in Beirut, the book said.
Casey's widow, Sophia, took issue yesterday with the depiction of Casey's views of Reagan and Woodward's contention that he eluded security at the hospital and met with the dying Casey. The Post said in a statement that Woodward stands by the story.
Woodward wrote, "After four years of frustration with his agency and Congress, Casey had reached the breaking point. . . ."
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3
Local Briefs
Appeals court to hear cases at law school
The 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals begins three days of cases at 9 a.m. today at the KU School of Law.
Today through Wednesday, several three-judge panels will hear cases that are part of their regular docket. The entire court will sit at 2:30 p.m. Wednesday to be heard in Kansas man who contends his defense from fire marshal to fire chief violated his right of free speech.
The court, which usually meets in Denver, occasionally meets in other places in its jurisdiction, which covers Kansas, Colorado, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Utah and Wyoming, said Al Johnson, associate dean of law. The court was brought to the University of Kansas by arrangement with Michael Davis, dean of law, Johnson said.
Among the judges are James Logan, former KU dean of law, and Deanell Tacha, former vice chancellor for academic affairs.
The hearings will be at the Frank L. Snell courtroom in Green HIll. Sessions begin each day at 9 a.m. to open to the public as space permits.
Ex-Justice to speak about Constitution
Former U.S. Supreme Court justice Arthur Goldwell will speak on "Constitutional Faith," his reflections on the Constitution on its bicentennial, at 4 p.m. Wednesday at 104 Green Hall.
At 12:30 p.m. Wednesday, Goldberg will take part in a mock case with eight KU law students acting as associate judges. Other KU law students will present arguments on a prayer-in-schools case that the U.S. Supreme Court will hear this year.
KU Democrats plan to poll students
The KU Democrats will conduct a straw poll tomorrow and Wednesday to measure student support of Democratic candidates vying for the party's nomination in the 1983 presidential race. The poll will be from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Wescoe Hall.
Results will be announced at a meeting of the KU Democrats at 7 p.m. Wednesday at the Kansas Room in the Union.
Nominations open for teaching award
The Chancellors Club is accepting nominations for the 1987 Chancellors Club Career Teaching Award. The award and $5,000 are given to a faculty member who has contributed to the University of Kansas for 15 years or longer.
Students, faculty, staff and alumni are invited to send nominations by Oct. 12 to the office of academic affairs, 129强 Hall. Where appropriate, a nomination must be submitted to the columna vita, supporting comments and departmental and school endorsements.
Correction
Because of incorrect information supplied to the Kansan, Toru Haga's name was misspelled in Friday's calendar. Haga, from the University of Tokyo, will speak at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
1987
From staff and wire reports.
Kansas City Times' editorial cartoonist Lee Judge spoke Friday to about 90 people at Stauffer-Flint Hall.
POLICE SUPERVISOR
SILVANO
Cartoons by Judge controversial intent
By MICHAEL MERSCHEL
Lee Judge admits that his cartoons aren't usually too friendly. But Friday, the Kansas City team kept his crowd laughing anyway.
Staff writer
Judge explained that he made his cartoons, which attack everyone from Ronald Reagan to Ted Kennedy and everything from religion to his own newspaper, as controversial as he could.
"There's a real tendency right now in journalism to go towards just kind of bland and be nice and don't make anybody upset," he said. "This is not a theory I favor. I think that it kind of turns people off eventually. In fact, it thinks it's good business to be controversial."
Judge, cartoonist for the Times since 1981, lectured, cracked jokes and showed slides of his cartoons to 30 people at Stauffer-Flint Hall.
"It's just hard to help and convince editors and publishers to just suck it up for six months and find out that it's true."
Judge's fondness for controversy has caused him problems in the past.
After dropping out of college and working as a mannequin-dresser and an artist for an advertising agency, Judge started drawing editorial cartoons part-time in 1976.
In 1978, he was hired as a fulltime cartoonist by the San Diego Union. Because the paper's editors
and publisher were conservative and Judge's favorite targets were conservatives, Judge was fired in 1980, he said.
Eleven months later, Judge was hired by the Times. He still can't be as free with his cartoons as he would like, he said, although he probably has more autonomy than most cartoonists.
"I don't know of any newspaper anywhere that really, really believes in the First Amendment," he said. "I mean, we pay lip service and believe all of belief in it. We do out after it ends, wife, and you'll find out how quickly the First Amendment goes down the tubes."
During the speech, Judge also showed cartoons that never made it into print, such as one drawn after the death of Kentucky Fried Cheese blower Col. Sanders, showing a foot kicking a bucket of chicken.
"Editors exist to edit," he said. "They're going to edit, so give them something to edit."
Despite occasional disagreements with his editor and a $27 million lawsuit over one of his cartoons, Judge plans to stay in court. Though he's been approached by larger papers, he said after the speech
"I have absolutely no desire to live in those places," he said.
Judge's appearance was arranged by the KU chapter of the Society for Professional Journalists, Sigma Delta Chi.
Task force to focus on AIDS education
"I think that first we should dispel the myths more than anything," said Kathryn Anderson, chairman of the cultural affairs committee, during the task force's first meeting last week.
The Student Senate Task Force on AIDS has decided that it will concentrate on educating KU students about the disease before focusing on the formation of campus AIDS policies.
The nine-member task force was created in August by the Student Senate Executive Committee and was allocated about $700 for things such as videotapes and duplicating paper.
inform students about the disease.
Task force, chairman Michael Foubert said the group would try through the use of mail, videotapes, advertisements and speakers to
By a Kansan reporter
Foubert said the task force was concentrating on AIDS education programs and would be planning to form another task force that would address policy issues.
Several task force members plan to attend a workshop this semester designed to train volunteers how to work with AIDS victims.
Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, said the task force probably would consider such issues as privacy, restrictions on staff and faculty members with active cases of AIDS and the protection of students, staff and faculty with active cases of AIDS.
Ramaley said the task force also would launch an educational program.
She said the task force probably would consist of two main committees — a University-wide committee and a Lawrence campus committee.
KU fund raising starts in spring
By JULIE McMAHON Staff writer
Staff writer
Corporate money will be up for grabs among three Kansas state universities during upcoming fund-raising events, officials at the universities say.
The University of Kansas and Wichita State University will begin $100 million fund-raising drives in the next year, and Kansas State University has begun planning a major fund-raising drive.
Todd Seymour, president of the Kansas University Endowment Association, said there probably would be little conflict between universities, but there always would be some competition.
Each university will ask for donations from its own alumni and from corporations around the United States. The universities won't be competing for alumni money, but they will compete for corporate donations, university officials said recently.
But the competition won't be too intense, he said.
"Basically everyone knows both schools (KU and Wichita State) have campaigns. Seymour said, "People want an idea where they want to donate."
Seymour said corporations donated to the university program that would benefit them most. Competition arises when corporations must decide which university has the program that best serves their needs.
Wichita State's drive, called Commitment to Excellence, will begin Oct. 10. KU's campaign, called Cam-State, will start next spring. KState's team is not organized yet and should begin in a year or a year and a half.
"Corporations will support the Un. whenever they have an interest in it."
our doing something better,' Seymour said.
Rusty Andrews, director of communication at K-State, said different corporations had different interests.
For example, because the petroleum industry isn't doing well right now, petroleum companies might give money to a department or school at the University that could help that industry, Seymour said.
Andrews said K-State first would contact industries that already had a DAC.
"We work to create the best possible match between the school and the corporation," he said. "We'll try to make a strong case to get across that we want to be the best possible choice. The decision has to be made by the corporation."
Seeking money from corporations through alumni is a common practice among universities.
"We have alums with a warm feeling in their heart for Kansas State." Andres said. "An alum at a corporation can get us in the door."
Bob Harkosk, vice-president for development, alumni and university affairs at the alumni who were highly ranked at companies could help his university.
"Obviously, if we have the chairman of the board as an alum, then he can wield pretty wide influence," Hartook said.
Harook said it was not unusual for a friend to give to give more than one university.
Often the corporations that alumni work for will match a donation base.
ASK backs Regents stricter standards
Staff writer
By BRAD ADDINGTON
TOPEKA — The Associated Students of Kansas' Legislative Assemble yesterday supported a move to tighten admission standards at state universities.
The assembly supported a recommendation by the state Board of Regulatory Affairs to a Committee that encouraged what it termmed enhanced open admissions.
The Regents advisory committee is composed of the student body presidents of the seven Regents institutions. The committee recommended the stricter admissions standards to the Regents earlier this month.
The recommendations for admission call for a minimum high school grade point average of 2.0 and completion of the Regents recommended preparatory curriculum, except for the foreign language requirement.
The Regents recommended preparatory curriculum consists of four years of English, three years each of math, social studies and natural sciences and two years of a foreign language.
Kevin Amack, Fort Hays student
key president and ASK representation,
in 1991. He delayed until the fall of 1991 to give
school districts a chance to accom-
mend him.
Martie Aaron, KU campus ASK director, said the student advisory committee's requirements would place a great demand on high schools to develop new curriculums and to counsel students.
modate them.
Mark Tallman. ASK legislative director, said the Legislative Assembly usually convened once a semester to discuss its position on issues concerning Regents universities.
About 45 delegates from the University of Kansas, Kansas State University, Wichita State University, Pittsburgh State University, Fort State University and Emporia State university attended the assembly.
The Legislative Assembly only discusses general concerns. The ASK Policy Council discusses specific pieces of legislation, Tallman said.
Five delegates from each university serve on the Policy Council, which is tentatively scheduled to meet Nov. 8 in Manhattan.
The ASK assembly passed a resolution that supported the recommendations. The ASK resolution also emphasized that the state should consider how stricter admissions would affect tuition and state financing.
Each Regents university is represented in the Legislative Assembly by one delegate for every 1,000 students that the school has. KU has the greatest representation with 24 delegates.
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ATTENTION All Graduate and Law Students:
THE SENATE ELECTION COMMITTEE will be accepting applications September 29 October 2.
The applications will be available in the Student Senate Office, 105 Burge Union.
The deadline for applications will be 5 p.m. October 2.
10 graduate seats and 2 law seats are open.
4
Monday, September 28, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The garbage game
The game of Hot Potato works only if everyone plays by the rules. If a player puts his hands down to his sides, the game is pointless.
The radioactive waste site that will be determined by the Central Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compact Commission is a hot potato.
The teams Involved in the game are the states of Kansas, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Arkansas and Louisiana, and they are not being good sports.
The criteria for choosing the site are points of contention. Each state is proposing criteria that would send the dump to one of the others.
Representatives from Nebraska say the selection criterion that considers whether states now have disposal sites is unfair. Nebraska does not now have a disposal site.
No state is standing in line to volunteer to house hazardous waste, so all factors must be considered. It is not fair for anyone to have to live with nuclear waste, but the existence of nuclear power plants makes the disposal of low-level radioactive waste unavoidable. We cannot wish it away.
This decision already has been postponed for six and a half years.
It's a no-win situation. All must play fair. Like it or not, we're all involved.
Biding their time
Sen. Joe Biden, D-Del., has quite a way with words. It's too bad they are often not his own. Presidential Candidate Number Two has committed political suicide, and the public waits, anticipating the next skeleton to be dragged out of the closet.
Is this a test of public tolerance or just media muckraking? Investigative journalism can be controversial, but it seems that people are certain of one thing: A candidate's private life has a direct influence on his service in public office. The downfalls of both Gary Hart and Joe Biden illustrate the price of poor judgment and dishonesty — fatal character flaws when running for office.
People make mistakes they regret, yet they should be willing to own up to them, admitting they have learned something. In the unforgiving world of politics, candidates had better make sure they have a clean slate long before they enter the campaign spotlight.
Let's hope that candidates both present and future have learned from these mistakes. Nothing is sacred in the public eye; exaggerations, misstatements or speeches that are not one's own are sure ways to ruin a campaign.
In this democratic nation, the political field is designed to narrow, but there now should be a few wiser candidates playing. Who will be the next one cornered by his own past?
Deck the mall
In spite of the voters, the issue won't die.
City commissioners are once again dipping into coffers to cater to the requests of three separate mall developers.
Commissioners voted last week to dole out another $25,000 to hire consultants who will determine zoning changes necessary to build a suburban mall.
The voters snubbed a proposed downtown mall — not a suburban mall, which three developers are currently proposing. But voters don't vehemently oppose a mall, illustrated by the number of Douglas County shoppers who drive to Kansas City to shop at a mall.
But wait. There's more.
Voters denounced spending the money necessary to accommodate a mail - lighting, sewage, curbs and sidewalks.
And yet the city continues to pay for $25,000 studies instead of realizing the money can be better spent.
The downtown mall concept that voters killed has been resurrected by the Downtown Improvement Committee to haunt Lawrence residents. The committee also hired a consultant — with a $15,000 to $20,000 salary — to push for the opening of a downtown mall that would open before the nebulous suburban mall.
And where does the committee get much of its money? Why, from the Lawrence City Commission.
Are city commissioners starved for the type of entertainment that only a mall issue provides? Would a Dillards really make a difference? And can the city afford to allocate another $25,000 to pay for yet another zoning study?
And have commissioners considered telling the developers to pay for the studies, instead of the city continuing to foot the bill?
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
News staff
Jennifer Benjamin ... Editor
Juli Warren ... Managing editor
John Benner ... News editor
Beth Copeland ... Editorial editor
Sally Streff ... Campus editor
Sports editor
Dan Ruettmann ... Photo editor
Bill Skeet ... Graphics editor
Tom Eben ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Bonnie J. Hardy ... Business manager
Robert Hughes ... Advertising manager
Kelly Scherer ... Retail sales manager
Kurt Messersmith ... Campus sales manager
Greg Knipp ... Production manager
David Derftell ... National sales manager
Angela Orton ... Relationship
Ron Weems ... Director of marketing
Jeanne Hines ... Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and less than 200 words and must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University of Kansas, please include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
Guest shots should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest shots. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer Fint Hall.
Letters, guest shots and columns are the opinion of the writer and do not necessarily reflect opinions of University Daily Kansas. Editorials are the opinion of the Kansas editorial board.
The University Dialy Kanane (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stairwater Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60405, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 60404. Annual subscriptions by mail are $40 in Douglas County and county. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the student activity fee.
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansas, 118
Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
JIM BERGMAN
CINEMAT ENCYTERE STUDIO
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Separate us,grad students cry
Against my better judgment, I am living in McCollum Hall this year.
I would have preferred to stay in my summer apartment, but because I am a graduate student with an assistantship on campus and a thesis to write, I moved back to McCollum. As much as I liked the peace and privacy of my apartment, I knew I wouldn't have time to cook and clean.
So far, it's been fairly quiet, despite the fact that there are freshmen living on floors that were once reserved for graduate students. But I'm not sure how long the quietness will last.
Last year, before coming to KU, I specifically asked to live in McCollum because the housing brochure described it as a graduate and upperclassman residence hall.
Imagine my surprise upon discovering that 800 freshmen lived there, and that only the top three floors were reserved for graduate students. Those of you who were at KU last year may remember the newspaper articles about McCollum Hall vandalism and noise.
I lived through it: from the trash cans and fire extinguishers that were thrown out of windows, to the loud lobby parties on Friday nights, when the noise would echo up the elevator shafts from fourth floor. And many still remember the food fight that underclassmen started two years ago.
Lisa Maloney
Guest Shot
My question is simple. why isn't there a reason students alone? Graduate students constitute
The University could make a small fortune by placing many of us in Joseph R. Pearson Hall, and keeping the hall open all year. Many stay on campus during the holidays, and they would save those with summer jobs in Lawrence the trouble to move back in August. There would be little upstart flooding bathrooms and other destructive practices aren't common among grad students.
approximately 30 percent of the KU student population. Most of us have been out of school for a number of years, and many are juggling part or full-time jobs in addition to studies. We need a quiet place to live, close to campus, where we can work on our degrees in peace.
One explanation I've heard for the lack of graduate-only housing is that most graduate students have moved out of University residence halls. But isn't the decrease of graduate students in these halls equal to the increase of undergraduates?
If anyone in the Office of Residential Programming has any bright ideas about mixing grad students with underclassmen and freshmen so that we can "set a good example," I've got news for them — I'm not paying $6,000 a year to babysit.
The underclassmen don't want us to police them. Graduate students are not fun to live with. They don't call the 10th floor of McColum Hall the "Graveyard Floor" for nothing. We study too much, work too hard, and are generally unpleasant people to be around, especially when we're trying to partier. We are not tolerant in the least of noisy parties. Even on weekends.
And underclassmen should be able to have some fun and crank their stereos occasionally without having to worry about some grouchy grads pounding on their door and telling them to shut up.
The trouble is that most grad students are just too busy to organize and lobby for a graduate residence hall, so housing officials will probably remain ignorant of how many unhappy residents they have and grad students will continue to be stuck in McCollum hall. Although most grad students are only here for two or three years, inappropriate housing can make a big impression on these soon-to-be alumni. And angry alumni don't donate money to KU.
ney is a New Castle, Ind., graduate student in journalism, and a con editor on the Kansas
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
No rubber stamp
attend Tuesday night's meeting, possibly too ashamed to show his face. I would be.
Frank Partny has been quoted and featured in the Kansan quite extensively in the past week — always dealing with the subject of the Student Senate and the Senate Finance Committee, the latter of which I am a member. His comments have been negative and possibly slanderous. His accusations against the committee stem from a meeting he did not stay for the entirety of. His assumption in each article that a unanimous vote is a rubber-stamp approval insults each bill's many merits. Maybe his attitude has something to do with the fact that he lost the election for committee chairman. He failed to
I personally invite Mr. Parttomy to stop insulting the finance committee and attempt to become a positive force on it. If he had bothered me, Tuesday night he would have witnessed at their hour session for one bill that narrowly passed, definitely not a rubber-stamp approval.
Chad Foster, Kansas City, Mo., freshman Good advice
Good advice
In defense of Brad Taylor's column on Sept. 91 would like to underscore the main point he was trying to address.
His column was not written to libel any one person or department as everyone seems to know him going to point out the fact that the current KU advising system is for the most part just a sick joke.
I challenge any professor to ask any freshman or sophomore class if it would describe its
advisers as people who "know the system intimately" and "know what pertinent advice to give" and "know how to involve puzzled students in charting their way forward."
If the system is as efficient and upstanding as Dr. Drayton would have you believe, then I propose that advisers take legal responsibility for the advice they give. In my relationship with the advising system I found that "carefully" trained advisers were more concerned with getting bodies into classes in their department than they were with the actual interest of the student. Do advisers work on salary or commission?
Yes, there is good help and good advice, but you have to know where to find it.
As for the freshmen who have been run through that sausage factory known as summer orientation, they would have settled for a bad schedule and maybe an extra year of school to have avoided the impersonal monster called "advising."
Brad Jordan, Ulysses fifth-year senior
katz
NOW OBSERVE, CLASS, AS I BRING THE
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THAT'S SOME PARAMECIUM!
AMAZING GROWTH!
MOVE-I CAN'T
SEE!
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IF THE SCIENCE DEPARTMENT DOESN'T GET MORE EQUIPMENT SOON, IT WON'T BE A PRETTY SIGHT.
GEE,WOULDN'T IT BE GREAT TO HAVE A MICROSCOPE?
DON'T JIGGLE THE— OH NO! NOW IT'S ALL OVER THE SIDEWALK!
SO MUCH FOR OUR SEMESTER PROJECT.
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1
University Daily Kansan / Monday, September 28. 1967
5
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
SUN SUN
That was smart.
4-28
© 1987 Universal Press Syndicate
sunny
That was smart.
©1987 Universal Press Syndicate
4.28
Campus/Area
Former county commissioner dies
By JENNIFER ROWLAND Staff writer
School, and in 1940 started working for the aircraft industry in San Diego, Calif. In 1949 Mr. Cragan opened his own restaurant, The Lounge, in Independence, Mo.
Walter R. Cragan, longtime KU supporter, former Douglas County commissioner and local restaura-
teur, died Saturday afternoon at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. He was 80.
Mr. Cragan was born in Quapaw, Okla., on July 14, 1907, and his family moved to Lawrence three years later. He attended Lawrence High
He married Celia Lucas on Sept. 25, 1950, in Dallas.
Mr. Cragan returned to Lawrence in 1954 and operated two local restaurants — the Deluxe Cafe, Seventh and Massachusetts, and the Sirioh Restaurant, North Third
Street
After retiring from the restaurant business in 1969, Mr. Craigan, a county commissioner from 1971 to 1975 and from 1979 to 1983
Survivors include his wife, of the home; a sister, Winifred Pickens, of Kansas City, Kan.; and several nieces and nephews.
Services will be at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow
at Plymouth Congregational
Church with the Rev. Kendall C. Baker officiating. Burial will be in Memorial Park Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. today and 9 a.m. to noon tomorrow.
SAVE YOUR MONEY, CLIP A COUPON!
Memorial contributions may be made to the American Heart Association or Plymouth Congregational Home is handling arrangements.
parked in the 900 block of Arkansas Street, Lawrence police reported
On the Record
■ A mountain bike valued at $730 was taken between 10:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. Thursday from a bike rack of Wesco Hall, KU police reported.
A radar detector valued at $220 was taken between 7 p.m. Wednesday and 1 p.m. Thursday from a car department lot. KU police reported
A purse and three rings valued together at $1,417 were taken between 9 a.m. and 11 a.m. Sandworm from a truck parked in the 700 block of West 32rd Street, Lawrence police reported.
100 albums, 40 cassette tapes, two necklaces, a bracelet, a pair of earrings, a blow dryer, a makeup kit, two curlers and a make-up kit, valued $2,038, were taken between 3 a.m. and 9 p.m. Thursday from a car
About $700 was taken between 11 p.m. Wednesday and 8:45 a.m. Thursday from a business in the 2500
block of Iowa Street, Lawrence police reported.
- Six guitars valued together at $1,358 were taken between 7:15 p.m. Wednesday and 8 a.m. Thursday from a business in the 2600 block of Iowa Street, Lawrence police reported.
- A mountain bicycle valued at $600 was taken at 3:45 p.m. Saturday from a business in the 1000 block of Verizon street. Lawrence police reported.
- An AM-FM radio/cassette player
valued at $600 was taken between
midnight and 10:15 a.m. Thursday
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- A 10-speed bicycle valued at $500 was taken between 9 p.m. and 10 p.m. Saturday from a residence in the 1900s 191st Street, Lawrence police reported.
A forged check valued at $473.73 was discovered step 16, at a business in the 3100 block of Iowa Street, Lawrence police reported.
■ An AM-FM radio/cassette and a radar detector valued together at $440 were taken between midnight and 7:30 a.m. Sept. 21 from a car parked at Hawthorn Drive, Lawrence police reported
- A mountain bicycle valued at $410 was taken between 5:30 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. Thursday from a bicycle stand at a residence in the 1600 block of Tennessee Street, Lawrence police reported.
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6
Monday, September 28, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Enrollment
Continued from p. 1
The enrollment growth was expected, Meyden said, but was forcing larger classes and making it difficult to find student-teaching positions.
But Meyen said he was pleased with the increase, especially because stricter admissions requirements meant the school was not only admitting more students but also was admitting better-quality students.
The school of architecture and urban design experienced its largest undergraduate growth in the past five years. It recorded 682 students this year, up from 646 last year, a growth of 5.6 percent.
"I'm surprised at those figures," said Max Lucas, dean of architecture and urban design. "We control our enrollment very carefully."
Lucas said that he was pleased with the increase but that he would need time to study the figures to
determine their full effect.
"Our problems are with faculty overloading, and yes, they are hard to find," said he assumed that the increase would attract more state financing.
The School of Journalism recorded only a slight drop, from 732 to 727, but an increase in the number of students.
Tougher entrance requirements caused the drop, which was expected and hoped for, for Mike Kautsch, dean of journalism, said.
Kautsch said the school had been hoping to decrease enrollment because it already was more crowded than desired. Since 1963, the school's enrollment has gone up 18 percent.
"We'd possibly be in good shape if it dropped some more," he said.
The School of Fine Arts' enrollment remained steady, dropping only six students to 1,100. Peter
Thompson, dean of fine arts, said he was relieved enrollment was not up because the school still is coping with a large increase from last year.
Thompson said the school actually had admitted more students than it intended but was helped out by the fact that many of them did not show
"We could have been in desperate shape," he said.
The School of Pharmacy experienced growth, with 252 students this year, up from 244 from last year and 240 in 1985.
The law school, which has its enrollment dictated by the Kansas Legislature, admitted 506 students this year, compared with 508 last year, said Lillian Six, director of admissions.
The Legislature gradually has been reducing the number of students admitted to the school, Six said.
ASK hears teacher loan report
By a Kansan reporter Staff writes
Staff writer
TOPEKA — Members of the Associated Students of Kansas heard an updated report yesterday on a proposed piece of legislation that would provide forgivable loans for education majors in Kansas.
The bill would cover those students who would teach in Kansas in areas having shortages, said Chris Graves, ASK executive director.
ASK, which has members from each state university, lobbies the Kansas Legislature for student concerns.
The loans would cover all or part of tuition costs for the students during their junior and senior years. Students would not have to repay the loans if they taught in the areas with shortages for seven years after gra
duation. The loan would be reduced by one-seventh each year.
Students who graduated and
'C
Students who graduated and decided not to teach or decided to teach elsewhere would have to repay the loans.
decided not to teach or decided to teach elsewhere would have to repay the loans.
The ASK legislative assembly has been supportive of the proposal in the past and will continue its support, Graves said.
The bill was introduced to the House of Representatives during the last session by State Reps. Vernon Williams, R-Wichita; Jo Ann Pottert, R-Wichita; and Elizabeth Baker, R-Derby.
ASK members testified in front of the House Education Committee in support of the bill in March.
The education committee referred it to the interim Legislative Educational Planning Committee for further study. The committee took no action but appointed two of its memb- eries, Jim Allen, R.Ottawa, and State Rep. Anthony Hiley, D Topeka, to study the proposed bill more closely.
The two should report to the interim committee no later than November, Graves said.
WEATHER Lawrence Forecast
TODAY
Clearing
HIGH: 75°
LOW: 53°
This morning's showers will dissipate by noon and skies will clear by this evening. The high will be in the mid-70s and the low will drop to the lower 50s.
5-DAY
TUE
Partly sunny
72/48
HIGH LOW
WED
Sunny
75/51
THU
Sunny
77/52
FRI
Mostly sunny
81/56
SAT
Mostly cloudy
80/59
North Platte
69/40
Clearing
Omaha
71/48
Mostly cloudy
Rain T-Storms Snow Flurries Ice
Goodland
70/43
Clearing
Hays
73/47
Partly cloudy
Salina
74/51
Mostly cloudy
Topeka
75/53
Showers
Kansas City
76/54
Showers
Columbia
75/55
Showers
St. Louis
76/58
Thunderstorms
Dodge City
76/50
Mostly cloudy
Wichita
77/54
Thunderstorms
Chanute
77/56
Thunderstorms
Springfield
76/58
Thunderstorms
Forecast by Jamie Zahara.
Temperature are fairly high
and tonight's overnight low.
Conditions are forecasted for
this afternoon.
Tulsa
80/60
Thunderstorms
On Campus
A reception for international students is scheduled at 3:30 p.m. today at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union.
■ "Continuity and Change in the Art of Aaron Siskind," a lecture by Aaron Siskind, photographer, and Carl Chienarae, Fanie Allen Knapp professor of fine arts at the University of Rochester, is scheduled at 7:30 p.m. today at the Spencer Museum of Art auditorium.
A meeting of the Society for Fantasy and Science Fiction is scheduled at 8 p.m. today at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union.
NOW OPEN
BODY BOUTIQUE
The Women's Fitness Facility
AEROBIC CLASSES OFFERED
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University Daily Kansan / Mondav. September 28, 1987
Campus/Area
7
Bill Baethke/Special to the KANSAN
MARSHALL
Jazz pianist Makoto Ozone plays a selection for a crowd at South Park. Ozone was a special guest yesterday afternoon at KANU-FM radio's 35th birthday celebration.
Swingin' in South Park
Pro-Life activists attend conference
By VALOREE ARMSTRONG Staff writer
OVERLAND PARK "—Murder, Holocaust. Cancer." Those were common ways to refer to abortion in the past. The word "wife" conference at the Marriott Hotel.
Nathanson took part in the two-day conference, which was sponsored by Right to Life of Kansas and attended by about 250 people.
Bernard Nathanson, an obstetrician and producer of two anti-abortion documentaries, said his newest film, "Eclipse of Reason," graphically depicted a second-trimester abortion by using cameras inside and outside a woman's uterus. Nathanson's first film was "Silent Scream."
He said that films about Nazi death camps and the aftermath of the atomic bomb at Hiroshima were graphic, too, but that they persuaded some Americans that wrongs had been committed.
In answer to charges of dramatization in his films, Nathanson said at a press conference, "We've presented the films as documentary data. They're there for you to see — an explicit, graphic showing."
Nathanson hasn't always been an anti-abortion activist. He was the founder of the National Abortion
Rights Action League and performed more than 75,000 abortions in his New York City Clinic.
But he changed his loyalties in the 1970s because of new technology such as ultra-sound scanning that let him see fetal movements, he said.
The Rev. Edward Markley, a Catholic priest who was sentenced to five years in an Alabama state prison on charges of destroying an abortion suction machine, also spoke at the conference.
Markley, who was released this July after one year in prison, said the Birmingham clinic had replaced the doctor and was back in business within hours.
But he said he was now using peaceful means to protest abortion and wouldn't advise others to break the law.
Markley, too, compared abortions to the Nazi Holocaust of the 1930s and 1940s. He said that ending abortion would require as many people and as many countries as prayers as it took the Allied nations to defeat Nazi Germany in World War II.
"But we can't solicit then (recruits) by sending greetings from Uncle Sam," Markley said.
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8
Monday, September 28, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
HARVARD
Photina Hy Stanhan Wade
Flying high
A-10
Above, Kasey Hine and his father, Lewis Hine, both of Manhattan, examine the cockpit of an Air Force T-38A trainer jet. Right, Canadian Snowbirds, a nine-plane military formation aerobatic team, performs a Big Diamond maneuver. The aircraft were on display over the weekend at Forbes Field in Topeka as part of "Superbatics '87." Nearly 100,000 people attended the show, which is sponsored annually by the Combat Air Museum in Topeka.
Programs prepare teachers
By a Kansan reporter
Education majors are getting a helping hand this year from a rejuvenated School of Education Student programs, and there are several programs on tan for them.
The group has been around for about six years. But this year, it will offer more programs and activities than before, said Chris Dalton, Overland Park senior and the organization's president.
This semester's programs deal with topics such as teenage suicide, teen sexuality and pregnancy, and AIDS in the classroom.
"We're trying to prepare them and say, 'Hey, this could come up,' he said. "We want them to be a little more prepared."
Evelyn Swartz, professor of curriculum and instruction and the organization's adviser, said the programs
would expand on what the students were learning in their classes and help them with some of the social issues that are making teaching a more difficult profession than in the past.
Dalton said the group also would
We want them to be a little more prepared.'
Chris Dalton
effective if a faculty works together as, a cohesive group," he said.
Chris Dalton President, School of Education
The group always has provided a way for students to have some say on how the school is run by seating rooms on several faculty committees.
President, School of Education
Student Organization
Dalton said one of his goals for the organization was to try to inspire a greater sense of pride among education majors.
"If we can provide the impetus for them to be excited, then it does show a reflection when they get out in the schools," he said.
Student officers work for wellness
By AMBER STENGER Staff writer
Some KU students are helping to educate their peers about how to prevent health problems, and they're earning credit at the same time.
Staff writer
Fifty-five students are participating in the Student Health Officer Organization. As health officers, they assist students in their living groups by listening to their problems and referring them to people who can help.
"Let's say you have a health problem," said Janine Demo, coordinator of health education at Watkins Hospital. "The first person you are going to talk to is your roommate or a friend or someone you think might be knowledgeable in the area. The last person you're going to call is the health professional. That's why the health officers are there."
"A lot of times, people are a little
boring, making that step of actually
sending it."
The health officer program started three years ago. However, this is the first year that students can earn credit for participating. Health officer enrolls a two-hour class every two weeks and earn one hour of academic credit.
Students can earn up to two credits in the program while at KU. After serving for two semesters, they can health officers on a volunteer basis.
KU's program is aimed at preventing problems instead of treating them.
"With my background in health education, I've geared this program toward preventive health care." Demo said. "We are teaching the whys and hows before the fact, rather than after the fact."
Jamene Gilkey, Wichita junior, said she was participating in the program so that Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall would have a health officer. Because most resiliency professionals offer officer service, she said, few people have come to her for information or with questions.
Gilkey said that more people probab- lize to use the service as the year progresses.
Demo said she wanted the program to grow.
"I'd like to see health officers on every floor of every dorm, in all of the fraternities and sororites, and in all of the scholarship halls," she said.
give education majors a chance to learn to work with other prospective teachers. That will help them work better when they start teaching, Dalton said.
Now, health officers are living in six of the eight scholarship halls, in 12 of 14 sororities, in about 20 fraternities, in many residence halls. Demo said.
"It makes teachers so much more
She said she hoped the program would include off-campus residents in the future.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, September 28, 1987
Sports
9
Turnovers leave questions for KU football team
32 32
Bv CRAIG ANDERSON
Joe Wilkins III Special to the KANBI Louisiana Tech running back Garlon Powell glides over the KU defense. Powell was the Bulldogs' leading rusher Saturday with 110 yards.
It was hard to decide what was the most fascinating aspect of the eight turnovers Kansas committed Saturday in its 16-11 loss to Louisiana Tech.
Usually when a team loses possession of the ball so many times, the result is a rout. That wasn't the case for Kansas, however, as the team played its most competitive game of the season. The Jayhawks had a chance to win the game in the fourth quarter before senior quarterback Mike O'rourk threw his third and final interception.
Maybe the most interesting part was the flurry of turnovers that occurred in the first half. In a span of a little over 13 minutes during the first and second quarters, Kansas committed five miscues.
That total doesn't even count the Jayhawks' first offensive series of the game. A Louisiana Tech defense lineman appeared to have injured in his arms a pass by steward John Dunn, who hose that was batted into the air at the line of scrimmage. But the lineman dropped the ball.
"Turnovers happen to a team in a slump," said Kansas coach Bob Valesente. "If I knew the answers to turnovers I would make a lot of coaches because I think every coach in America would like to know."
At times during the game, Kansas was losing possession at a faster rate than 1.0. ranked Oklahomans in the 65-9 victory over Tulsa.
What seemed even more amazing was that despite the five first- half turnovers, Kansas went into halftime with a 5-3 lead. It was the game this season that the Jayhawks had been ahead in a game.
That lead was short-lived, however, as an Orth interception 5 minutes into the third quarter set up a short Bulldog scoring drive that resulted in a touchdown. The interception was just a small part in what turned out to be a long game for Orth.
Orth completed only three of his last 25 pass attempts and threw three interceptions in the second half. Orth also overthrew his potential receivers for most of the game. After the game, he spent little time talking about his performance.
"You go into every game ready," he said. "That's all I'm going to say."
Orth replaced Dohonoe in the first quarter after Donohoe threw interceptions in two of the Jaya hawks' first three offensive drives.
When Orth proved ineffective, Valesante said he gave some thought to bringing in the Jayhawks back, freshman Kevin Verdugo.
"Orth was just so loose and ready to go." Valesante said. "I believed right up until the end that we were going to win the ball game."
The Kansas turnover and quarterback miseries seemed to overshadow good performances by the weak defense and running game.
"We had some success," said senior fullback Mike Rogers. "We were running straight up the hill, and we made these turnovers and win the game."
The longest Louisiana Tech drive of the game was only 36 yards. Sticking to the turnover paradox, that was the drive in the second half, scored by scoring the touchdown. Kansas would never lead again.
In the first half, the Jayhawk defense was especially impressive. On only one of Louisiana Tech's twelve first-half drives did the Kansas defense give up a first down.
"I was happy to see that we made some improvement," junior linebacker Rick Clayton said. "I wasn't happy that we lost, though. We came in expecting to beat them and beat them bad."
Senior cornerback Milt Garner said mistakes killed any chances the Jayhawks had to end their 10-5 win streak that spans two seasons.
"This game feels worse than Kent State, because we really should have won today." he said.
cornerback Mike Fisher for the remainder of the season for disciplinary reasons. Fisher happened to be featured on the front cover of the Kansas football game program for Louisiana Tech.
For the most part, the Kansas running game also looked good. Junior tailback Darryl Terrell rushed for 97 yards in 21 carries. In its first two games, the entire team had rushed for only 97 yards. LaSente praised the improved running game, but only to a point.
"I was happy that we were able to run for more yards," he said. "I offered five lines was coming off the belt but I wasn't enough for us to win, though."
Senior offensive tackle Bob Pieper returned to action Saturday after missing the first two games of the season because of a knee injury. While he said he was glad he made the field, he seemed more concerned with team's attitude after losing its third straight game this season.
"It's tough to take a loss like this," Pieter said. "People need to take a look down inside of us and realize that takes for ourselves to be a better
football team "
In a season of tough losses and bad breaks, the coincidence seemed almost to be expected.
After the game, Valesente took a look at the flood of reporters and cameras around him and decided he'd better change his position.
"I'd better talk with my back against the wall because I'm sure some of you want to stick a spear into it," he said to the media.
While Valesente was antiping what was on the minds of the media, perhaps the fiercest barbs came from fans in the stands. Late Friday, when some disgruntled fans held up a sign that read "So long, Coach Val."
In a move made before the game, Valesente suspended senior
Back arrives just in time for game, has big day
By ANNE LUSCOMBE Staff writer
Mike Rogers was listed as the starting fullback for Kansas on Saturday. But, until he arrived at Memorial Stadium, suited up and ready to play, there was a lingering doubt in the minds of the coaches as to whether he would step onto the field.
Rogers himself was unsure. He drove home to Smith Center on Friday morning after his aunt died suddenly of an aneurysm. He left at 6:30 a.m. Saturday to make it back for the game.
"I had to miss the funeral because it was today, but I was there for the wake. That is when the shock really hits, at the wake." Rogers said after the game. "It was up to me to come back. The team was in trouble, and we pressure on me. But I have an obligation to these guys and to the team."
Rogers fulfilled his obligation in the best way he knew how - by playing.
Performing his duties as a fullback, Rogers rushed for 33 yards on 11 carries. But it was his play as a receiver that earned him career honors and allowed him to make almost half of the 143 yards Kansas accumulated in the air. Rogers gained 70 yards on five receptions, including a career-best 43-yard catch.
"I just felt good that it was tna situation. We had to get down there and we had to get the yards to put a position to win the game." he said.
The reception came on a drive that ended in a touchdown for Kansas. Rogers' carry gave the Jayhawks a much-needed first down in the touchdown drive that brought in the content for the game. Howey scored the Jayhawks failed to score for the remainder of the game, losing 16-11.
Rogers is not particular about how he adds up vardage.
"It doesn't matter if I catch or run the ball. I just like to carry the ball," he said.
"Mike is an excellent, fine and gutsy young man. I didn't know if he would come back after his aunt died, but he did and put a outguy performance. He is a level-headed person, pleasure to work with." Huff said.
Offensive coordinator Gary Huff was extremely pleased with Rogers' performance.
Play at plate fires Twins to 8-1 victory
The Associated Press
MINNEAPOLIS — Even with all the cannons in the Minnesota Twins' line-up, a little pistol named Al Newman made the key play that enabled the Twins to clinch at least a tie for the American League West title.
Kirby Puckett, Gary Gaetti and Kent Hrbek homeed in the Twins' five-run first inning Sunday. But it was Newman's stellar defensive play at second base in the top of the inning that shifted all the momentum to Minnesota in the Twins' 8-1 victory over the Kansas City Royals.
The triumph lowered the magic number to one for the Twins, who last week won.
"It was a key play for me," said Bert Blyleven, who pitched a five-hitter. "If he doesn't get Wilson at the plate, it's 1-0 and that might have changed the mood of the whole game."
A record crowd greeted the Twins with a three-minute standing ovation, but Blyleen, 15-11, almost burst the fans' bubble. He walked lead-off batter Willie Wilson and gave up a single to Kevin Seitzer.
But George Brett then grounded sharply to Gaetti at third, who went on to win second. Newman quickly freed a stray ball, nailing Wilson for the double play.
"That got the crowd into the game," Newman said. "When you've got first and third with George Brett at the plate, you can only expect the play. I don't make the play, I'm the goat. I couldn't believe it made, myself."
Royals Manager John Wathan said, "A play like that can make the momentum shift. Give Newman and the Twins credit. It was just a matter of time, with their power, till they hit some out."
Neither could the Royals, who have to win all six of their games and hope the Twins lose all six of theirs just to tie Minnesota for the title.
Blyleen, pitching on three days' rest because of Joe Niekro's hip injury, struck out eight and walked two.
KU catcher Troy Mentzer slides safely into homeplate as Barton County Community College catcher Chris Humphrey looks for the ball. The Jayhawks beat Barton County 5-2 yesterday in the first of three five-inning scrimmages at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
Scott Carpenter/KANSAN
B
Mets manager fears losing job
NEW YORK — New York Mets manager Davey Johnson said he thought he might be fired yesterday after a published report quoted him as asking for his contract to be renegotiated.
"I figured I was fired. Frank would have been right in firing me," Johnson said of general manager Frank Cashen in a 40-minute talk with the Meets beat Pittsburgh 12-3. "I was looking for (pink) slips."
According to Johnson, Cashen told
The Associated Press
him in an Aug. 26 meeting that his contract would not be renegotiated without the manager bringing up the subject.
However, in a column in Sunday's New York Times, Johnson was quoted as saying: "Frank said flat out, 'I'm not extending your contract.' That tells me he didn't like the job I did this season."
Johnson claimed the report was inaccurate and called a team meet
"I had a little meeting today to clarify some things with the balclub.
Johnson said he initiated the Aug. 26 discussion with Cashen to apologize for unspecified actions of his earlier in the year when the Mets suffered injuries to key pitchers and Dwight Gooden's admission of cocaine use.
Some of the things that were printed were not factual," Johnson said. "I wanted to apologize to them."
"I wanted to apologize for some things," Johnson said. "I was trying to give him a blanket apology. He wrote new statements that kind of shook me."
Walks help Jayhawks to victory in baseball
Staff writer
By DARRIN STINEMAN
The Kansas baseball team has been winning some ugly baseball games, but they are winning.
The Jayhawks were the beneficiaries of 24 walks by the Barton County Community College pitching staff yesterday in a 24-19 victory. Kansas scored 11 runs in the eighth inning on two single singles. Seven were walked in.
A 15-inning scrimimage game was played, allowing the teams to use starting pitchers at the beginning of each five-inning interval. It also allowed them to use relief pitchers in late-innings situations three times, but the Kansas relievers had little success.
The Jayhawk bullpen gave up nine runs in the disasterous seventh inning and a walk, as Steve McGinnis on the ropes after giving up four earned runs in 1½
The Kansas pitchers were in no position to snicker at the opposing pitchers, as they walked 18 themselves. The walks combined with frequent errors to make it a long afternoon and evening.
"I feel good about the way I've been throwing in juco games," he said, "but in (in-squad) scrimmage games I haven't done as well. I get up more for the juce games."
The fall season continues Thursday when the Jayhawks meet Allen County Community College at Hoglund Game time is scheduled for 3:30 p.m.
One of the Jayhawks' young pitchers, left-hander Darin Harris, continued his successful fall season, winning matches without allowing an earned run.
innings, freshman left-hander Danny Lamb came on. Lamb's first pitch was hit for a single, driving in two more runs. Lamb went on to give up four earned runs while retiring only one batter.
Kansas coach Dave Bingham said the problems McGinness and Lamb faced were similar.
Volleyball team loses two in Iowa during weekend
Bingham said he was disappointed that Lamb hadn't shown he could be effective out of the bullpen. "That's what this is all about. We threw freshmen and some guys coming off injuries today. It's just a matter of having young guys throw," he said.
By a Kansan reporter
The KU volleyball team lost two matches over the weekend, extending its losing streak to seven matches.
Iowa State defeated the Jay-
hawks 8-15, 7-15, 15-12, 15-2, 15-12
Saturday night in Ames.
"Iowa State is tough at home, but sometimes, we're our own worst enemy." KU coach Frankie Albizt said. "Judy Desch hit the ball in our first two games. Monica (Spencer) played well and Jodi (Oelschlager) passed and hit really well."
On Sunday. Northern Iowa
defeated Kansas 11-15, 15-4, 15-1, 13-15, 15-3 in Cedar Falls.
"Obviously, we were not very consistent." Albizt said. "Elsa Woods was our top hitter and Tammy Hill also hit the ball well."
Kansas, 4-9 overall and 0-2 in the Big Eight Conference, will play Kansas State in Manhattan at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in its next match.
"We're making a lot of mental errors now and that's really hurting us," Albitz said. "We played a lot of subs this weekend. They didn't play very well at Iowa State, but they played well (Sunday)."
)
10
Monday, September 28, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
SportsMonday
KU alumni gather to dedicate new baseball stadium
By DARRIN STINEMAN Staff writer
Staff writer
A group of about 100 former Kansas baseball players helped raise more than $100,000 to bring the program on the field when they played here — a stadium.
The money raised by the former Jayhaws went towards the more than $300,000 renovation of Quigley Field, said John Tromboid, coordinator of alumni contributions for the project. There were over 500 individuals and companies that contributed to the fund. Tromboid said.
Trombold, who lives in Del Mar, Calif. played first base for the Jayhawks from 1962 to 1964 and was KU's first baseball All-American in 1953. He said the project was a team effort.
"It's a great grassroots thing, and especially for a non-revenue sport," he said before the dedication of Hogland-Maupin Stadium on Friday evening. "It's something to be proud of. It's the realization of a dream come true — we never had a real ballpark."
The stadium was named in honor of Forrest Hogland, former KU baseball player, and the late Tom Maupin, founder of Maupint Travel Company and a supporter of the University.
Chancellor Gene A. Budig officially dedicated the stadium to begin the ceremony.
"This is a wonderful occasion for baseball at the University of Kansas, an occasion to which we have looked forward," he said. "It is with pleasure and with gratitude that I formalize this Hoglund-Maupin Stadium."
Hoglund, a major financial supporter of the new stadium, originally
Joe Wilkins III/Special to the KANSAN
Hoglund was reluctant to draw attention to himself at the ceremony as well.
made his contribution anonymously, but he reluctantly allowed his name to be revealed, said KU athletic director Jill Sander who served as master of ceremonies.
The
"While the name on the stadium 10.2 there, it's a solid team effort to everyone that contributed to it." he said to a crowd of about 350. "I am going to be very proud going to be a first-rate program at the University of Kansas.
Former KU All-America baseball player John Trombold speaks at the ceremony dedicating the new Hogund-Maupin Stadium. Sharing the podium with Trombold on Friday were from left to right: Forrest Hoglund, a main contributor to the project; Neil Meckaskey, of Maupintour Travel; Kansas baseball coach Dave Bingham; Chancellor Gene A. Budig and Kansas Athletic Director Bob Frederick.
"This is a great day for Kansas baseball. I feel we have one of the best facilities around. We feel very fortunate to have Dave Bingham as coach. It's on the upswing, and it will be a winner."
Trombold, whom Frederick called "Kansas baseball's most devoted worker," told the crowd: "What an exciting day, and it's exciting because we finally have our own facilities." He said, "It's obvious that these facilities wouldn't be possible without your contribution."
An old-timers' game featuring Kansas players from as far back as the 1930's preceded the ceremony, and alumni from the last 10 years played the KU varsity after the stadium was formally dedicated.
in the dugout during the old-timers' game. Hoglund described why he felt it was so important for Kansas to have a baseball stadium.
lower than anyone wanted them to be. Baseball can be a lot of fun for a school."
Both Trombold and Hoglund said they were pleased to have Bingham as the new coach of the Jayhawks. Bingham coached for 14 years at North State, posting a 585-270 record before coming to Kansas in June.
"I just have a great love for KU and I love the baseball program very much, and I hope it will pick up the program," he said. "I hate to see something wrong in it, but thing second-rate in it, and I think the state of the program's facilities were
The three-time national coach of the year said he was equally pleased to be back.
"It's obviously a great thrill to be in Lawrence," he said during the ceremony. "As an outsider looking in, I looked at the University of Kansas as a great family situation. I've found that to be the case.
"I always felt as a coach that you've got to like to play in the ninth inning with the pressure on. I look at this stadium and it makes a coach feel pressure about living up to the facility we have."
Renovations began last fall with improvements to the playing surface, which will keep the name of Quigley Field. Built in 1958, the field was named in honor of Ernest Quigley of Texas athletic director from 1944-49.
The 1,500-capacity aluminum stands were completed early this summer, and the project was completed with the installation of lights in July.
Hoglund, president of Texas Oil and Gas Co. i Dallas, said the lighting was made possible by the contribution of Neil Mecaskey of Maupintu Travel Co. in memory of Maupin.
"Neil felt he would like to donate the lighting in memory of Maupin. "Hoglund said, "Tom Maupin shared this same interest in the
University."
In the old-timers' game, Hoglund and Trombold's white team defeated the blue team 11-5. Hoglund had one win and lost to Trombold, but had two hits and drove in two runs.
game. Jim Trombold, of Mercer Island, Wash., played for Kansas State and played for Wichita, played from 1980-82. Three played first base while at KU.
of thing," the elder Trombold said. In the alumni game following the
ceremony, the Kansas varsity defeated the alumni, 13-1.
Trombold's brother, Jim, and his father, George, also played in the
Senior Rocky Helm, who went one-air-two with a double and an RBI in the first game, said the new stadium added a new dimension to the baseball program.
Low finish still impresses cross country coach
By MIKE CONSIDINE
Staff writer
"Our kids are doing good stuff." Roveto said. "I have a tremendous amount of faith in this group. We'll be a good team when all is said and done."
An eighth-plain finish in a 10-team meet may not sound impressive, but KU women's cross country coach Cliff Rivelot's optimism wasn't dimmed. Rivelot, in fact, was encouraged by his team's performance at the Illinois Invitational on Saturday.
Big Eight Conference-favorite Nebraska won the meet with 52 points and the Huskers' *Mammi Resh* was the individual champion in 17:09. KU amassed 156 points.
KU'S Susan MacLean placed eighth overall,
10th, and was the top freshman runner in the
10th.
"Susan beat some very good runners," Vroleto said. "She was with the leaders through 4,000 meters. By the end of the year, that last 1,000 meters will take care of itself."
Rovelo said senior Trisha Mangan also ran a solid race, but faded in the last 1,000 meters. She finished 36th overall in 19.01. Sophomore Kelly Coffey was second and freshman Tina Saulberry was 36th in 19.31.
Rovello said the team would increase its work-cut schedule in preparation for the Sooner Invitah
The men's team finished second behind Western college in Saturday's Cavalier Cup Invational at Johnson County Community College. The men's team finished with 44 points with a limited squad.
The Jayhawks top three runners - Steve Heffer
nan, Sean Sheridan and Craig Watcke — didn't compete so Coach Bob Timmons could get a good look at the rest of the team.
"I thought we had a good effort there." Timmons said. "Southwestern had good depth, we came close but we couldn't quite go with them. But I didn't think it was Oklahoma State Jamboree) with a solid team."
Freshman Mike Pritchard, who had been ineligible because of a problem with his transcript, led the class to conclude that he was not a doctor.
Junior Matt Bell (seventh place, 26:43), freshman Sam Reephouse (eighth, 26:46) and Jon Joslin (12th, 27:09) also earned spots in the Jayhawk lineup with their Cavalier Cup placings.
Missouri's John Pendergraft won the race in a course-record 25:53.
Conference games bring few surprises
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Oklahoma's 65-10 game of Tulsa was expected. So was Nebraska's victory over Arizona State, although the 35-28 squeaker was closer than most Cornhusker fans might prefer.
For sure, Louisiana Tech's 16-11 conquest of winless Kansas made the state a national leader. We have to say that Wyoming's 34-17 whipping of Iowa State was expected.
But expected, too, was a total blowout by Iowa of Kansas State. Published predictions had the final tally in the 70-0 range, and when he led Kansas Stan Parrish saw that, he knew he did a pathway to his players' powers.
"They said we were the worst team in the world, that it was a shame I ruined a good coaching career by coming here," Parrish said. "We were ridiculed in the papers, and whoever did that, I'd like to thank them on behalf of our team. The articles motivated us."
Sure, the final score — Iowa 38,
Kansas State 13 — makes it sound as
if the No. 19 Hawkeyes merely toed
with the winless Wildcats. Fact is,
Iowa scored 17 of these points in the
last 10 minutes of the game.
Another tipoff to how much fight K-State gave Iowa was time of possession — 30:28 for Iowa, 29:32 for Kansas State.
The Hawkeyes even practiced all week in green jerseys, simulating Michigan State, their opponent following the Wildcats.
"The heat and their depth — 100 guys to our 60 — got to us," Parrish said. "We ran out of gas. We were dead on our feet at the end."
"To be honest, we weren't entirely up for this game because of worrying about Michigan State," said Iowa's Dillon Fields, a junior yards and caught four passes for 85.
In other conference action, Colorado got a big game from No. 3 quarterback Sal Aunese and beat Washington State 26-17. Oklahoma State raised its record to 4-0 with a 29-0 victory over Southwestern Louisiana, the Cowboys' second shutout of the season.
a touchdown pass with 1:21 and lost to the Hoosiers 20-17.
Another somewhat unexpected event around the Big Eight Saturday was Missouri's near-miss at Indiana. The Tigers, bidding to go 3-0, gave up
The Huskers also preserved their perfect record and kept alive the Big Eight's hopes for a national championship showdown in Lincoln on Nov. 21 between No. 1 Oklahoma and No. 2 Nebraska.
Nebraska, playing in 93-degree heat at Tempel, Ariz., needed a 62-run run by Kyle Jones to set up Sage run by Chris Brown to rise up with 3:37 left to接住 a 28-28 tie.
Backup quarterbacks had big days for Oklahoma and Colorado. Charles Thompson scored three touchdowns, including a 30-yard run ranked Sooners' victory over Tulsa.
Starter Jamelle Holiway had already put the game out of reach, though, by scoring twice and hitting tight end Keith Jackson on a 47-yard scoring pass play. Oklahoma's juggernaut has now outscored its three opponents this year a total of 162-14. Tula dropped to 0-4, and the Golden Hurricane wound up with 50 yards of total offense to Oklahoma's 541.
"After they tied the game, we knew we had to come back and show what we could do," said Taylor. "It was for pride. We had to go ahead and take care of business and we knew we could do it."
After Colorado's victory, Washington State coach Dennis Erickson said, "Where did they get that quarterback from?" Colorado coach Bill McCarthy pulled starter Rick Wheeler late in the first quarter and put in Aunese. The 5-foot-10, 195-pound responded with the second-best rushing day by a quarterback in Colorado history.
Warren
Zevon
Sentimental
Hygiene
Tour
Special Guest
X
Tuesday, October 20
Memorial Hall - KCK
ON SALE NOW AT ALL CATS OUTLETS / DIAL-A-TICK 576-7676
Produced by New West
NEEDS YOU!
SUA
Student Union Activities is planning an exciting year full of concerts, speakers, movies, trips, all kinds of recreation and more.
YOU CAN BE PART OF SUA by sharing your time, talents and ideas in the officer position of secretary.
We Need Your Help In These Programs. Experience is NOT a necessity, however, interest is required. For more information stop by the SUA Office or call 864-3477.
Please Fill Out Applications By:
Tuesday, October 6
5 p.m.
5 p.m
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
Sports Briefs
Softball team wins two games
Roanna Brazier wasn't expected to pitch this weekend, but the sophomore overcame an arm injury and led the Kansas softball team to two pair of victories at the state Invitational this weekend.
Brazer led the Jayhawks, 4-7, to a 3-2 victory over West Mississippi and a 3-1 victory over the host Cyclones in the tournament finale yesterday.
She had missed last week's practices because of tendinitis in her shoulder.
Freshmen Jenny Splittoff and Tammy Cook each contributed two base hits to the eight-inning victory over Southwest Missouri State. As a team, Kansas had six hits.
Splittorff had four hits in the
Brazier also took the loss in a 1-0, eight-inning decision Saturday against Creighton.
Senior Gayle Luedke drove in the game-winning run against Iowa State.
tournament.
Cook and freshman Jessica Hennig had base hits against the Cyclones..
Crew team captures four division races
Kansas won the varsity women's open division and the women's novice division. The Kansas men's lightweight team won the varsity open, and Kansa's boat "A" won the men's novice division. All the team divisions have eight-person crews.
The Kansas Crew won four of the seven divisions raced at the Head of the Des Moines Regatta at Des Moines, Iowa, this weekend.
Scoreboard
Baseball
American League
National League
Chicago 7, St. Louis 3
New York 12, Pittsburgh 3
Montreal 5, Philadelphia 3
San Francisco 15, Atlanta 6
Cincinnati 4, Houston 2
Los Angeles 4, San Diego 3
Minnesota 8, Kansas City 1
California 11, Cleveland 8
Detroit 3, Toronto 2, 11 innings
Nashville 4, New York 5
Milwaukee 9, Boston 6
Chicago 5, Oakland 0
Seattle 5, Texas 3
Waterbed Works has the latest in sleeping comfort Waterbed Works has Sun Tui Futons 100% cotton, space efficient, all sizes. Come in and try one out! 710 W. 6th 842-1
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710 W. 6th
842-1411
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SAVE
RENEWAL
The entire University of Kansas Campus is invited and encouraged to attend Renewal Week classes Sept. 27 - Oct. 1. Fr. Luke Byrne from Rockhurst College in Kansas City, Mo., will lead the sessions. We hope that everyone will have the opportunity to attend all or any of the sessions. The schedule is as follows:
Sept. 30 - No One Is An Island
Sept. 28 - A Place to Grow
Sept. 29 - Food For The Journey
Sept. 29, No One Is As Island
1631 Crescent Dr. St. Lawrence Catholic Center
Sept. 10 - No One Is Air Island
Oct. 1 - Making A Difference
Oct. 1 - Making A Difference
St. Lawrence Catholic Center
If You Missed it Last Week Don't Miss it This Week! SUA SPECIAL EVENTS
Aard Vark
CAFE
Great Dancing!
Great D.J.
9 p.m.-1 a.m., October 2, 1987
Kansas Room (6th floor) Kansas Union KUID Required $2 admission charge
metropolis mobile sound
featuring Ray Velasquez
Classified Ads
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Ask for Nibbles. Great food Delivered (to any dormitory) 842-149-6 p.m. to midnight.
Head home for the holidays? FLY CHEAP.
Call us now. Carpenters Travel, 434-5698.
dormitory) @42-419 6 p.m.
GO AT MATTHY LIKE COMPETITION? If so,
then come to 25D Strong Hall, Monday,
Friday from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. For Dulce Katz,
Katz 25D Strong Hall (844-150), for further
information on THE PUTMAN MATHEMATICAL
COMPETITION
MASSAGE VS. BEER-a massage from Lawrence Therapy has no calories, and they aren't making you feel laughed at you leuko/hunger, and costs less than an admission at GammaHosp. $381 not conceived! Call Bruce at 841-600- we'll make you a believer (urp) or not. Please contact Dave Brown. 841-600- please contact Dave Brown. 841-600-
London over Christmas Break! Sunschale Tour Ships to Sydney, Tasman and Tauranga. Visit Vail Bear Creek, Steamback, Breckenridge, and Winter Park for five or seven nights including a flight from London to Vancouver $149! *One round trip air and car* transportation available. Call toll for your tour. Light skin break brochure 1-866-321-9310 TODAY!
Hillel לולאה
Wed., Sept. 30
Lunch 11:30 - 1:30
Kansas Union Level 2
Sunset Room
Questions? Call 749-4242
PRE-BUSINESS SOPHOMORES
Applications for School of Business for Spring, 1988 Due Oct. 1
Apply Window 3 Strong Hall
for more information call 864-3844
Organizing campus war games club. Tour
hamburg; players index, games exchange
in the game.
Reading for Comprehension and Speed Workshop,
Tuesday, October 6, 13; and, 20 at 7:30 p.m. on
Material fee: $15. Register, pay fee by 5:00 on
Student: 6. Student Assistance Center,
121 Strong.
**KS1 KEYSTONE for Thanksgiving, November**
**25-29. Low package prices, includes air/hotel/ski*
*transfers/lift tickets.* Call 843-5698.
*Package available without air.*
Be A
H. E.R.O.
HIGHER EDUCATION RESCUE OPERATION
Meeting -
Wednesday,
Sept. 30
Alderson
Auditorium
Kansas Union
7 p.m.
ENTERTAINMENT
At Your Request is Lawrence's Best and Most Affordable D.J. Sound and Lighting for Any Occasion. 841-165
JLTIMATE ENTERTAINMENT
Ultimate Mobile DJ System For All Occasions.
Pb1 at 432-3380.
$vp spend $25 on Bowen when you can catch the doris gaurin shoes here on campus for only $9? ! Don't miss them-Sunday, October 4, 8 p.m. tickets at SUA and CATS.
Rent a hot tub for your next party. Call Tub-to-go,
841-2691.
LIBERTY HALL
★★★★☆
Bill Hamst, All The Movies
7:30 & 9:30
ALL WEEK
THE
BIG
Easy
R
642 Mass
749 1912
if you missed it last Friday, don't miss it this Friday!
Award Park cake-great dinner, great DJ in
9 am. a.m. Friday, October 2. Be there!
MUSIC* **-** *MUSIC* ***-** *MUSIC* ***-** *MUSIC*
ted House Audio-Mobile Party Music, & track
Music from the studio Audio-Wizard.
Call Brad 749-1275.
mobile service
1 DJ Service in Lawrence
Experienced DJ's
Music for all Occasions
Sound and Lighting
DJ Ra Welle 74017 7083-
LIBERTYHALL
something incredible is happening for live music this week;
Tues., Sept. 29th
ALEX CHILTON
(Cold Idol from Memphis)
Wed., Sept. 30th
SON SEALS
(Legendary Chicago bluesman)
FOR RENT
metropolis
Fri., Oct. 2nd
COMMON GROUND
(Hometown World Beat)
Sat., Oct. 3rd
BOTTLENECK
TRIP SHAKESPEARE
1 bedroom cottage $22.00 plus deposit. Utilities
= NO PETS. Near campus & downslow.
843-314-6759
2 bedroom apartment close to campus. Reasonable, clean. 843-5231.
APPLE LANE APTS. Contemporary studies available at Apple Lake. On KU bus route. Launch on campus. Apple Parking. Wheel and cable payment. $285.00 per day. Call 813-300 for appointment to see.
foreign in court or foreign in law cases for female or German-speaking male. $150. Calldale. Call 866-294-5378.
for rent. A/C 2 br apartment off street parking
new paint. A/C $260/month. 1-881-8789.
Must lease. Single room apartment $260 per month, low utilities, water paid. Bus route.
Furnished 2 bedroom apt, some utilities paid, off-
charge, library, 1 block from Noah. No pets.
841-300-7666
Not satisfied with where you are living? Naimshim Hail has one female space available for improvement, and is offering individual lease liability, excellent "A1-U-CA" Meds, paid utilities, weekly maid service, and more. See www.naimshim.com for best housing options at KU! For more info, call or come by Naimshim Hall, 180 Naimshin Drive, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
SUNRISE
TOWN
Rent 1/3 of three bedroom townhouse...$150 plus
1/2 utilities. No deposit. On bus route. Call Maria
or Lort at 841-9288.
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 841-1287 for an appointment.
Office hours are 1-5 M-F.
Studio apartment for sublease. Full kitchen and
1423 Ibiza 0-2 minutes from campus.
843-7644
SUNLEAWOR HOUU ROoms available as
great location 749-601, ask for Ann, Deb, or
Sublease a two-story house—a home, not a room! Perfect for 2. Call days, 841-5797.
FOR SALE
1972 Honda Motorcycle CB350. Perfect condition.
Must sell!! Call 864-6418.
490 Yamaha. Very good condition. Must sell.
$475 OBL. Call Us at 844-4921-841-6869.
**015 OBO** Call LKK at 844-7821 841-7829.
**36/12** 1/2 foot Excel, 3/1 wheeler. Excellent con-
trol.
AQUARIUM Too many fish tanks. Will kill 39
birds. Put up for B75 OBO Just add fish. @821 1192.
Put up for B75 OBO Just add fish. @821 1192.
Clare Out-Satin Sheets. From only £2.50 for a
second J勃篷 Joined W 11W, 25Z.
Small Shopping Cases.
3 foot ball python. Healthy and includes tank, heater, and water bowl. Call 864-2561.
AMPLIFIER-Peace Deuce 2-channel, 2-12" 125 Watt. Phase, fuzz, reverb, foot switch, Loud, clean. Must sell $200. 749-1193.
edition. Call to see this camper 842-8017.
9 foot ball machine. Builder and team tackl
Close out sale! We have several odds & ends that will be offered direct to public at wholesale prices. $19 dresser & mirror $29 odd mats $49, waterbeds $138, soap & chairs $38 & much more.
GOVERNMENT Surplus! Camiflage clothing, overcoats, raicouts, combat jungle boots, camisoles, shorts, skirts, casual workwear. Carhartt workwear; much more!! Open Mon-Sat: 7, Murys. Surplus sales, Sales, Mursy, KS
For Sale: King-sized watered complete with
linens and linen. Must sell-best offer. Call
784-5209
784-5209
FOR SALE ALL-SPORTS TICKET! Highest of
*takes it*. Call in evening. 841-2079.
Equalizer w/pct痕 analyzer $100, AM/FM
tuner $50, dual subwinder $200 Must sell!
Cisco CC960B-73E2L-E14B0
Suzuki G54 169E, great condition. Must sell soon.
$750 or best offer. 841-7767.
GUITAR-Gibson RD Custom. Humbuckers, electronics, excellent action. Looks, feels great.
TREX 152 breed model 560 23' brick-$295, in storage for last year. Wool rug, mansion, 6/1/2 x 1/2', excellent shape=$25, 749-2688 after p. 1/m.1951-4412 (Perry)
Qain Furniture Warehouse, 8th & New Hampshire,
Lawrence.
For Sale: Bowie concert tickets. Call 811-276-2176 for Kemper. Very good sea
MUST SELL HYBRID Honda Passport Only.1,500
or best offer 免锁保门 免费 lock & bell 450 or
best offer 81-729-3650
Mountain bike. Specialized Hard Rock. Extra equipment. Truck must. Sell $30. Ask for Chris.
**** MOTHBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE.
Monday-Friday 10:5:0 p.m. Saturday 10:2 p.m.
512 E. 9th, 749-8661.
Onkyo TX35 receiver, $200. 1975 Bradley GT, $2000
Desk $50, dorm carpet $45, 10-speed bike $50. Call
814-4743.
Hamilton 27'' x 9''. D60 dia-light VR 29 drawing table with panel. Best offer 843-9724
PEUGEOT 12 SPEED TOURING BIKE
PERFECT CONDITION W/PUMP & BAR BAG.
CALL 841-1388; OR LEAVE MESSAGE.
Two GREAT upper-level tickets to BOSTON concert!
Mark, 841-0236
Vaccines - Save his money. Recommended with 9+
Vaccine - Save big money. Reconditioned with 3 years of service and/or warranty. Vacuum Laundry & Sewing Center, 916 Mascot Ave, Los Angeles, CA 90045
1974 Pontiac Safir wagon. Air, cruise, tilt,
AM/FM cassette stereo. Runs great. 845-1736.
$700.
Naimish contracts for sale. Will pay $160 security deposit. Contact Frank at 749-2338.
1974 T16 New motor, new paint, in Shawnee.
1-631-6647
Save: PERFORMING ARTS Ticket. Admission to four different series, $60. Call 864-6992
Sale: sofa sleeper and 10-speed at 739 Massachusetts, Miller Furniture.
Racing bike 1987 Bianche 59 cm $480. Ross 19-inch mountain bike $249. Both bikes in excellent condition. Call 843-1873.
AUTO SALES
1800 Chevrolet II, very clean, A/C/AM/FM
cassette, great gas mileage. $1500 best offer
terior, tires-under coated. Porsche wheels.
Complete restoration. $4250 OBO. Call Dave at
864-6726.
37 Ford truck for sale-Sure, it has problems-iRuns and for $100 or best offer, whataya want?
843-4235
70 Chev. Carryall runs well, low miles, PS, PB,
dissipat tract good. $895 obo. 843-393-6
BXI/9 / 1984. *Fun sports car* 3:5peed,
leather interior, power window, NEW stereo,
amplifier, tires and more. Looks great! Must
buy. 800-616-8000 days; 30/14-72/
weekends.
ORDER NEW 1988 CARS--TRUCKS-
VANS-$250-4450 OVER COST, DELBERT D.
THOMAS 843-8449
Reliable 1970 Palto wagon. 59,000-21,000 on
engine. (New engine installed by FORD-have all
papers). Runs great. little rust. $400. 749-1193.
Tune up your motor in 30 minutes.
*****New Cordless Bell Phones*****
Overstocked and must be sold by EOM! Only
$499 retail. 8100 Call 852-8644 7700
CARS SELL for $158 (average)!! Also jeeps,
trucks, etc. Now available. 865-687-4000 Ext.
S-9758 for details.
Tune up your import car, $35. Parts and labor included, satisfaction guaranteed. Call Aaron, 841-4629.
VOLVO, 1982 244 DL, must sell-moving, low mileage. Excellent condition. 943-7445 after 5 p.m.
LOST-FOUND
University Daily Kansan / Monday, September 28. 1987
LOST: Black leather jacket. Heavy sentimental value. Reward Please call 841-6890.
FOUND mens ring in restroom in Lindley Hall
Call Kirk at 844-763-106 and describe
Lost Professor's black attache case--important
papers, reward: 100.99¢ on Room 3.Balloy.
papers-reward. 749-2698 or Room 2 Bailey
Lost. Years P.Z.travel number. No.
$10-640 Weekly up mailing circulars! Rush self-
added stamped envelope! Opportunity: 9011
Wilshire Box, B26, Dept. Q, Beverly Hills, CA
80211
HELP WANTED
Lost, Loney R-7 tennis raquet. It was left on a bus September 22. Reward of $20. Please call Roger, 864-1125.
$8/our telemarketing Monday Thursday 5-9 and Saturday morning. Flexible schedules. Lencae location-carpool from Lawrence available. For interview, call Mr. Lackenby at 749-4824.
Apartment Leasing Agent, part time position of,
Midwest College Management 119 Staffer Fint Hall, Lawrence, KS 66034.
Cook wanted for fraternity. Experience necessary. For more information, call 841-6728.
Country estate owner needs weekend help.
Housecleaning and/or outside maintenance work.
paid stay. Call 848-8292 days or
887-4619 evenings, and save name and phone number
GOVMENT MANAGEMENT $10.940-553-298.jr. New
Hiring Call 863-657-4007 Ext. R7 for current
job details
Jantor needed at Raintree Monesson School,
4545 Clinton Parkway. Flexible evening hours.
5:30 p.m. on. Transportation required. Call
945-6800.
part-time days. M-F: 8 a.m. to noon. Also each week Monday through Friday, students assist with basic needs at local financial institution. Some listing. Dependability and ability are important skills. Must be a must. Call: 415-646-1889 at 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Part-time sales clerk for gift shop. Non-smoker. Must be available to work on Saturday $3.50; apply in person at Arthritis Hallmark, 2rd and Iida. Part-time morning front office help wanted for physician's offee. Non-smoker. able to work from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. Req. education. Seal receipt. Carry: 0-130 Climbing
Singer needed for working blackgrass band. Must
have a background in Rock and roll is good.
841-645-676
Volunteers needed. Volunteers in court are looking for someone who is court-aware. Call Ann at 8417700, if you are court-aware.
Walters, waitresses, hostess, kitchen help, and
cook. Visit the Alton restaurant's
W 1st W. dr. 32d. 84-8232
Wanted: Male personal care attendant for
work with a client to train the right person. For interview
843-797-9001
Want your own business? Now is the time to start earning as an Avon representative. Call Julie at (800) 274-3916.
Work Study-Clerical work in medical office.
Must be available some afternoons. Accurate typing Secretarial/secretary activities. App. in person, 112 W. Flushing, 6th St. 208. Reference(s)
We have a new store that you can get cash on almost anything of value. Also, good on buys on camera. jewelry, stereo equipment (auto & camera) and jewellery. Jewelry & Jewellery. 800-719-6290, Jewelry & Jewellery. 800-719-6290
Ki Skylets over Christmas, January 5-10
Package includes transportation/ki/skdg/
discount and discount on lift tickets. Only $188 Contact Martin at 841-0777
MISCELLANEOUS
God~Happy仆 It~! it's been fantastic. Fun, faith,
love, and thank. remember what?^7 Love ya^7
Are you looking for a a wild, steamy night of uninhabited pleasure for two? CALL DANNY R.,
All Ep Initiates! CONGRATULATIONS!! - 0ooo00m
TYLER F.
19 TODAY!!
BUS. PERSONAL
Yo, brother Tyrone,
HAPPY BIRFDAY
Kali and Michèle-Ski-Kansas and the popcorn
eksalan. It must have been the fruit. Hope to
have it.
For that personified hair design, bump into Carl &
Company & Company Hair Designers at 2116 W. 520th St.
in the Holiday Plaza on the Bus Line. Tuesday-
Saturday from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday and
Wednesday.
LLM, the last two years have been the best in my life “Please Don’t Let Him Seek Your Heart’ (Phil Collins, Love always, CJP. Prescott C: Aren’t you tired of Jennifer A. sen-
I've not trusted of Jennifer A. sending you these dumb personal?
to yo BAD SELF. Word!
Workshops - Our mechanics will teach you how to change flat tires, wheel nuts, brakes, and more for 14 of our sessions. 15 each. 10 a.m., beginning September 19. Sunflower, 801, Massachusetts,
ankle bracelet
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12
Monday, September 28. 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Sports
Soccer co-captain plays for kicks
Bv ROBERT WHITMAN
Staff writer
Finding the motivation to play for the women's soccer club for the fifth straight season was not hard for Pascale Haustermanns. But she faced other challenges.
"I't harder to get in shape this year," Haustermann said. "I compare myself to all these 18-year-olds. When I was 18, I could run forever too."
It would be hard to define Hauser-
manns, 22, in different physical
terms than her teammates just by
lean, long-legged 5-foot-10 frame.
But it would be hard to argue with Haustermann on that subject anyhow. I a graduate student in the School of Medicine would exercise physiology and nutrition.
Another challenge Haustermanns faces is finding time for soccer. The team practices on Monday, Wednesday and Thursday afternoons. But Haustermanns, president of the club, and a captain of the team, has class class Day afternoon that preve her from going to practice.
Another challenge is preventing
parents in their child's
from finding a new living place (e.g.
finding out she's playing this fall.
Haustermanns suffered a broken jaw jaws teeth and one chipped tooth with rays in the opponent last spring. Both were trying to head the ball during a game against Kansas State. She now wears a mouthpiece during games.
"My mother said I ought to play same non-competitive sport like tennis," she said.
course. I said yes."
But soccer is in her blood and has been since she was in the fourth grade. She said she learned about the game from her father, who played for 25 years for men's club teams in West Germany and in Tulsa.
Haustermanns played in a city youth league in Tulsa until her senior year at Bishop Kelley High School. The high school started a girl's soccer team that fall, and she played as a right wing forward.
But during a winter season game on a snow-covered field, Hauster-manns said she tore all the ligaments in her right ankle.
Though some schools in the country have varsity women's soccer programs, Haustermanns said she was not recruited by any them.
But it would not have mattered if she had been. Academics was the director for Haustermanns and her parents, when she was researching college.
"Truthfully, my parents wouldn't let me go to an-in-state Oklahoma) school." Haustermanns said. "I came up here and looked at KU. Academically, it's a lot better than OU or OSU. I knew KU had soccer. I didn't care if it was varsity, club or intramural."
Haustermanns started with the club in the fall of 1983. The club began a streak of 23 straight victories that until the end of the fall 1984 season
"When I first joined the team, it was really small," Haustermanns said. "We had about 12 or 13 players in the entire club. But we were dedicated, knew each and played well together."
Haustermanns is the only player that remains from the team of five years ago. The faces are different now and so is the type of player coming into club.
"It (five years) seems like a long time because the team has gone through some changes," Haustermann said. "We have a lot more coming out, but not as many are sticking to it. To a lot of girls, it's a bit hard or fourth priority, so they don't commit as much time to practice."
There are about 15 new players who will play regularly in games this fall, Haustermanns said.
"We have more players this year with good individual skills than we've ever had," she said.
Haustermanns and co-captain Leigh Strom serve as liaisons between the players and coach Kevin Connor. Though Haustermanns were elected club president in the spring by the members, she said both she and Strom share equal responsibility for running the club.
"I don't know if people are noticing, but we're trying to develop a lot of team unity." Haustermann said. "If anybody has a problem with the team, they don't want to go directly to Kevin, they can call me or Leigh."
Despite being with the cum for so long, she said playing with the team had been interesting for the most part.
"It gets boring when we lose or we don't play well," Haustermanns said. "Other than that, I love it."
SAMSUNG
Dave Niebergall/KANSAP
Pascale Haustermanns attempts to maneuver the ball past women's soccer coach Kevin Connor during practice. This is Haustermanns' fifth season with the KU women's soccer club.
Leigh Strom scored both Kansas goals, one in each half.
Mary Walker scored a goal midway through the second half Saturday, giving Benedictine College a 2-2 lead. Women's soccer club at Shenk Complex.
Walker shot after receiving a free kick by Benedictine defender Denise Pezidow that went about five feet in front of the KU goal.
Strom was set up by a pass from Pascale Haustermanns and scored her first goal from about 10 vards
KU women's soccer club ties game with Benedictine
Benedictine tied the game later in the first half on a goal by Kelly Eckel.
By a Kansan reporter
Kansas, 0-1-1, will play two matches Saturday afternoon at Sken Comp. against, apart from Kansas State at 2 p.m. in East Austin Missouri Valley College at 4 p.m.
Lacrosse club loses twice in weekend tourney
away. That gave Kansas a 1-0 lead early in the first half.
In the second half, Strom gained possession of the ball at the midfield line, dribbed about 50 yards and scored his second goal making the score 2-1.
By TOM STINSON
Special to the Kansan
Six unanswered goals midway through the second half spoiled the KU Lacrosse Club's bid for a victory yesterday in the Kansas City Lacrosse Tournament at Swope Park. The Jayhawks, whose first organized team was the Oklahoma State Cowboys 13-6 in the tournament's consolation game.
Lack of practice and not enough substitute players plagued the club, which also lost its opening round game Saturday to Missouri, 9-1.
"For just starting Monday, we need the greatest gift Cameron. Our defense played."
Lacrosse, a sport originated by the American Indians, is similar to hockey in rules and in nature except that lacrosse is played on a field, said Mark Glassman, club president.
The Jayhawk offense was led by junior Ron Conner, who netted three goals against the Cowboys and had the lone goal against Missouri.
The first goal by the Jayhawks in the game against Oklahoma State was on a shot by junior Cory Powell that went the full length of the field. Conner tied the score at 2 in the second quarter on a shot assisted by
KU beats K-State in soccer
sophomore Dan Grossman.
The Kansas club opened the second half with two quick goals by Grossman and Conner and pulled within a point. But the Cowboys then started their string of unanswered goals, which included three in less than three minutes during the third quarter
Kansas then traded goals with the Cowboys on shots by Conner and junior Mike Beaty before allowing him to reach the final minute of the ball to trail 7-4.
Glassman said a home game against the Kansas City Club is tentatively scheduled for the weekend of October 10 and 11.
By ROBERT WHITMAN
Staff writer
The KU men's soccer club survived the last six minutes of the game Saturday short-handed and defeated Kansas State 3-2 in Manhattan.
Yellow cards are given by the referee to caution a player about flagrant fouls or unsportsmanlike conduct. Yellow cards receive two yellow cards in a game.
Kansas, 2-1, had to play with 10 players when Chris Eviliszer received his second yellow card of the game in the 84th minute and was ejected by the referee. The Jayhawks led 3-1 at the time.
Kansas led 1-0 at halftime on a penalty kick goal by Keaton Paton in the 23rd minute. The Wildcat defense brought down KU forward Bret Chapman in its penalty box, setting up the penalty kick
The Wildcats made it 3-2 in the 87th minute of the game on a goal by Patrick Bonnefiel, who was left uncovering the far post for the Kansas defense.
In the first minute of the second half, Kansas State stole a pass from the KU defense to galele Jon Gregor and the game on a goal by Dave Wietz.
KU forward Jim Rudnick was credited with the goal that put Kansas back in the lead in the 54th minute when his pass was deflected into the Wildcat goal by a Kansas State defender.
KU defender Marc Boussaget put Kansas ahead 3-1 in the 82nd minute when he stole a ball in the Wildcats' field and hit a low shot into the goal.
"We played a much better game of soccer with the exception of the last six minutes." KU coach Glenn Shirtliffe said. "The monkey is off our back now. It's been a long time since we went to Manhattan and played a good game."
Shirtlife and seven players went to the Kansas State Penitentiary in Lansing on Sunday to give a soccer clinic for some of the inmates.
Shirtliffe said about 20 inmates took part in the clinic, which lasted three weeks. The clinic was conducted on the softball field of the prison's softball field
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday September 29,1987 Vol. 98,No.27
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Lobbyist chosen to fill job
Staff writer
By NOEL GERDES
University of Kansas officials announced yesterday that they had hired a lobbyist from the Wichita Area Chamber of Commerce to perform some of the duties vacated by Richard von Ende, former University executive secretary.
Von Ende resigned in September 1986 after pleading guilty to two federal cocaine charges.
Jon Josserand, who will have the title of governmental affairs specialist, will start his $38,500-a-year job in mid-October and will report to Marlin Rein, associate director of the budget office. Rein has overall responsibility for legislative relations at the University,
"It's a continuing challenge to educate and inform the citizens of the state as well as the legislators to the role of higher education and the critical needs it faces." Josserand said.
Josserand will coordinate the University's lobbying effort with the Kansas Legislature in Topeka. Issues he will deal with this academic year include his plan toUniversity's budget proposals and selective admissions proposals.
He graduated from KU in 1976 with degrees in business administration and political science, and he earned a degree from the KU law school in 1979.
Josserand has been vice president for government relations of the Wichita Area Chamber of Commerce since last year. For eight years, beginning in 1979, he held several positions in the Kansas secretary of state's office, including assistant secretary of state.
Vickie Thomas, University general counsel, said that although Jossen-and would assume many of von Ende's duties, the two positions were not the same. She said that the executive secretary position had been vacant since von Ende resigned and that Chancellor Gene A. Budig would decide whether to hire a new executive secretary. Several people have been handling the University's lobbying since von Ende resigned.
"The University is much larger than any single individual," he said. "I will be less of a lobbyist than a participant in a team of people."
Josserman said he didn't think the circumstances surrounding von Ende's departure would handicap his own lobbying efforts.
HUNTS
A man for fall seasons
Marvin Kasson, a Lawrence resident who describes himself as "very much a farmer," unloads some squash Kasson has been providing area stores with fresh vegetables for 50 years. He was delivering goods yesterday to Community Mercantile Co-op, 700 Maine St.
Colorado Democrat says she won't run
By VIRGINIA McGRATH
Staff writer
Some local Democrats and supporters expressed disappointment yesterday after U.S. Rep. Patricia Schroeder of Colorado announced that she would not seek the 1988 Democratic presidential nomination.
"I was a little disappointed to hear she's not running, but I'm glad she made the decision early," said Jim Parrish. Kansas state chairman of the RNC said on an ego trip; she's in it in earnest because that's the way she is."
Schroeder made the announcement yesterday in Denver. Tearfully, she said that her son had been a great friend.
about America, and I learned a lot about Pat Schroeder (this summer). That's why I will not be a candidate to win. I could not figure out how to run.
"There must be a way, but I haven't figured it out. I could not bear to turn every human contact into a photo opportunity."
"I assumed she wasn't going to run because she hadn't announced yet," Williams said. "I think it's still too early for me to conclude I wish she could run and win."
Milicent Williams, Olathe junior and president of the KU Democrats, said she wasn't surprised that Schroeder decided not to run.
State Treasurer Joan Finney, who said she was disappointed by Schroeder's decision, said, "I have been closely observing this. I would like to see a woman on the national ticket before this century is out. I think we will see that and that we'll see a woman elected president."
Parrish said that difficulties in raising the necessary money and the prospect of being one of the first to accept her offer had affected Schroder's decision.
He said that Schroeder's power and influence as senior woman in the House of Representatives were subservient to him. The force to give up that seat to run her
campaign.
"Having met her and watched her over the years, I know she is making a tremendous contribution there." Parrish said. "No doubt there will be careers to pursue a career as a presidential nominee or vice-presidential nominee."
Jean Rosenthal, assistant state coordinator for the Kansas chapter of the National Organization for Schroeder had been a strong backer of Schroeder.
"I'm very sorry and disappointed that she won't be running. She was definitely the candidate of choice for
See SCHROEDER, p. 6, col. 1
Officials to study admission policy
By MICHAEL HORAK
Staff writer
University of Kansas officials are beginning to evaluate the possible effects of a selective admissions Board of Regents earlier this month.
Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, said yesterday that she would study what impact the plan would have on the University and would present her findings to Chancellor Gene A. Budig in November.
Officials at other Regents schools are conducting similar studies.
Ramaley's report will deal with the academic preparedness of incoming freshmen; the opinions of alumni, faculty and students on selective admission; and a policy change would have on the number of students who enter KU.
"Iinside this seemingly simple question of open and selective admissions are important issues that everyone needs to think about." Ramaley said. "There isn't a person on the state that won't be affected by it."
Selective admissions for KU, Kansas State University and Wichita State University were formally propounded by the executive director, Stanley Konik.
Koplik's plan would limit in-state admission at the state's three largest universities to students who meet test-score or class-rank requirements.
Four regents schools, Fort Hays State University, Emporia State University, Pittsburgh State University and the Kansas Technical Institute, would remain open to all Kansas high school graduates.
Ramaley said she thought it was important to answer key questions such as why the change was proposed now and whether the state really wants the change before tinkering with the law. The 73-year-old open admissions policy.
"To move quickly beyond that tradition without asking important questions would not be good for Kansas." Ramaley said.
In the impact study, Ramaley will be looking at whether new freshmen are prepared when they come to KU!
"The concerns I'm hearing seem to focus on how well-prepared are students for college and should the state play a role in state play different roles," she said.
Under Koplik's plan, community colleges would be used more for remedial courses KU, KState and other schools would eliminate all such programs.
To aid Ramaley, KU's office of institutional research and planning will randomly select [freshman transcripts to see how many wouldn't have been admitted under the provisions of Kolikl's plan, she said.
Time permitting, alumni, key KU supporters, faculty and students will be polled on their views about selective admissions.
So far, views about Kopik's plan have been mixed. Ramalye said.
"I've talked to some people deeply committed to the philosophy of open admissions and equal opportunity for all, but there are also those who feel that closing admissions would increase the quality of education we give."
Over the next month, faculty and students will have opportunities to voice their views on the plan. On Oct. 1, the University Council will sponsor a faculty debate on selective admissions. That debate will be at 3:30 p.m. at 108 Blake Hall. Ramaley said there would be other times in October when students and faculty could comment on the plan.
The Regents are expected to take a position on selective admissions before the Kansas Legislature convenes in January. Because admission law is the only legal law, any change would have to be approved by the Senate and the House.
ASK kicks off plan to improve schools
The Associated Press
TOPEKA - Associated Students of Kansas announced yesterday a campaign to improve the quality of education at state universities while maintaining an open admissions policy.
Called "Higher Education Rescue Operation" — HERO — the program was unveiled at the Statehouse by spokesmen for ASK, which represents student governments at the six state universities.
Under its HERO program, ASK is supporting three things:
It endorses the state Board of Regents "Margin of Excellence" program that is designed to increase financing for Kansas universities to 95 percent of their peer institutions and to boost faculty salaries to the same level as their colleagues at peer institutions.
The three-year cost of the program is $47 million, of which $20 million would come from tuition increases and the rest from increased appropriations from the Kansas Legislature.
It wants the amount of money available for student salaries and the off-campus Kansas Career Work
Martie Aaron, KU campus director of ASK, said that performance in a required high school preparatory curriculum, not test scores, should be used to determine whether students could succeed at a university.
The HERO campaign kickoff on the KU campus will be at 7 p.m. tomorrow at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
Students witness court in action
"A student can decide to take preparatory courses, but a student can't decide what his ACT score is going to be." Aaron said.
Kansan reporter Brad Addington contributed information to this story.
10th U.S. Court of Appeals hears cases at School of Law
It wants to see stricter requirements for students admitted to state universities, without denying Kansas' own students the opportunity to get a college education. ASK advocates a required core high school curriculum for college-bound students and remedial programs at the local level for those who lack those courses.
By MICHAEL MERSCHEL
There are plenty of ways for students to up end going to court. Bringing a court to students usually a little harder, but it happened yesterday at the KU School of Law, when the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals began three days of hearing cases at Green Hall.
Study program increased by $300,000 over the next three years, a goal that seeks to offset student tuition 'increases.'
Staff writer
A three-judge panel, including former KU dean of law James Logan and former KU vice-chancellor for academic affairs Deanall Tacha, spent yesterday morning hearing cases from its regular in office counsel who could attorneys and law clerks and in equal number of law students.
Logan said the court had come to the University of Kansas for the benefit of the students.
"The school wanted to do it, Judge Tacha and I had previous association with it. It was agreeable and thought it would be interesting for the students."
Logan, who was dean of law from 1961 to 1968, said the court traveled away from its usual seat in Denver about once a year to bring some variety to its proceedings.
Logan said.
The school wanted to do it, Judge Tacha and I had previous associations with the school and the court was agreeable and thought it would be interesting for the students'
— James Logan
judge 10th US Circuit of
T
Appeals
The 10th circuit court's area of jurisdiction includes Kansas, Colorado, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Utah
Davis said the appearance by the court gave law students a chance to see the real version of what they studied in their classes.
In each of the six cases the judges heard yesterday, attorneys from each side had 15 minutes to argue whether a lower-court ruling should be overturned. All six cases were from New Mexico.
The last time the court was at KU in 1981, said Michael Dean, dear of
and Wyoming. There are 11 U.S. Courts of Appeals, which are the highest federal courts below the Supreme Court.
The attorneys' presentations were frequently halted in mid-sentence by questions from the judges. The judges sometimes nodded in agreement as the lawyers argued their cases and sometimes asked follow-up questions. Occasionally, they chided the lawyers for poor reasoning; but
See COURT, p. 6, col. 3
DONALD C. BROWN
After a long morning of hearing appeals, U.S. Circuit Judges Deanell Tacha, left, and James Logan, retire for lunch. Tacha, former vice-chancellor for academic affairs, and Logan, former KU dean of law, are two-thirds of the 10th U.S. Court of Appeals panel that met yesterday at Green Hall.
---
2
Tuesday, September 29, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Colombian avalanche kills 120; at least 500 more still missing
MEDELLIN, Colombia — An avalanche of red mud and rock killed at least 120 people, including 43 children, when it thundered down a mountainside and onto an area, officials said yesterday.
Some residents estimated that up to 500 people were missing in the scores of buried shacks.
At least seven of the children killed were attending first Holy Communion parties when they were buried under the landslide
Sunday in Villa Tina, an impoverished area of the industrial city of Medellin.
Exhausted workers dug through 20 feet of mud looking for survivors and bodies, and residents missed relatives and belongings.
"We heard the noise that sounded like an explosion, and soon afterward a huge mass of rocks and mud descended upon us," said Mary Mosquera, who lost three daughters in the avalanche.
Angry travelers complain of police abuse
MIAMI — Angry passengers accused of storming an Eastern Airlines ticket counter after their flight to New York was canceled complained yesterday that they were pushed around by police and treated like criminals or terrorists.
"I've never seen so much violence in my life," said passenger Edilema Rios.
"Eastern didn't handle it prop
erly, and the police were brutalizing the passengers," said John Smythe, vice president of Shearman Brian Brothers in New York City.
Police denied that the seven officers used excessive force Sunday at Miami International Airport but said complaints from the crowd of nearly 200 would be investigated.
Bush meets with Solidarity leader Walesa
WARSAN, Poland — Vice President George Bush made a dramatic appearance with Solidarity leader Lech Wałęsa yesterday and many Polish people in a televised address to strive for greater freedom.
"To our freedom and your freedom," Bush said in Polish and English at the end of a live five-
minute broadcast on state-run television that was unprecedented for an American official.
Bush said that he met with Wales, with other Solidarity officials and noted that he had visited the gravestes of the Rev. Jerzy Popieluszko, a pro-Solidarity priest who was slain by secret government police.
Mines block channel in gulf
U.S. Navy suspects Iran, may attack ships carrying mines
The Associated Press
White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said the rules of engagement had not changed, and a senior official in the organization did not include pre-emotive strikes.
But a Pentagon source said the rules already were fairly broad.
aboard the ship," he said. "If we have it pinned down that a ship is in international waters and carrying mines, then we might move in."
"The key is finding hard evidence, conclusive evidence, that mines are
"We are tracking a whole lot of vessels to see if they are minelayers," he said. "Our resources are being stretched out to the limit."
A Pentagon official said in Washington that the Navy might attack any vessel it determined to be carrying mines, even if it was not caught laying the explosives in international waters.
MANAMA, Bahrain — Mines blocked a key shipping channel in the southern Persian Gulf yesterday, and sources said the U.S. Navy suspected Iran was avenging the airy attack on an Iranian minelayer.
The sources spoke on condition of anonymity.
Another source said the Navy was looking at options for dealing with intensified Iranian activities in the area.
The commander of naval forces for Iran's Revolutionary Guard, Mohsen Rezaie, said Iraq would attack U.S. frigate to retaliate for the Sept. 21 capture of the Iran Ajr, which the Navy said it caught in the act of
laying mines
One U.S. military said the reason he was putting a serious burden on the Navy is that
From The Associated Press.
Rezaie's comment was reported by Iran's official Islamic Republic News Agency, which gave no direct quotes.
The agency quoted Iranian navy chief Rear Adm. Mohammad Hussein Malekzadegan as saying, "Muslim combatants are ready to teach American Marines a lesson they will never forget."
As many as six mines were spotted about 20 miles off the busy United Arab Emirates port of Dubai.
But U.S. military sources said the destroyer USS Kidd reported possible sightings of only three such mines.
The London-based Lloyd's Shipping Intelligence Unit issued a notice pinpointing an area several miles away where it said should be considered mined.
U.S. passed up 1985 meeting chance with Iranian official, former aide says
WASHINGTON — U.S. officials passed up a chance in 1985 to talk directly to a high Iranian official eager to improve relations, instead strengthening the hand of Iranian radicals through arms sales, a for-profit consulting consulted in Iran-contra testimony released yesterday.
The Associated Press
Michael Ledeen, a former consultant on terrorism who took part in early discussions with Israel about
In his testimony, given privately in March, June and September to House and Senate investigators, Ledeen said the official believed the changes could lead to Iran's abandonment of Iran and to better relations with the West.
said to have been eager to cooperate with the United States, asking only for small arms to protect himself and his allies inside Iran and for secure communications equipment to stay privately in touch with the United States, Ledeen said.
the Iran arms saies, said the Iranian official 'believed it possible to, in essence, change the nature of the country to a peaceful, parliamentary methods'
He said the official strongly opposed large-scale scales of U.S. made weapons to Iran because that strengthened his powerful opponents who were resisting any tendency towards moderation.
Bork sees disfavor from polls
The official, who is not named, is
Senate Democrats said that they had nothing to do with the polls and that they would make up their minds based on Bork's qualifications.
As the third week of hearings began, meanwhile, testimony continued to reflect deep divisions over schools, lawyers and public officials.
Judiciary Committee Chairman Joseph R. Biden, D-Del., said he hoped the panel could conclude its investigation by the nomination by the middle of next year.
WASHINGTON — Public opinion polls that show growing opposition to Supreme Court nominee Robert H. Bork touched off heated meetings yesterday at Bork's Senate confirmation hearings and at the White House
A Republican member of the Senate Judiciary Committee said some polsters had been "utterly detestable" in framing questions designed to undermine President Reagan's court nominations. And Reagan spoken Marlin Fitzwater accused Democrats of trying to turn the Bork nomination into a "special interest-led public referendum."
Among witnesses testifying Monday:
The Associated Press
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, September 29, 1987
3
Campus/Area
Local Briefs
Student offers not guilty plea to fraud charge
KU student Quintin Smith pleaded not guilty to a charge of telephone fraud last week, county Court clerk Douglas County District Court clerk.
Smith's lawyer called the court Thursday and rendered a plea of not guilty. Bond of $750 had been posted for Smith.
Smith, who is a starting wide receiver for the KU football team, was schedled to have his first court appearance in district court yesterday, but it was postponed until 11 a.m. Oct. 27.
Smith, Houston sophomore, was arrested Sept. 21. He had been charged May 15 after MCI and US Spirt investigators gave evidence for prosecution to the district attorney's office. District Attorney Jim Flory said he had decided to wait for Smith to return to Lawrence this fall before arresting him.
Body in Colorado identified Friday
The body of a man who authori-
ties initially thought was a KU
student was identified Friday as
Eric Osteen of Osage Beach, Mo.
Although Osteen was never a student at the University of Kansas, he had been traced back to this area. He apparently told people who last saw him alive Aug. 16 at a Grateful死 dead concert in Colorado that he was an art student at KU. His body was found Sept. 3 at the bottom of a waterfall in Telluride, Colo.
Investigators from the San Miguel County Sheriff's Department traced Osteen back to the Kansas City Art Institute, where the dean of students matched a picture of the unidentified man with Osteen's student identification card. Osteen's parents were notified, and they sent sheriff's officials their son's dental records.
Those records resulted in a positive identification, said Sky Walters, San Miguel County undersheriff.
Six JRP residents report tire damage
Joseph R. Pearson Hall residents reported a rash of tire slashes Thursday night.
Lt. Jeanne Longaker, KU police spokeswoman, said six residents had filed reports of slashed tires. Longauer said she knew more students had damaged tires but had not filed reports.
The incidents occurred between 5 p.m. Thursday and 2:30 a.m. Friday. Longaker said a security officer noticed several flat tires in the lot and ran a check on license plates. The owners were then notified.
Total damage to the cars was estimated at $75. Police are continuing to investigate but have no leads.
Bomb scare upsets church services
Morning worshippers at the First Presbyterian Church were evacuated Sunday after they received a bomb threat, church-school superintendent Cheryl Harmon said.
Church officials evacuated about 200 adults and children before Lawrence police arrived. Some parishioners were scared, the evacuation was calm for the most part, she said. No bomb was found.
City to hear mall rezoning requests Planning staff recommends no clearance for proposals
Planning staff recommends no clearance for proposals
By VALOREE ARMSTRONG Staff writer
Staff writer
From staff and wire reports.
Lawrence's city planning staff, in a report released last week, said it would not recommend allowing three new apartment buildings and pave the way for suburban malls.
The 178-page report, which planers have labored over since July, details why each area would not be an appropriate mall site.
Price Banks, planning director,
said yesterday that the planning staff
had given much attention to the three
rezoning requests because of the size
of the sites involved and the possible
their rezoning could have on the
city.
"There's a difference between a zoning request for a McDonald's and one for a large mail," he said. "It's a little bit more complicated of this magnitude — lea. alone three."
The rezoning requests are for:
■ 55 acres of land northwest of Wakarusa Drive and Highway 40. A request to rezone that land has been submitted by Attorney Ed Collister of Lawrence.
101 acres of land south of Clinton Parkway on both sides of Wakasura Drive A request to requeat that land and a request to co-La. a Fort Smith, Ark., JRM.
a 61.5-acre site south of 35th Street on the east side of Iowa Street. A request to rezone that land has been made by Jacobs, Visconsi and Jacobs of Cleveland. That site is the only one of the three within city limits.
The requests will be considered by the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission in a marathon hearing at 6:30 p.m. Oct. 7 at Central Junior High School, 1400 Massachusetts St. The commission will
hear the planning staff's report, presentations from the three developers and comments from Lawrence residents.
T
here's a difference between a zoning request for a McDonald's and one for a large mall. It's not very often we encounter one issue of this magnitude — let alone three.'
Price Banks Planning director
surrounding property and the community, whether the zoning was compatible with the zoning of surrounding areas, traffic analyses, proximity to floodplains and problems of accessibility and utility services.
The staff also considered the rezonings' impact on the downtown area as a social and cultural part of the entire city.
The city planning staff considered each site on the basis of its impact on
Banks said that Lawrence city commissioners and Douglas County commissioners would be careful not to sing on the recommendation just yet.
Some officials said that city and county commissioners might not see the rezoning requests to make the final decision until December. It may take that long for them to clear the planning commission's scrutiny that begins Oct. 7.
JACKSON
Asbestos removal is started
By JORN E. KAALSTAD
Balcony basketball
Jeff Mentel, St. Louis junior, center, puts a move on Craig Mulcahy, St. Louis junior, left, as Kurt Slonka, Overland Park junior, waits his turn.
Staff writer
Workers from the department of facilities operations have started to dismantle an asbestos-insulated trash burner south of the power plant, said Bob Porter, associate director of physical plant maintenance.
Porter said the incinerator had been inactive since it lost its exhaust outlet when the plant's smokestack was torn down this summer. A more efficient non-asbestos burner in Malawi has taken over its duties, he says.
The power plant is behind Staufer-Flint Hall.
The incinerator was used to burn dead animals and animal parts from experimental labs, in addition to trash and paper.
An asbestos crew, wearing coveralls and breathing apparatus masks, will seal off the building and moisten the asbestos sheets with water to prevent dusting before they remove it.
The crew will be supervised by representatives from the Kansas Department of Environmental Health.
When the work is done in a couple of days, the asbestos will be transported to the Rolling Meadows Sanitary Landfill in Topeka. The landfill is led by the Kansas Department Environmental Health, Porter said.
Asbestos produces a dust containing needle-sharp particles that destroys lung tissue when inhaled. Asbestos is also a major component of environmental health engineering.
Porter said the decision to tear down the incinerator was not initiated by environmental protection officials. He said the job was done immediately, it was good training for future demolition defects that involved asbestos removal.
McKinney said facilities operations workers were well trained to handle asbestos
Porter said a similar burner at
the hospital into disuse also
would be dismantled.
Staff writer
Big field of candidates vies for freshman votes
By BRAD ADDINGTON
KU freshmen voting for freshman class officers today and tomorrow will choose from among two independent candidates and members of five coaltions.
**Sean Tevis of Overland Park is running independently for president. Tevis said he would like to offer freshmen more opportunities to get to know one another.**
"It's really sad to see students sit around the dorm and ing in front of the TV," he said.
■ Heather Hamilt of Leawood is running independently for secretary.
The Concept coalition is headed by Michael Beehe of Shawnee. Beehe said his coalition would emphasize student participation and encourage parity “There’s a pt to be looked into.” His said.
Other Concept candidates are Todd Miller of Overland Park for vice president, Stephanie Axe of Lenexa for secretary and Shannon Rogers of Mission Hills for treasurer.
- The Cutting Edge coalition is headed by John Hutton of Topeka.
"What we'd like to do is make all the freshman class officers more powerful than they are now," Hutton said. He said he'd like to have the class officers lobbied in the Student Senate.
Other Cutting Village candidates are Steve Jenkins of Prairie Village for vice president,
James Van Osol of Skokie, Ill., for secretary,
and Kim Hutton of Derby for treasurer.
■ The *Happenin'* coalition is headed by Joel Joyce of Prairie Village. Joyce said his coalition would focus on involvement. "I want to set up a freshman class committee with representatives from all the halls, fraternities and sororites," he said.
Other Happin' candidates are Tim Keel of Leawood for vice president, Julie Axland of Overland Park for secretary and Meg Moulthrop of Houston, Texas, for treasurer.
■ The Headway coalition is headed by Derek Bridges of Dodge City. Bridges said, "The freshman class this year has a lot of changes in it, such as the foreign language requirements, and we're going to try to help students with the problems that they have."
The New Horizons coalition is headed by Mike Enseley of Overland Park. He said one of the goals of his coalition would be to get more students in higher Education Rescue Operation campaign.
Other New Horizon candidates are Mike Rozell of Overland Park for vice president, Ann Nide of Omaha, Neb., for secretary and Brian Blankenship of Overland Park for treasurer.
Other Headway candidates are Audrey Curts of Hays for vice president, Christy Burns of Overland Park for secretary and Mason Gilland of Hutchinson for treasurer.
Elections are in the rotunda at Strong Hall.
KU Democrats plan poll
The KU Democrats will conduct a straw poll today and tomorrow to test on campus support of candidates for the Democratic nomination for president. Anyone on campus can vote in
Candidates on the poll are Bruce Babbitt, Michael Dukakis, Albert Gore, Jesse Jackson, Richard Gephardt and Paul Simon.
Eric Levitt, publicity chairman of the KU Democerat, said that although straw polls were not available, voters should be encouraged.
create interest in the KU Democrats and make students aware of the candidates and their interests.
"If students don't know about the candidates, the information at the meeting should help them."
Results of the poll will be announced at the group's meeting at 7 p.m. tomorrow at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union. Informations for the candidates will be provided at that time.
Public administration department ranks seventh in national survey
By a Kansan reporter
The KU department of public administration has been ranked seventh in a national productivity survey conducted by two researchers from the University of Georgia.
The researchers, Jerome S. Legge Jr. and James Devore, assessed public administration programs at different universities by counting the number of articles published by faculty in the respective journals in scholarly journals such as Public Administration Review and Administration and Society.
Several hundred universities with public administration and public affairs programs were reviewed in the survey.
In the 1981 survey by the two researchers, the KU department ranked 18th.
"They're more experienced and more skilled as a department than in 1818," he said.
John Nalbandian, chairman of the department of public administration, said the improvement could be attributed to more experienced faculty in research and to the improved quality of articles submitted to public administration journals.
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Nalbandian said the journals had high publishing standards. Faculty members have about a one in 10 chance of having articles accepted by the journals, he said.
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4
Tuesday, September 29, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Presidential power
President Reagan is an expert at getting tough. It's what he does best.
Now Congress must get tough with the president.
Reagan refuses to follow the terms of the 1973 War Powers Act, saying that it doesn't apply to U.S. forces in the Persian Gulf. Reagan calls attacking Iranian vessels in the Persian Gulf a defensive action that isn't hostile enough to warrant the War Powers Act.
The controversy arose again on Sept. 21 after a U.S. military helicopter attacked an Iranian ship. U.S. officials have said they tracked the Iranian ship by radar and air surveillance for several days and discovered that it was laying mines. In addition, U.S. sailors placed explosives on the Iranian ship and sunk it.
The War Powers Act would force Reagan to give Congress reports on U.S activity in the Persian Gulf. Congress also would have the power to end U.S. military involvement, regardless of the Reagan administration's opinion.
Reagan should not be given a free hand in this situation. He needs to be held accountable to the American people. Congress represents the American people.
Congress should insist on its Constitutional rights in the decision-making process now, before it's too late.
Criminal catchers
In a recent sting operation code-named Project Looking Glass, the U.S. Postal Service and the attorney general's office took aim at a most despicable crime - child pornography.
Unfortunately, the project also shattered some cherished tenets of fairness in criminal prosecution.
Doing business as the fictitious Far Eastern Trading Company, the Postal Service sent fliers soliciting purchase orders to people who were known to have bought pornography through the mail in the past. These orders actually were filled, using materials that were reproduced from previously confiscated photographs, magazines and films. Buyers were later arrested.
Though buying pornography that exploits children is a crime, the arrests made under the sting may be thrown out of court because of the tactics used. The solicitations may constitute entrapment.
The government would have done better to track down and punish the producers of child pornography than to pursue individual buyers through legally questionable tactics.
Child pornography is a serious offense. As Kansas City attorney Mike Lerner put it, "people who exploit children like that should be put away."
TV timeout
As every Jayhawk fan knows, Kansas basketball suffers slightly away from Allen Field House. We have won 48 consecutive games at home, but our road record lags a bit.
Last year, the basketball program suffered when, in the middle of the conference race, the team played four consecutive games on the road for national television. This year, the traveling threat is back. To schedule games in accordance with network schedules, KU again must face a road schedule that is demanding and a hindrance to its quality of play.
As it stands, KU will have seven national TV appearances tns season, only two of which are at home. In the heat of conference games, the Jayhawks play four road games with only one home game squeezed in. The heavy road schedule is due to the scheduling of games around TV appearances.
Coach Larry Brown told one newspaper, "It hurt us in the conference race last year to play four times on national TV in the middle of the race. I don't want it to happen again."
Jayhawk supporters don't want it to happen again, either. Scheduling around TV appearances hinders the players' performance, and thus the quality of the game. TV revenues are indeed high, but scheduling to accommodate networks during conference play is unfair. Top-rate conference play should not be sacrificed for sporadic TV coverage.
Correction
Because of an editor's error, Barbara M. Paris, administrative officer I in the department of English, was misquoted. In her letter to the editor, she wrote, "While I'm 100 percent behind the Margin of Excellence Program, it simply must not be classified employees who are sacrificial lambs — yet again."
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
News staff
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JIM BERMAN CALLING ON ENGINEERS 1987
"NO FOOTBALL?! WHAT GOOD IS FALL WIDDONFOOTBALL?!"
U.S. aid promotes democracy
Despite the recent approval of the Guatemala peace plan by Central American leaders, the United States should continue its support of the Nicaraguan freedom fighters. And tomorrow, when Mr. Obama will visit Congress should be prepared to renew its opposition to the Sandinista's stronghold in Nicaragua.
The call for restoration of aid, which President Reagan has made, should not be considered an attempt to undercut the peace process agreed upon in August, but instead, as Sen. Bob Dole said, it should be viewed as "a hedge against Sandinista bad faith."
This type of hedge tactic, as Dole suggests, would place the appropriated money in an escrow-type account so that in the likely event of Sandinista non-compromise with the accord, the designated monies would be made available to contras to further their democratic pursuits. In the less likely scenario of Sandinista compliance, the money would be retained by the U.S.
This is the most sensible approach the U.S. can take, given the sorry record amassed by Sandinista leader Daniel Ortega and his Marxist counterparts, Ortega's "revolution without frontiers" must be needed than a mere signature and a few cosmetic promises, because the stakes are too high.
The U.S. can't afford to put its unbounded faith behind a man who publicly stated that elections "in no way, like a lottery, decide who is going to have power. For this power belongs to us."
Marxist Nicaragua, controlled by Ortega, is a troublesome island of oppression in the wave of
Christopher Wilson Staff Columnist
The Sandistas betrayed the people's revolution in 1979, reneged on a promise made to the Organization of American States to democratize, and have undeniably committed themselves to the war against Islamic states throughout Central America. This threat both benefits fragile democracies and the security of the U.S.
Tomas Borge, Interior Minister of Nicaragua,
etched Sandinista intentions and their Marxist commitment in stone by saying, "Our) revolution's moral imperative and historical character make it inevitable that the energies released here will be universal in all Central America."
democracy that has swept Central America since Reagan took office in 1981; witness the democratic rise of nations such as Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador during this period. And the U.S. should not compromise these unprecedented gains in the region by abandoning the contras, especially in light of Ortega's trip to Cuba to "consult" with Fidel Castro, just hours after signing the agreement.
Some liberals would like to blame Reagan for the numerous problems in Central America. Critics say that Reagan, not Ortega, is at fault and that he is the one making peace impossible.
The fact is, Reagan sees a short-term solution, like the cosmetic Guatemalan agreement, as only a progressive move; he realizes that more concrete steps must be taken to provide a realistic, long-term solution that is both beneficial to the Nicaraguan people and to the United States.
How conveniently opponents of the president's policy forget that, in 1891, it was the U.S. that offered to help disband the contras if the Sandinistas would adopt basic democratic principles and keep their revolution a domestic affair. But Ortega declared his revolution "profoundly anti-Yankee and Marxist-Leninist," which ended the proposals.
And many also forget that it was President Jimmy Carter, not Reagan, who originally suspended aid to the revolutionaries in Managua. After the revolution, Carter sent more aid in 1979 to Panama, and then in 1982 to Zulia in the four previous years combined. But Ortiz lies and broken promises ended U.S. assistance.
Now Reagan is supposed to end his support of the contraes and embrace Ortega's "promises." If Reagan doesn't, critics will say that he's the one impeding the peace process.
The United States should, in an effort to assure Sandinista compliance with the Guatemala accord, adopt a plan similar to the one suggested by Sen. Dole that pledges support to the contrains. This would not be a disruptive move, just a clear message to Ortega that the U.S. is wise to his ways and that it will not rest until democracy in Nicaragua is a reality.
Christopher Wilson is an Olathe junior majoring in political science and economics.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Write your senator
I recently sent this letter to Sen. Nancy Kassebaum. My hope in writing her was to have my voice heard in regard to her upcoming vote on contra aid. I written to her before, and to her credit, she has always faithfully acknowledged my letters with one or more form letters. Granted, she's a busy lady, but I really wonder whether she ever reads these letters. I'm sure her staff must go through a majority of them. They probably just show her a tally of overall opinions. By sending a copy of my letter to the Kansan, I thought it might stand a better chance of her reading it. It might also encourage others to follow suit and write to her.
When contra aids finally come up for vote, you voted against the people of Kansas! You admitted that of all the issues you'd ever voted on you received more contact from your constituents on contra aid than on any other and that you were convinced that the people of Kansas were for the most just against contra aid. Yet knowing this, you went ahead and voted against us!
Contra a tie is coming up to bat again, and quite frankly I'm about to give up on you. I worked myself sick last spring to help educate people in Kansas about the evils of the contras, trying to get folks to make contact with you as to their opinions on contra a tie.
Dear Nancv.
You don't know the furor you caused among us. I no longer feel that I live in a democracy. My voice is not heard because you chose to veto it. You chose to override the people's vote, presuming your own to be more educated. That's not your place. Yours is to represent the
overall voice of Kansas, which you failed to do.
Even if you feel we are wrong and even if we are wrong,
we did not vote you into office so that you could override us. You have to let us make our own judgments, for the possibility of you being wrong about a certain issue is greater than the possibility of the majority of your constituents being wrong.
Meanwhile, people are being murdered, kidnapped, raped and tortured with our tax money; silos are being binned up along with trees; electric plants or electric plants; crops are being burned; all because you and the minority of the U.S. people have chosen to harass these dirt-poor people.
Why not befriend Nicaragua? Ask for forgiveness. Stop contra aid. Stop the contras. Build schools. Send teachers. Build hospitals. Send doctors.
Unfortunately, poverty makes the most critical ground for communism and revolution. Why not pour aid into friendship aid? Only then will communism be weakened. Only then will democracy stand a chance. Nicaragua badly needs doctors and teachers. The Cubans send the Nicaraguas Cuban teachers who naturally add a little Marxism to their ABCs. We should send U.S. teachers so that democracy can be given an equal voice.
Give peace a chance. I beg you! Stop the killing. Vote no on contra aid. You don't have to be pro-Sandinista to be anti-contra aid. Support the (Costa Rican President) Arias plan. It's a wonderful one, especially because it was formed by all of Nicaragua's own most immediate neighbors. Vote for the people of Kansas in the process. It's your duty.
Called to action
Marta Ines Brow, Lawrence senior
I do not know about anybody else, but I am angry! I am from a small town in Wyoming and when I came to school this fall I noticed that tuition had risen $147.50 for out-of-state students. I do not object to paying for my education as long as I receive the classes I need and want, and am provided with the essentials for getting this quality education.
But it really upsets me when I end up standing in line for hours just to be told that three-quarters of my classes are closed. What's worse is when I do get into my classes, they are so full that neither enough books or chairs are provided. What about the libraries? Rumors have it that they do not have the money to buy current material. I also have been told that KU lost nine professors last year due to low-paying salaries.
I am addressing my fellow students. This is our chance! Let's get involved and let the governor know that we are concerned and willing to take the necessary steps to keep KU the respected and highly-rated school that it is.
Great — so what can we do? We can become a part of H.E.R.O. The Higher Education Rescue Operation is designed to create a general awareness of this upcoming proposal. It encourages the students to write to the governor and urge him to say "yes" to the Margin of Excellence.
This is ridiculous! I am paying $3,200 a year (and more now), to attend the school I honestly love, but I want to see action. Is anybody else feeling my frustration? I chose KU because of its reputation as a top public university. I do not want to see KU declared to be a mediocre school. Come on everyone, let's do something about this!
The Board of Regents has realized that we are facing a dilemma. They proposed a program called Margin of Excellence This is a three-year proposal to increase KU's overall budget to 95 percent of those of our peer institutions and to increase professors' salaries to 100 percent of those of our peers.
Sherri Sweers, Green River, Wyo., sophomore
BLOOM COUNTY
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MA.
AND YOU WILL TAKE CARE OF THAT BIG ZIT ON YOUR NOSE WON'T YOU DEAR?
THAT 15 MY NOSE, MA.
.
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, September 29, 1987
Tuesday Forum
1789
Alexander Hamilton
Washington
George Washington
Framers forge Constitution from diversity
JOHN HENRY CROSSON
Thomas Jefferson
JOHN WASHINGTON
James Madison
'R
Benjamin Franklin was helped forward from his place; afterward it was said the old man wept when he signed.'
Catherine Drinker Bowen author of "Miracle at Philadelphia"
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Editor's Note: Calder M. Pickett, Clyde M. Reed distinguished professor of journalism, delivered an address, "We the People: 1787 Revisited," on Sept. 16. The following is an excerpt from his speech.
America, 1787. Look at those maps in the history books, and see what a native nation we were then, still the 13 original colonies, states now, the first states beyond the 13 not coming in until the 1790s. Settlement out in Kentucky and Tennessee and the Ohio country, and along the Gulf of Mexico. Settlement, of course, for many generations, in the American Southwest. Steam still wasn't part of our technology. No railroads, no electricity. Primitive roads, and not many of them. You rode a horse, or rode in a wagon or a coach, or traveled by raft or boat or ship.
A popular history called "The Making of a Nation" describes the formation of the Constitution:
"All hopes for the future of America were centered in the Philadelphia convention when it opened in May 1787. If the convention failed to agree on a sound form of government, the young nation might never be bound together into a working union. But how to bring this about? Searching for guidance, the Constitution makers who had assembled in Philadelphia studied the records of ancient Greece and Rome. They delved into the administration of the Carthaginian Republic. They looked at the systems used by aristocratic city-states like Venice and Florence and even examined the workings of tiny federal alliances like those of Switzerland and the Netherlands. Useful parallels abounded. But the delegates soon discovered that no federal government had ever been created that both recognized the coordinate role of its member states and based its power on the consent of the people. Americans were trying to build what had never been built before."
They had been operating under something called the Articles of Confederation, those Americans, but these had proved quite unsatisfactory. It was as though the states of today could be operating without any binding federal structure. We were fortunate to have such a gathering of intelligent gentlemen to write the document, even though such leaders as Thomas Jefferson and John Adams were abroad.
The circumstances were not exactly bright, and the weather must have been ghastly, especially in an age of no fans, heavy clothing, and not as many baths as we take today. French women don't breathe. "At each inhaling of air, one worries about the next one. The slightest movement is painful."
Catherine Drinker Bowen, in her book, "Miracle at Philadelphia," writes, "In the Pennsylvania State House, which we call Independence Hall, some 55 delegates, named by the legislatures of 12 states (Rhode Island balked, refusing attendance)."
met in convention, and during a summer of hard work and high feeling wrote out a plan of government which they hoped the states would accept, and which they titled the Constitution of the United States of America."
Few could have expected the convention to succeed. There was the perhaps minor problem of Rhode Island not being there. Delegates were nervous and apprehensive. Sessions were secret, and little information leaked out. These men didn't know that they were writing a "constitution"; the word and the concept would come later. They were there to revise the Articles of Confederation, by instructions of Congress.
The delegates elected the father of our country as the president of the convention, though I don't think he was known as the "father" quite yet. The vote was unanimous. Washington said he wasn't qualified, and he constantly called on God for help, and maybe his modesty was the real thing. He was usually silent, but he voted with Virginia, and he took part in the debate toward the end. Madison was taking notes in the front row of the hall. "As a reporter, Madison was indefatigable, his notes comprehensive, set down without comment or aside." Bowen writes.
And now the proposals began to be placed before the convention. Edmund Randolph, governor of Virginia, presented a plan, proposing "a national government, consisting of a supreme legislative, executive and judicial." His words drew silence, for the concept of a national government was not favored by some. Federal . . . national . . . supreme. All were sticky and troublesome words for some time.
They were debating the word "federalism," and what it meant; James Madison told the delegates that a federal government operates on states, a national government directly on individuals. The word "democracy" was being tossed around, too, and it apparently meant anarchy, mobs and the like to some of the men of 1787.
The delegates considered the idea of the instituting of a national executive, though the term "president"
might be overambitious or of war or might be ill. George Washington sat and listened, most of the people assuming that he would be a man to head the government, what plan came out of the convention.
The idea of a single executive frightened some people, who remembered a single executive called George the Third.
And the Constitutional Convention, and the resolution "that the members of the first branch of the National Legislature ought to be elected by the people of the several States." That meant the House of Representatives, and were those who were opposed to such revolutionary ideas. Charles Pinkney argued that the people were not "fit judges." Property rights were banded about; the convention was a body of propertied men, and we have heard the arguments that our nation was founded by people whose chief motivations were economic.
didn't come along for a time. The idea of a single executive frightened some people, who remembered a single executive called George the third. They argued about the presidential veto. And old Ben Franklin got up and campaigned for a plural executive, because a single executive
They came up with what is called the Sherman Compromise, from Roger Sherman of Connecticut, that the suffrage in the House should be based on the free inhabitants of a state, that in the branch called the Senate there should be one vote from each state.
The convention had opened on May 25. By July 26, a basic plan for the Constitution had gone to committee, and a draft version was sent back. On Sept. 10, the Constitution was agreed upon and referred to a committee of style for the finishing touches. The big task lay ahead: gaining approval of the document. The delegates had gone beyond their assignment; bad of improving the Articles of the Constitution, he drafted something new. The convention also had gone beyond Congress's instructions by ruling that ratification by any nine of the 13 states would be sufficient "for the establishment of this Constitution between the States so ratifying the same."
Catherine Bowen writes vividly about the signing of the Constitution, surely one of the great moments in the history of America. "The moment had come to sign the Constitution. Before the members moved to the table, a motion was made and parliamentary journals and other papers of the Congress went into General Washington's hands, to be retained by him 'subject to the order of Congress, if ever formed under the Constitution.'
"It was now past three o'clock. Members ranged themselves according to the geography of the states, beginning with New Hampshire and going southward. New Hampshire, Massachusetts Connecticut New Jersey Pennsylvania ... Delaware and so on down to Georgia Four men who fiercely opposed the Constitution were absent.
Franklin looking towards the President's chair, at the back of which a rising sun happened to be painted, observed to a few members near him, that painters had found it difficult to distinguish in their art a rising from a setting sun. I have, said he, often and often in the course of the session, and the vicissitudes of my life, that I have been able at that behind the President without being able to tell whether it was rising or setting: But now at length I have the happiness to know that it is a rising and not a setting sun."
"Benjamin Franklin was helped forward from his place; afterward it was said the old man wept when he signed. Following Pennsylvania six states remained; they moved slowly to the table.
Sept. 17, 1787. The Constitution is the member of the convention put together.
"Whilst the last members were signing it," wrote Madison, "Doctor
They wrote an article that set forth the rights and powers of the Congress of the United States, the Senate and the House of Representatives. The second article set forth the rights and powers of the executive branch. The third deal with the judiciary. The fourth deal with the states. The fifth set forth the amendment process; the sixth said that "all bills contracted before the adoption of this Constitution, shall be as valid against the United States under this Constitution, as under the Confederation"; the seventh told how the document was to ratified.
There was no provision for what came to be known as the Bill of
THE FAR SIDE
Rights: The people who wanted ratification had to guarantee that a bill of rights would be added in order to guarantee that ratification.
The battles against ratification were fought out in the large states, in pennsylvania, where the Anti-Federalists tried to delay things, in Massachusetts, in Virginia. Ratification proceeded. On the 21st of June, 1788, New Hampshire, the ninth of the states, ratified, and Virginia followed four days later. Eleven states were now in the Union, but North Carolina gave no approval until 1789, and Rhode Island held out until 1790.
CIVIL
The author of "The Making of a Nation" wrote that "Americans of 1788 greeted its ratification with relief and enthusiasm. Boston, Charleston and New York outdid one another, and ratified the constitution with fetes and processions, but Philadelphia outdid them all in ardor and ingenuity."
And here, in the autumn of '87, 200 years later, we can ask, "Have we done it right?"
What a document, I say. And what a concept, and how it has endured! And how. I think most of us would agree, all Americans, here in the bicecentennial, should be proud of our bicentennial, should provide it, and even get excited on occasion — despite the abuses in our lives.
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Tuesday, September 29, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Dole starts academy screenings
By a Kansan reporter
Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan, is now accepting applications from Kansans interested in being nominated and appointed to a U.S. service academy for admission in July, 1988.
Md.
Nominations will be made by Dole to the U.S. Air Force Academy at Colorado Springs, Colo.; the U.S. Amphitrite Marine Academy at Kings Point; the U.S. Naval Academy at Academy at West Point, N.Y.; and the U.S. Naval Acadey at Annapolis,
Candidates nominated by Dole will be further screened by the board of admissions of each academy, which may transition to a limited number of nominees.
Strong academic records, including ACT or SAT test score results, leadership experience, performance on a physical skills test and a medical evaluation are considered in the evaluation process, Dole said.
Applications may be obtained by writing to Sen. Bob Dole, U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C., 20510. The deadline for completed applications is Dec.4.
Nominees will be announced by Dole in mid-February. The academies will then announce their choices are made during March and April.
Appointments to the U.S. Coast Guard Academy do not require Dole's nomination. Those interested should contact the Admissions Office, U.S. Coast Guard Academy, New London, Ohio, 60320.
On Campus
French Table is scheduled for 11:30 a.m. today in Parlor C in the Kansas Union.
- "Beginning the Job Search: Getting Down to the Basics," a University Placement Center program, is offered at 2:30 p.m. today in 148 Burge Union
"The Larger Context of East-West Artistic Relationships," a lecture by Toru Haga of the University of Tokyo, is scheduled for 4 p.m. today in the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
"Liberation Theology," a seminar, is scheduled for 4:30 p.m. today
at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
Tryouts and practice for the KU Men's Soccer Club are scheduled for 5 p.m. today at Shenk Complex, 23rd and Iowa streets.
A KU Hispanic-American Leadership Organization meeting is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. today in the Oncology Room in the Kansas Union.
■ "Portrayal of Women in the Media," a workshop of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, is held on Tuesday in the Pine in the Kansas University in Kansas.
A KU Pre-law Society meeting is scheduled for 7 p.m. today in the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union. Dottie Harder, head of admissions at Washburn University School of Law, will speak.
"Constitutional Origins of the Judiciary's Present Day Power," a lecture by Phillip Paladan, professor of history, is scheduled for 7 p.m. today at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union.
■ KU Fencing Club is scheduled for 8:30 p.m. today at Robinson Gymnasium.
Schroeder
Continued from p. 1
a lot of women and a lot of people," Rosenthal said.
Rosenthal said, however, that Schroeder would remain an effective political voice as a member of the House.
"She's in a position to effect a lot of changes. She has a lot of power that way — power she would lose if she had to give up that job.
"But now I have no candidate," Rosenthal said.
"I said that I could not stand aside from a campaign that would decide the nation's future and my children's future."
She said she had set out this summer to "see if it was too late to mount a campaign, not a symbolic campaign, but a winning campaign for the presidency of the United States.
Schroeder spent nearly four months testing the political and financial support she could garner for a presidential campaign after a fellow Coloradan, former U.S. Sen. Gary Hart, dropped out of the race.
Schroeder said she was proud to be characterized as "the candidate that people would be most likely to buy a used car from."
"There are only two things that matter: that you believe my word and that we trust each other," she told supporters.
The Denver Post said Sunday that she had raised only half of the $2 million she once said she needed to run a credible campaign.
Her decision leaves five announced candidates and one unannounced contender in the Democratic field. Rep. Richard Gephardt of Missouri, Senators Paul Simon of Illinois and Albert Gore of Tennessee, Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis and former Arizona Gov. Bruce Babbitt have declared their candidacies, and civil rights activist the Rev. Jesse Jackson is expected to formally enter the race next month.
The Associated Press supplied some information for this story.
Jet slips off runway at KCI
The Associated Press
Court
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A Continental Airlines jet with 54 people aboard partially slipped off a runway yesterday at Kansas City International Airport, but no injuries were reported.
The 727-200 was taxing to a terminal about 1 p.m., when the nose gear slipped off the wet asphalt onto the ground. When Gary Everett, who turned, said Gary Everett, the airport
Aboard the jet were 47 passengers and seven crew members, according to Ron Fohmeister, the general manager of Continental Airlines at the airport.
supervisor for Continental Airlines. Flight 1160 had just landed at the airport after a flight from Denver.
Continued from p. 1
The plane's main landing gear came to the edge of the asphalt, he said. Some of the asphalt buckled under the weight of the aircraft.
sometimes judges and attorneys laughed together.
Some of yesterday's appeals were routine, but others had enough drama to rival any Perry Mason episode. One appellant swelled a reversal on his conviction for heroin possession with intent to distribute.
The appellant's attorney claimed that the original lawyer in the case had collaborated with the man who threatened the appellant and his family and coerced him to run drugs money across the Mexican border.
After sitting through several of the morning's cases, Sharon Chalker, Herington second year law student, said she was surprised at the informal nature of the court. She said she was amazed at how well-prepared she was with each case and how quickly they were able to spot faulty arguments.
Three three-judge panels will continue to hear cases at 9:30 a.m. today and tomorrow in the Frank L. Snell Courtroom in Green Hall. Two of the panels will meet in Kansas City, Kan. At 2:30 p.m. toarrange, all nine members of the court will sit together to hear one case.
In each of the six cases the judges heard yesterday, attorneys from each had 15 minutes to argue that a court-rourt ruling should be overturned.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers.
From the KU Weather Service
Today we will have mostly sunny skies and mild temperatures. The high will be in the mid-to upper 70s, and the low will drop to the mid-40s.
North Platte
72/35
Sunny
Omaha
70/44
Sunny
Rain T-Storms Snow Flurries Ice
Goodland
73/42
Sunny
Hays
74/42
Sunny
Salina
76/44
Mostly sunny
Topeka
77/44
Mostly sunny
Kansas City
73/47
Mostly sunny
Columbia
74/47
Partly sunny
St. Louis
74/51
Partly sunny
Dodge City
76/47
Mostly sunny
Wichita
80/48
Partly sunny
Chanute
80/49
Partly Cloudy
Springfield
77/47
Partly sunny
Tulsa
83/53
Thunderstorms
Forecast by Anne Wilcher.
Temperatures are today's high and tonight's overnight low.
Conditions are forecasted for this afternoon.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, September 29, 1987
7
Sports
KU defeats rivals for highest prices on concessions
By DAVID BOYCE
Assistant sports editor
At a Kansas home football game, fans pay $1.75 for a 20-ounce plastic cup of soo drink. At the University of Missouri, they pay $2.25 for a 22-ounce plastic杯 of soft drink.
In fact, when comparing concession stand prices with Missouri and Kokoto University, KU prices are higher in nearly every food category.
At K-State, a 22 ounce plastic cup of soft drink costs $1.50, and a 32 ounce cup costs $2. A king-size candy bar sells for $1 at K-State, while it costs $1.25 at Kansas' Memorial Stadium. Popcorn costs 75 cents at K-State, $1 at Missouri and $1.25 at Kansas.
son, and making money is the name of the game."
The good news about concessions prices here is that they did not increase from last year. However, even though the cost of a 16-ounce cup is up by more than $2 this year it comes in a throwaway paper cup instead of a plastic cup.
Brent Jones, concession manager at the University of Kansas for Marriott Corporation, said the difference in concession prices depended on how much of the profits went back to the school's athletic department.
“Prices here are about the same as other schools around the country.”
“They are not trying to gouge the students but trying to get the maximum out of them.
Marrison is in the third year of a five-year contract with Kansas. The company also handles concessions on Michigan and California-Berkley.
"Each year we have a seven-month down period which there are many different opportunities we need to make as big a profit as we can during football and basketball season."
Concessions prices out of line at KU
KU $1.25
KSU .75¢
MU $1.00
Prices an ounce for large soft drinks
KU sells a 20-ounce soft drink for $1.75 while K-State sells a 22-ounce drink for $1.50. Meanwhile, MU sells their 32-ounce drinks for $1.50; almost half the price of KU's drink an ounce.
Popcorn prices
KU loses the price war when considering the price of popcorn.
A regular size popcorn costs 50¢ more in Lawrence than in Manhattan—a quarter more than in Columbia.
Hot Dogs for sale
KU apparently makes a thrifty profit on hot dog sales, too.
While K-State and MU sell their hot dogs for $1.00, KU is half again as much.
Jones would not disclose how much of the gross profit Marriott had to pay the department, but he did say it was not unreasonable.
"I think the prices are fair for the rent we pay," Jones said.
"People think we make a lot of money, but once everyone gets their slice of the pie there are only pennies left," Jones said.
All prices submitted by Marriott must be approved by the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation board.
Last year the athletic department made $185,909 from concession sells, an increase of about $26,000 from the previous year when the athletic department made $160,000, said Susan Wachter, assistant athletic business director.
Last year prizes increased 25 cents on nearly all food items. A $1.50 drink during the 1985 football season went to $1.75 last year.
Wachter said the athletic department made $5,000 more in 1986 on concession sales at football games than in 1985 partly because there was one more home game. She said she didn't know why basketball profits increased $21,000 during that same time span.
Jones said concession stand workers received 12 percent of total sales. The remaining 88 percent was
divided between Marriott and the athletic department, he said.
Scott Paul, Overland Park senior, who worked at a concession stand during Saturday's game against Louisiana Tech, said he thought the profit the University received was very high.
Paul, who compared the prices here with those at movie theaters, said we would buy a soft drink at a football game if he was thirsty enough.
Jones also said he would buy a soft
"I guess when you are in a closed environment you try to get away with as much as you can," Paul said.
drink and food items at the present prices.
"I pay these prices every time I go to a Royals game," he said.
to a Royals game, he said.
Although many fans will buy a soft drink, that doesn't keep them from complaining about the prices.
"Not only are they putting a sub-pair product on the field, but they are putting sub-pair products in the stands," he said.
Tom Fagan, St. Louis, Mo., junior,
said he was particularly outraged
with prices after two weeks in the
stands.
He said that Saturday when he went to buy a large soft drink it
tasted watered-down, was filled with ice and was two inches short of being full.
"I asked the concessionman to fill it to the top and he said, 'I feel bad about the prices, but we have no control over it.'" Fagan said.
"A friend of mine buys nachos for $1.50, which is a fair price, but the chips were stale." he said. "When you get $0.50 you expect some sort of quality."
"When you are only putting 25,000 people in the stands, I guess you need to get all you can out of the people
But Fagan said he understood the reasoning behind the prices.
who come." he said.
Jones voiced some of the same sentiments.
"Football hasn't been the money producer we thought it would be when we took the contract," Jones said. "But basketball makes up for it. I would really like to see the football team start winning."
Jones said he would also like to see the temperature rise.
During last year's first home football game against North Carolina, temperatures were in the upper 80s, and although North Carolina beat Kansas, 20-0, more than 11,000 large cups were sold.
Union head asks to televise strike talk
Four more cross picket lines as NFL players' walkout enters its second week
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — The NFL strike entered its second week yesterday with the two sides locked into immovable positions, no negotiations in union head Gene Upshaw suggesting that the next talks be televised.
Upshaw, who met with players from six teams in Los Angeles on Sunday, made the suggestion in Cleveland, where he talked with the former Rangers and the area. He later went to Chicago where he met with members of the Bears and six other teams and backed down some about the televised negotiations.
Upshaw plans to meet with the Atlanta Falcons and the New York Giants today.
"We have nothing to hide by putting them on television," Upshaw said. "We think the public should see that we are making movement at the table and they could really see what the owners think and do at the table."
Later in Chicago, Upshaw said that when serious talks resumed and the union presented its new offer, the proceedings would be held in a closed meeting room and not before the media.
spokesman, said such a televised meeting would be defined as an unfair labor practice by the National Labor Relations Board. Each side has already filed complaints against the other with the NLRB.
John Jones, a Management Council
"We are prepared as a union to stay out as long as it takes," Upshaw said in Chicago.
However, four more players crossed picket lines yesterday.
Veteran linebacker Reggie Williams, who said he will play for the Cincinnati Bengals against San Diego on Sunday, and two members of the Indianapolis Colts, wide receiver Walter Murray and defen-
side back Jim Perryman, all went back to work despite the strike Seattle Seahawks center Stan Eisenhooth also crossed the picket line yesterday, joining his brother John, who had done so earlier.
"I hope they are playing with the guys who are on this field today." Williams said as the striking Bengals worked out at a high school. "But if I them I will play with whatever players we wearing the Bengals uniform."
But most coaches seemed resigned to playing without regular players like Williams. Many likened it to running rookie mini-camps.
10
Scott Carpenter/KANSAN
Take me out to the ball game
James Stines, Olathe junior, knocks the ball into left field for a triple. Stines played in the international软球 tournament, sponsored by Recreation
Coaches pleased with golf teams
By DARRIN STINEMAN
Staff writer
Services yesterday afternoon on the fields behind Robinson Center.
Stines' team, Delta Chi, beat Alpha Epsilon Pi, 7-2.
Oklahoma State won the tournament with a score of 917. Duke took second with 925, followed by Oklahoma with 935; North Texas State with 953; Southern Methodist with 960; Texas Christian with 966; Texas &M with 923; Lair with 985; Texas &M with 1005; and Nebraska with 1002.
The Kansas women's golf team finished seventh out of 10 teams at the All-College Classic at Edmond, Okla., this weekend.
Senior Tina Gnewchw led the Jayhawks with 83-78-77 — 238 at the 54-hole, par-71 event. Senior Susan Pekar had 83-78-70 — 240; sophomore Donna Loven had 80-83-84 — 247; sophomore Sherri Atchison had 89-81-78 — 248; and sophomore
"We tried to have a little attitude adjustment after the first day because we weren't trying to have good things happen," Weiser said. "I was really proud of the way they turned things around."
"Our kids played a lot better," he said. "They played better, but they expected better things to happen, and that paid off."
Kansas coach Kent Weiser said he was pleased with the way things went at the tournament.
The men's golf team after the second round is in sixth place out of 18 teams in the Butler National Invitational. The tournament is being
Suzanne Mossberg had 88-87-91
266
The team shot 334 on the first day of the tournament and followed with 319 on the last two days.
Arkansas has the lead after 36 holes of play with a team total of 595. Arkansas State share a second place tie, Kansas. The out of second place with a 600 total.
Individually for the Jayhawks at the end of the second round, junior Jon Bruning is tied for 11th with a one-off 150. Rudy Zupetz, also a junior, is one off Brunning with a 151. Close behind are sophomore Clay Devers, who has a two-day total of 153, and senior Brian McGrevy with a 153. Junior John Erickson finished the second day shooting 175.
played at Cog Hill Country Club in Lemont, Ill., with Illinois playing host.
Seattle beats Kansas City
"I am very pleased with our showing so far," said Coach Ross Randall. "These are some of the top teams in the Midwest."
The Associated Press
Lee Guetterman pitched a four-hitter for six innings, and Phil Dawson gave in two runs as the Seattle Mariners beat Kansas City 5-1 last night.
The Royals were eliminated from the American League West race earlier last night when the Minnesota Twins clinched the championship with a 5-3 victory over the Texas Rangers.
Guetterman, 10,4 made his first start since Aug. 15 when Mark Langston was sidelined because of the flu. Jerry Reed, who provided relief at the start of the seventh, allowed two hits over three innings for his sixth save.
Valesente says team needs consistency
By CRAIG ANDERSON Staff writer
Despite the recent downturns in the Kansas football fortunes, there will be no major changes of strategy, but Coach Boles Valese said yesterday.
Valeseng, speaking to about 40 people at the weekly meeting of the Kansas Quarterback Club, said his team needed to reach a level of consistency if they were going to be successful this season.
The Quarterback Club is a group of alumni and supporters of Kansas football that meets every Monday to watch films of the previous Jayhawk game and discuss the game with Valesente. The group meets in the Summerfield Room of the Adams Alumni Center.
The quarterback and the head coach of a football team, Valesente said, are in some ways similar.
"When things start to go wrong for a team, the quarterback always in a lot of the heat," he said. "I know I feeling that they sometimes have."
For the season, Kansas quarterbacks Kelly Donohoe and Mike Orth have combined to throw for one touchdown and seven interceptions. Donohoe who had started the Jayhawks in three games, was replaced by Orth in game six Saturday against Louisiana Tech He had thrown interceptions on two of the Jayhawks' first three possessions. Orth came in and complete
six of 29 passes for 117 yards and threw three interceptions.
Valesente said he had been disappointed in the performance of his first two quarterbacks. He said some of the decisions they had made during games, such as throwing the ball to the wrong receivers and not throwing the ball away to avoid a sack, were things that the quarterbacks needed to work on to become consistent.
"They've both had chances to move the offense." Valescent said. "They need to keep working hard in practice. We want to keep the competition open for who will play at quarterback. It'll probably go right up until game time before we decide who will start."
Other areas of the offense started to show some progress against Louisiana Tech. Valesente said he was happy with the time the offensive line was giving the quarterbacks to throw the ball. He said he also was happy with the return of senior tackle Bob Pieper.
"Piper was coming off the ball with a vengeance," he said. "He was really sticking some people out there."
Valesente said he was happy for the most part with the way the defense had been swarming to the ball. He said freshman linebacker Kyle Schenker, in particular, would be getting more playing time after his strong performance Saturday.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Kansas City Chiefs expanded the team's roster to 48 yesterday by signifying eight player players, including former Kansas wide receiver Richard Estell and ex-Chiefs backup quarterback Sandy Osiecki.
Sports Briefs
Former KU receiver Estell is among eight signed as replacement Chiefs
Estell, who played for the Jayhawks from 1982-1985, is Kansas' all-time leading receiver with 1.997
The Chiefs also signed last year's second team all-Big Eight quarterback, Alex Espinoza of Iowa State.
yards on 117 receptions
The eight new players join the 40 replacements signed last week as the team prepared for Sunday's against the Los Angeles Raiders
Correction
Because of an editor's error, Walt Houk of Maupintour Travel was misidentified in a photograph of the dedication of Hoglund-Maupin Stadium, which was published in Monday's Kansan.
Those shown in the photograph are John Trombold; Forrest Hoglund; Houk; baseball coach Dave Bingham; Chancellor Gene A. Budig and athletic director Bob Frederick.
Scoreboard
American League
Baseball
New York 9, Boston 7
Baltimore 3, Detroit 0
Milwaukee 6, Toronto 4
Seattle 5, Kansas City 1
National League
Cincinnati 6, Atlanta 5
New York 1, Philadelphia 0
Houston 11, Los Angeles 5
San Francisco 5, San Diego 4
8
Tuesday, September 29, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Officials confident of success of corporate and research park
By VALOREE ARMSTRONG Staff writer
Staff writer
The University of Kansas and the city of Lawrence have shown that two heads are better than one in their joint efforts to develop the University Corporate and Research Park in west Lawrence, officials say.
Although Lawrence's size makes it an unlikely site for a research park, the University provides a strong incentive for prospective tenants, a director of economic development and Lawrence Chamber of Commerce.
"Not all clients will do research at the University, but the University is an asset because it provides a plentiful labor force." Martin said.
"It's a fascinating project. And for a town this size to have both a university and a research park is really something."
University and city officials have
cooperated on the project, which they say will give the city an economic and scholarly boost. The 296-acre research park is two and a half miles west of campus, at the intersection of 15th Street and Wakarusa Drive.
Not only will KU students find jobs there after graduation, but undergraduates, too, may secure internships, work-study positions and part-time work, officials say.
Carl E. Locke, dean of engineering, said that there were limited opportunities for engineers to work in a community the size of Lawrence and that the park could mean increased job opportunities.
Locke said the School of Engineering started a cooperative plan that might use the park's resources. As part of the program, students, starting at the sophomore level, can work for seven to eight months and then go to school. Some students work from
January till the end of summer and then attend fall classes.
Larry Chance, president of R.G. Billings Enterprises, the coordinator of the park's development, said that 10 percent of the park was occupied and that developers had contracted or optioned an additional 20-25 percent.
Current and future tenants include: Hall-Kimbrell, environmental engineering; Kohlman Systems Research, flight testing equipment; Campbell-Becker, finance consulting and venture capital; PKG Design Research; production manufacturing; Oread Productions, film production; Oread Laboratories, bioanalytical research; and WOS Data, computer software development.
Chance said the developer wanted controlled growth on a long-term basis, bringing in two to three new firms each year.
valued at $230 was taken between 9 p.m. Saturday and 1 p.m. Sunday from a car parked in the 1300 block of Pinnacle Campus Law. Lawrence police reported.
block of Vermont Street, Lawrence police reported
TOPEKA — Former Gov. Robert F. Bennett yesterday urged submission of an amendment to revise the Education Article of the Kansas Constitution, while spokesman for endorsed raising standards groups endorsed raising standards for admitting students to state universities.
An AM-FM radio/casette player valued at $200 was taken at 3 a.m. Saturday from a car parked in the 1300 block of Tennessee Street,
Education article revision urged by former governor
The Associated Press
■ An AM-FM radio/cassette, equalizer, speakers and sunglasses were fitted together at $292 were taken between September 12 and Sunday from a police station on Lawrence Street, Lawrence police reported.
■ An AM-FM radio/cassette player
Bennett was among panelists discussing higher education governance and whether the state Board of Education's powers under the constitution should be clarified at the annual Conference on Postsecondary Education sponsored by the Legislative Educational Planning Committee.
On the Record
Another panel tackled the question of setting college preparatory requirements for Kansas high school graduates to meet before they automatically are admitted to the state's six universities.
nance issue was tied to state funding of education — whether more money should be pumped into public education when questions existed about whether the state system was run as efficiently as it could be.
A 24-carat gold ring valued at $600 was taken between Aug. 15 and Sept. 18 from a security drawer in a building at Ellsworth Hall, KU police reported.
Flentje, secretary of administration and Gov. Mike Hayden's chief policy adviser, said the issue of education finance dictated that the governor and the Legislature take another look in the 1988 session at the issue of who governed what aspects of the state's educational system
The former governor said he thought only elementary and secondary education should be administered by the Board of Education, and only higher education should be administered by the state Board of Regents, with the state's iT community being served by some new board. The two-year colleges now fall under supervision of the Board of Education.
The House passed an educational governance bill during the 1987 session. The bill now rests in the Senate committee heading into the 1988 session.
Other panelists at the Postsecondary Education Conference said if the state would increase admissions standards at the universities, student retention would better prepare and education in the state in general would improve.
Another panelist, H. Edward Flentie, said the education gover-
An AM-FM radio/cassette player
valued at $350 was taken between
9:45 p.m. Saturday and 12:15 a.m.
Sunday from a car parked in the 1000
The Regents currently are studying different proposals for increasing standards, involving the University of Kansas, Kansas State University and Wichita State University; KU and Kansas State only; and KU only.
All graduates of Kansas high schools are eligible for admission to the six state universities and Kansas Technical Institute in Salina, regardless of their standing in their gra
One part of the Regents study proposal would require students to complete a suggested preparatory curriculum with a 2.0 grade point average on a 4.0 scale. The curriculum requires three years each of math, science and social studies; and two years of a foreign language.
duating classes or test scores.
State Rep. Denise Apt, R-Iola, chairman of the House Education Committee, said she supported the concept despite her philosophical views. She said remedial courses at universities cost the state too much money.
Bennett, governor of Kansas in 1975-1979, and a former president of the state Senate, was co-author of an amendment altering the state's Education Article, which was adopted by state voters in 1966.
Bennett said it was never the intent of lawmakers to give the state Board of Education any powers except those delegated to it by the Legislature, but a state Supreme Court ruling in 1973 said the state board held certain "self-execution" powers under the 1966 amendment which it could exercise without legislative approval.
No constitutional confrontation has developed between the board and the Legislature in the years since the court ruling.
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RENEWAL
The entire University of Kansas Campus is invited and encouraged to attend Renewal Week classes Sept. 27 - Oct. 1. Fr. Luke Byrne from Rockhurst College in Kansas City, Mo., will lead the sessions. We hope that everyone will have the opportunity to attend all or any of the sessions. The schedule is as follows:
Sept. 29 - Food For The Journey
Sept. 30 - No One Is An Island
Oct. 1 - Making A Difference
Sept. 28 - A Place to Grow
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, September 29. 1987
9
Campus/Area
Mall makes circles around usual shops
By JULIE McMAHON
There's an unusual mall in Lawrence for people who like quaint shops and don't mind going out of their way to find them.
The Roundtown Mall, 2859 Four Wheel Drive, is easy to miss. The circular shops, which are arranged around the store, are tucked behind Wal-Mart yard, are tucked behind Wal-Mart
23rd St.
Iowa
27th St.
Roundtown Mall
31st St.
"We don't have the walk-in business that they have downtown, but once we get a customer, we call Dolores Beers, who round up of the stores at the mall for her daughter-in-law, Gail Youngquist.
The mall was opened about four years ago by Rex Youngquist, Gail's friend.
The mail has 10 stores and two empty shops, one of which will be a restaurant. The stores are grouped in a clusters joined by walkways so customers can shop in two or three stores without outside.
The Clock Shop has grandfather clocks and wall clocks. The Plant Factory has cactuses, small trees and hanging plants, and Deck the Halls is a year-round Christmas shop with ornaments, Santa Claus statues, Christmas cards and countless other Christmas decorations.
"The Christmas shop is probably the most popular, but it's seasonal." Beers said. "Lingerie is good all year round and the bath shop is something that Lawrence hasn't had for a long time."
Limited Edition has unusual furniture, wall-hangings and accessories, including a clock that's 4 feet in diameter, oriental-looking living room and dining room furniture, a tapestry with a picture of a lama on it and statues depicting the evolution of the Jahawk.
Vormehr Studio and Gallery has original watercolors and prints of the University of Kansas and other
scenes. The gallery also has greeting cards with watercolor prints and pen and ink drawings of KU sororities and fraternities.
"Our customers want to find a fun little something that they can't find just anywhere," Gail Youngquist said.
The mall is a family-run business. Rex Youngquist owns the mall. His wife, Anbeth, helps run the stores with Gail Youngquist and Beers. Youngquist's daughter Lynne Sanders used to run the candle shop, but she now makes candles for Disney World in Florida.
The design for round stores was Youngquist's. He designed round homes in Florida and shipped the homes to Arab nations such as Algeria or Bahrain before the oil crisis in the 1970s. It still was a demand for portable homes.
Youngquint said it took three containers to ship a regular trailer home for their libraries, so he designed a completely finished container that could be shipped in one container.
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Reading for Comprehension and Speed Workout
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(Hometown World Beat)
Sat., Oct. 3rd
TRIP SHAKESPEARE
Winner of 1987
Minneapolis Music Award
BEST NEW GROUP
BUTLENECK
Rent 1/3 of three bedroom townhouse...$150 plus
1/2 utilities. No deposit. On bus route. Call Maria
or Lor at 841-9298.
Why spend $2 on Bewin when you can catch the Hoodus Gear right on campus for only $9?! ! Don't miss them--Sunday, October 4, 8 p.m. tickets at SUA and CATS.
1972 Honda Motorcycle CB350. Perfect condition.
Must sell!! Call 864-6418.
1979 400 Yamaha. Very good condition. Must sell.
$475 OBO. Call Luke at 864-921/841-9689.
Studio apartment for sublease. Full kitchen and
bath. 1423 Ohio-2 minutes from campus.
842-7644
FOR RENT
BOTTLENEcK
condition. Call to see this camper. 842.8017.
3 foot ball python. Healthy and includes tank
AMPLIFIER-Peavley Deuce. 2-channel. 125 Watt. Phase, fuzz, reverb, foot switch. Loud, clean. Must sell. $200. 749-1193.
3 foot ball python. Healthy and includes tank heater, and water bowl. Call 864-2861.
An Absolutely Awesome Array of Antiques, collectibles and new stuff we have: hardback and paper-backed books, playshows, books, Playbills, Penthouse, etc. of good antique, Indian, and costume jewelry (giltter and good衬品, the right vintage clothing for any age); small miniatures, fine miniatures, flesta, and the best selection of antique furniture in the area. Quantities Fits 411 New Hampshire, Open Sat & Sun 10-5
AQUARIUM. Too many fish tank. Will sell 60
tanks for $750 or set up for $750. Bid 842-1192.
Bid 842-1192.
Clare Out-Satin Sheets. From only $2.25 for 50.
Buyed by Junction, 711 W. 212D, Malls Shopping Center.
Close out sale! We have several odes & ends that are offered direct to public at wholesale prices. Dress $19, dreser & mirror $7, odd mats $4, waterbals $18, soa & chairs $38 & more. Hurry, supply is limited. Inspect at Mar & Quail Brewing warehouse 8 & New Hamphire, Lawrence
Equalizer w/spectrum analyzer $100, AM/FM
tuner $50, dual subwoofer $200. Must sell!
842-4403. Anytime!
For Sale: Bowie concert tickets. October 4 show at Kemper. Very good seats. Call 841-2276 after 5 p.m.
For Sale: King-sized waterbed complete with
linens and lins. Must sell-best offer. Call
760-235-9818.
GOVERNMENT Surplus! Camiflage clothing, overcoats, raiconds, combat battles, jungle boots, ski boots. Government Surplus! Carhartt workwear, much more! Open Mon Sat. MAR Surplus Musi St. Sales, MAR 1-4727 389-7462
GUFTAIR-Gibson RD Custom. Humburters acg
mature. Must sell. Obs. bqp. Looks, feels
Must sell. $200 obp. bqp. 719-733-8911
Hamilton 37" x 76" Dial-a-light VR20 drafting table with panel. Best offer 842 9724
**** MOTHBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE.
Monday-Friday 10-5:00 p.m., Saturday 10-2 p.m.
512 E. 9th. 749-4961.
Mountain bike. Specialized Hard Rock. Extra equipment. Two months old. Must sell. $350. Call 842-7757. Ask for Chris
MUST SELL. '81 Honda Passport. Only 1,600
miles. Good condition, free helmet & lock. $450
or best offer. #82-5634.
*New Cordless Bell Phones*
Overstocked and must be sold by EOM! Only
$60, retail $130. Call 841-6244 or 749-7270
Naismith contracts for sales. Will pay $160 security deposit. Contact Frank at 749 2338
Racing bike 1987 Bianchi 59 cm, $400. Ross
19-inch mountain bike $290. Both bikes in excellent condition. Call 943-1573.
PEUGEOT 12 SPEED TOURING BIKE
PERFECT CONDITION W/PUMP & BAR BAG
CALL 841-1388, OR LEAVE MESSAGE.
Found: Calculator in 300 Strong 9/21/78 *Come to Classics Department, 2003 Wesco*
Suzui K5 G 490E, great condition. Must sell soon.
750 or best offer. 814-7767
HELP WANTED
Rock n-roll--Thousands of used and rare albums
a.m. to 5 p.m. every Saturday and Sunday
Vacuums -Save big money. Reconditioned with
months guarantee. Prices start at $14.95.
Lawrence Vacuum & Sewing center, 916 Mass,
843-187
25' frame- $35,
storage for last year
1/2' frame- Shape- $49,749 -after 6
months
Shape- $23,749
Spontaneous men only: selling round-trip trip on
milady. Leave KC GP c/o. 1, oct. and returns
4:25 p.m. Oct. 4. $35. Call (816) 443-982
evenings
$1hour telemarketing Monday Thursday 5-8 and Saturday mornings. Flexible scheduling. Lenco location -carpool from Lawrence available. For interview, call Mr. Lacey at 740-492-1160.
Attimission to four different series. **65**. Call 864-684-132.
Snoopnose moth, sold by Snoopnose.
Quantril's Flea Market, 811 New Hampshire.
Save: PERFORMING ARTS ticket. Admission
Dear Ms. Ferguson,
I am writing to you about a report submitted by Quantril's Flea Market. It shows that the company is in good condition and is meeting the requirements set forth in the company's policies. I have received your report and am confident that it will be accurate and reliable.
Thank you for your time and assistance.
Sincerely,
[Name]
57 Ford truck for sale-Sure, it has problems-It runs and for $100 or best offer, whataya want? 843-4235
Turntable, CD player, amp, tuner, equalizer
749-3025
1978 Pontiac Astre 89.000 miles. Good transportation.
AM/FM FM radio. 30 mp players. 643-5687-8172
ORDER NEW 1928 CARS - TRUCKS -
ORDER NEW 1928 COST DELIERT D.
HONORUM 884-5449
Found-watch at Robinson tennis courts Please call to identify. 843-9736
Bertifine X1/9, 848. Fun sports car! 5-speed,
leather interior, power window, NEW stereos,
sound system and more. Looks great! Must sell.
31K, $160. 841-4600 weeks; 301-4742 weeks.
LastProfessor's black attache case-imperable
rapers - 749-2698 or Room 2 Bailey
LastProfessor's white tennis racket. It was left on a bus September 22. Reward of $2.00. Please call Carrier 86-14125.
1980 Chevrolet Monza, very clean. A/C, AM/FM cassette, great gas mileage. $150/best offer 864-3734
1974 TR6 new motor, new paint, in Shawnee.
1-631-6647.
Apartment Leasing Agent, part-time position, office skills and leasing experience desired. Send resumes to 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS, 60415
Super Sliced Convertible new: top, paint,
stainless steel frame + interior
complete restoration. $4250 OHG. Call Dave at
718-399-4144.
Do you love infants and toddlers? The Lawrence Day Care program has infant/toddler morning care-review positions available. Come by AA 101 or visit the center (in the Midwerkbrook Apartments) to apply.
GOVERNMENT JOB. $16,040-$59,230/yr. Now
hiring. Call 805-687-6000 Ext. R-9758 for current
federal list.
70 Chev. Carryall runs well, low miles, PS, PB,
diatriac tract goods .tires $885 obo .433-936
Cook wanted for fraternity. Experience necessary. For more information, call 841-6728.
Country estate owner needs weekend help.
Housecleaning and/or outside maintenance work.
For starting pay. Call 841-8282(days or 887-413) evenings and evening name and phone number
AUTO SALES
CARS SELL for $155 (average!) Also jeeps,
trucks, etc. Now available. 803-687-6000 Ext.
S-9738 for details.
Janton needed at Rainforest Montessori School,
485 Chinion Parkway. Excible evening hours.
5:30 p.m.-on. Transportation required. Call
843-600.
part time days. M-F: a.m. to noon. Also each Wednesday afternoon 1.pm-5.pm. Job involves working in an office environment, a situation. Some listing. Dependability and ability 'perform' in a pressure atmosphere a must. Call (612) 789-0142.
Found: Cassio watch outside of Wescool Hall on chassie table. Cassio is ill. Inside is a camera.
LOST-FOUND
Reliable 1970 Pinto wagon. 59,000-21,000 lion
engine (New engine installed by FOLE—have
lion engines). $4,995.
Part-time morning front office help wanted for local physician's office. Non-smoker, able to type 30 wpm, outgoing personality and neat appearance. Req. Bachelor's degree in Parkway Court, Lawrence, KS 86048.
engine. (New engine built by FOORD have all papers.) Runs great, little rust $90.79 - 1183
VOLVO. 1963 242 DL, must sell-moving, low mileage. Excellent condition. 843-7445 p.m.
e.m.
FOUND mens ring in restroom in Lindley Hall.
Call Kirk at 864-2541 and describe.
Part-time help wanted. Prefer grad, student 2
positions—morning, 6 a.m.-noon, & bakery
sale cleaning. $4 hour attained in three weeks
in part-time position at Munchers Bakery.
a.m. and no weekends at Munchers Bakery.
to expand to full time position in a tech environment. Requires journalism degree, excellent experience in publication production, including background in technical writing/editing and journalism training.
educational concentration in science or technical subject area preferred. Apply by submittal to the following address: October 7 to Human Resources Associations, Inc.; 910 Massachusetts, Suite 622.
Singer needed for working bluegrass band. Must play bass or guitar. Background in rock & roll is good, 841-6495.
Teaches aides needed for child care program 12:30 p.m.-infant room. 12:45 p.m.-Classroom experience and or study required. Requires to Children School Center, 331 Main.
Technical typist. Start 10-12-17 thru 12-13-87 with a keyboard and spring semester. Salary 86.25 hour. One 20-hour week of word processing experience, followed word processing experience, preferred Word experience on the Macintosh. Microsoft Word experience. Must have a computer with 12-10-12-14 and 4 or 5 call 863-398-102-97 anytime. Deadline for applications 10-12-97.
Volunteers needed. Volunteers in court in looking for any person who are court evidence. Call Ann K81470, 776-293-5755.
Waters, waitresses, hostess, kitchen help, and dishwasher work. Contact Hush's restaurant.
Wanted: Male personal care attendant for 27-year old male quadrupole: 2 m 3 morning a week. Will train the right person. For interview, call 842-7949
Want your own business? Now is the time to start earning as an Avon representative. Call Julie at 843-803 evenings.
Work Must-Clerical work in medical office
Must be available some afternoons. Accurately
luring. Serential/Receptionist activities. App-
ing with the 112.1 W. Bath, 501.2 Sacker. References required.
MISCELLANEOUS
SK1 Keystone over Christmas. January 5-10
Package includes transportation/ski/ldg
discount and discount on lift tickets. Only $189. Contact Martin at 841-0277
ROLL OUT
THE BARREL
For that personified hair design, bump into it
& Company Hairstylists at 211W 82nd St. in
the Holiday Plaza on the Bus Line. Tuesday-
safety: a.m. 4 p.m. Specials Tuesday and
Wednesday.
Refill your "HAWK" glass only $1.00
HEADACH, BACKACH, ARM PAIN, LEG PAINT STUDENT and most insurance accepted. For complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Mark Johnson 843-3979
Monday thru Thursday
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-4821. Confidential help/free pregnancy testing.
It Could Only Happen At...
THE HAWK·1340
Sunflower Mt. Bike Workshop-Learn how to repair & adjust your Mt. Bike-Thursday evening, 6-8 p.m., begins Sept 17 at 83, 84 Massachusetts, Laynegren, 93-5000.
NEW
bracelet
bracelton
AFRICAN
ADORNED
for unusual jewelry
5 E. 7th
842-1376
SERVICES OFFERED
We have a new store that you can get cash on almost anything of value. Also, good buy on jewelry, jewelry, storer equipment & instrument Jawahir Pawn & Jewelry, 104th St., 789-1199, Jawahir Pawn & Jewelry, 104th St., 789-1199
Capture that golden tan with a boubou portrait from Photo Plus. Call Mike or Gracie at 749-3706 evenings or weekends
"CRIMSON SUN PHOTO" is looking for young women interested in developing a modeling portfolio. 15% over cost. Call 841-8689
Do you need a tutor in math? Then call 843-9554
after 6 p.m.
COMPUTER CONSULTING Tutoring and programming for the computer science sciences in secondary and advanced engineering projects and other works
Group 841-4333 for individuals and groups
841-4333
PERSONAL
Mr. Fries is 211. I feel the need, the need for speed! Paid for by the committee to stop drunk designers!
Brazen Raisin-你 hot raging chuck. Thanks for the dinner and conversation. You're a sweetie. Have extra U2 tickets? See our plea in wanted section.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Muweus,
Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749.
Jen, yes, you do turn me on! Is that Mickey calling? J. L.
Miss Debbie at KU Med-Happy B-day! Smartz!
Love, I14, I16, Jackie, Denise, Leah, J.D., Bambabaoba. Call me!
Tom & Sean: Wednesday night at Baccero- they could be hold ing form! Next time WE'LL BRING THE LIMES!" Had a badd-K&A. P. S. Tom-the car is fully recovered.
THE COMIC CORNER
NE COURT @ 23rd & Ida, 841-4294
D.B. Needle-play & War Games, BLOOM
Sports, Big Boxing, Star, Snoor,
Who, Star & More
***Dunn Rite Home Maintenance***
/Int/Ext custom carpentry, painting, mike.
repairs, fence building, detailing, etc.
C a p h i l a t l a 8 4 3 - 5 3 4 3
Ward—Even if they won't print it, Bob knows the truth. I've got it bad, and I've got it good. June
FLASHBACK PHOTO fast and dependable party picture service. Call 841-7870 to book your next visit.
GRAF/N. Scientific and statistical illustration, maps, drawings, slides, editing aid, also watercolor illustrations. Phone 841-2561
BUS. PERSONAL
Bike Workshops - Our mechanic will teach you how to change flats,风轮 wheels, maintain brakes and tires. We also have all the tools $ each. $ each. Saturday, 10 a.m. beamed. September 19. Sunflower, Massachusetts, August 25.
Is "parlez-vous" Greek to you? French-English bilingual clears the confusion! Quality tutoring 842-3596.
Make your travel arrangements on campus
Leaving Town?
Airline Tickets
at airline counter prices no extra service charge
Service for:
See Maupintour travel
Doriet
air fares—c
travel arrangements
* Eurlal and Japan Rail Passes
* Car rental—hotel confirmations
* Travel holidays
* Travel insurance
ON CAMPUS LOCATION
in the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
Maupintour travel service
749-0700
Graystone Athletic Club
Special Student Membership
Racquetball Tanning
Exercise Equipment
2500 W. 6th Street 841-7230
KIMS ALTERATIONS- QUICK SERVICE. Suit-Cons. Zippers. Jiziers. All types of alterations. 201 F West 20th St. B4-8421 (Bird Food & Lest.) KU PHOTOGRAPHY SERVICES: Ektachrome film prints. Boats. Complete B/W service. PASSPORT B/ AID. Design & Build Room. 206 B-9447-6767
4ATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $8/hr, 843-9032
p.m.)
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services. Overland Park...(913)491-6878
Prompt contraception and abortion services in wrenge. 841-9716
HARPER
Seamstresses! All ladies' dresses can be made here in town. You choose your favorite design or styles from the latest fashion magazines. I will make them for you. Call Sue. 814-349-4400
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol training upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-2316.
2. Smart Word Processing, Spelling Corrected
Very Reasonable. Call Foster 749-2740
Iverson Reasonablen. Call Peter Fitzgerald.
A1-1 reliable professional typing: Term papers.
Theses, Resumes, etc. Reasonable IBM Electronic Typewriter 924-3246
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing. Judy. 842-7945 or Lisa. 841-1915.
TYPING
24 hour typing service. Professional word processing on letter quality printer. 843-7643
2 Smart Word Processing. Spelling Corrected.
ACT NOW. PAPERS-THESSES-RESUMES
WRITING LIFELINE 841-3469
A.Mabolutely Fast Typing It is Back! Dependable.
Reasonable Rates. Late Night Typing Available.
Kathy 841.240 days, 749.384 ave.
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS
MOMMY'S TYPING is back from Australia !!
842-3378 at 9 pm, please.
For professional typing/word processing, call Myrn. 841-4800. Fall special $1.20 page, double-space, pica.
Doma's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term papers, theses, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter quality printing, spelling corrected. 892-7477
Quality Typing includes excellent spelling, punctuation, grammar, editing. Fast reliable service.
Pickup delivery available. 843-0247.
Quality typing or word processing for theses, dissertations, resumes, term papers, applications. Professional editing, composition available. Have M.S. Degree.
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing, manuscripts, resumes, theses, letter quality printing, etc. 843-5062
newWORDITORS, resumes, papers, thesis dissertations, commercial, 843-3147.
WORD PROCESSING
WORD PROCESSING: Fast, accurate, experienced; thesis, papers, resumes; discount available. 841-8633.
WRIGHT'S TYPING SERVICE: Term papers, theses, miscellaneous, IBM Selectric. Spelling corrected. 843-9554
WANTED
TYPING SERVICE AND WORD PROCESSING
TRANSPORTIONS
1012 Massachusetts St. Suite 200
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
(Right above Morris Sports)
(931) 842-6218
Female roommate wanted. $155 per month plus
1/3 utilities. No deposit needed. Trairidge,
841-9288.
24 Hour Advance Notice to Insure Professional Quality
Female upperclassman classmate to share 2. br
apartment at Harvard Sq. $200 monthly plus 1/2
electricity and phone. Pool, on KU bus route.
Available immediately! Call after 5.841.7189
Roommate needed for townhouse at 9th and Michigan. Private room $175 and 1/3 utilities.
749-0189
Roommate wanted for 2 bedroom apartment
Furnished but bedroom. Rent negotiable and 1/2
utilities. Call after 11 p.m. 749-1867.
U2 Tickets Dedicated fans desperately seek tickets, call 864-248 or 864-247.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
- Policy
Classified Information Mail-In Form
Words set in ALL CAPS 3 count as 2 words
Words set in Bold Face count as 3 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.
Tearsets 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.
Deadline is on Monday at 40pm 2 days prior to publication.
Deadline for cancellation is Monday at 40pm 2 days prior to publication
Words 1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 days 15 days 1 month
0-15 2.85 4.20 6.00 10.00 14.95 18.90
16-20 3.35 5.00 7.05 11.30 16.55 20.75
21-25 3.90 5.80 8.10 12.60 18.10 22.60
26-30 4.40 6.55 9.15 13.90 19.70 24.40
31-35 4.95 7.35 10.20 15.25 21.25 26.25
01 announcements 300 for sale 700 wage unanticipated 800 services offered
100 entitlement 310 auto sales 700 personal 900 tipping
100 entertainment 250 travel 700 other
Classified Mail Order Form
Name
e ___ Phone no ___
(phone number published only if included below)
Please print your ad one word per box:
| | | | |
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AUS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FLOWLK KANSAN POLICY
Date begins.
Total days in class ___
Amount paid ___
Classification ___
Make checks payable to:
(A university)
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, K6 6045
---
1
10
Tuesday. September 29, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
GradEx wants elections postponed
Bv BRAD ADDINGTON
Staff writer
The Graduate Executive Committee decided last night to recommend to the Student Senate that graduate and law student Senate elections be moved from next week to later in October.
GradEx decided to make the recommendation because Senate had not established graduate and law student Senate elections in accordance with Senate regulations, GradEx members said.
Senate regulations call for the elections of graduate and law senators to be in the first full week of October. The regulations also call for
a 15-day period between the deadline for filing for candidacy and the election day.
All Senate elections were in the fall until Senate changed them last school year. Elections for all seats except graduate and law students are now in April. Graduate and law students were kept in the fall because some graduate students are at KU for only a year, senators thought.
The Senate had difficulty adhering to those new regulations because this year's Senate Elections Committee chairman was not selected until Sept. 15.
"If we would have had a little more foresight, we could have introduced
some legislation at the first Senate meeting," said Roger Templin, Student Senate Executive Committee Intern and ex officio member of Grade 8.
The first Senate meeting was Sept. 16.
At a special meeting last week, StudEx established that candidacy announcements would take place this week and elections would be Oct. 8. That would have given candidates less than a week to campaign.
Michael Foubert, GradEx coordinator, said last night, "we can have an election (next Thursday), but I don't think it will be reasonable."
But Jason Krakow, student bod
president, said StudEx did not have the power to postpone elections that the Senate regulations stipulated. Studex could have called for a special session of the Senate to discuss postponing the elections.
GradEx members last night discussed mail letters to student senators recommending that graduate and law student Senate elections be permanently changed to the last week of October, Foubert said. However, members realized that the letters would not reach senators within the required 10 days before the next Senate meeting, which is Oct. 7, so no action could have been taken at that meeting.
Family killed by teen is buried in Missouri
The Associated Press
MARSHFIELD. Mo. — Friends and relatives of seven family members killed during a teen-ager's shooting rampage clung to each other and wept as the family was buried yesterday in a small country cemetery.
"If there's anything to be learned from all this, it's to learn to seek someone to talk to if we're in trouble and to have the ears to hear when someone cries out," the Rev. Wilburn Stewart said after a brief service at Timber Ridge Cemetery.
Lining the front of the First Baptist Church were the flower-draped
caskets of Steve Buckner, 35, his wife Jan. 36, sons Kirk, 14, Dennis, 8, Timothy, 7, and Michael, 2, and Steve Buckner's sister, Julie Schlein. 30
Authorities believe 14-year-old Kirk Buckner went on a rampage with a 22-caliber pistol before dawn Friday. Authorities have not determined a motive for the shootings, but neighbors said the boy may have been frustrated about his family's financial situation.
About 500 people, including 34 ball- bearers, attended the memorial service before following five hearse to the burial site miles from the Buckners' dairy farm.
Steward, a longtime friend of the family, told mourners that the incident showed how frail people could be.
"Everything man makes has a breaking point. In mankind, there's a point of breaking, too," the minister said. "Something in Kirk had reached that point, and he just snapped."
The Rev. Jerry Cooney, who was among four ministers at the service, paid tribute to the family and said they had been involved in many community activities. He described Kirk as a youngster who loved to fish and hunt and enjoyed his activities in 4-H and Little League.
"This family was a very close group who thoroughly enjoyed one another. They shared many laughs, and there will be a great void in the surviving family members," Cooney said.
Investigators said Kirk, a quiet boy who had just started his freshman year in high school, apparently shot his younger brothers in the head as they slept, shot his mother and father outside their small farmhouse and then drove to the farm of his aunt and uncle, Jim and Julie Schnick.
The Lawrence Bicycle Club Invites You To
OCTOGINTA '87
Sun. Oct. 11 8 a.m. Haskell Indian Junior College.
Last year overseeing the school's 2014 60-minute tour,
'the wind up event of the bicycle season!'
- Join us for a
weekend of cycling events:
* Moonlight Ride
- USCF sanctioned 10k
CEC
Brenton Killeen
* Tonganoxie Tango
- Le Tour de Paradise
Brunch Ride
- Tonganoxie Tango
* Biking Across Kansas
Slide Show
Entry forms and T-shirts
For more information contact:
Charles Gebe, Coordinator, at 749-8458 or 842-0307.
FREE DRYING!
*With Wash
Laundry basket
FROM 8 a.m. to 10 p.m.(Last wash 9 p.m.)
TODAY THRU FRIDAY, OCT.2
at
LAUNDROMAT 777
19th & Louisiana
19th & Louisiana Across from Lawrence High School
Put your degree
to work
SOCIAL WORK
a world of good
where it can do
Your first job after graduation should offer more than just a paycheck.
If you're graduating this year, look into a unique opportunity to put your degree to work where it can do a world of good. Look into the Peace Corps.
SEE THE PEACE CORPS FILM!
Sept. 30th
4:30
4040 Wescoe
Call 864-3624 For Information
The toughest job you'll ever love PEACE CORPS
CORPS
SHAKESPEARE, SCHLAGEL, SCHILLER GOETHE, BUCHNER, AND HEINE
At 8:00 p.m., on Thursday, October 1, 1987 In Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall
Tickets at the Murphy Box Office Students : $3.50 General Public : $5.00 Phone : 864-3982
Sponsored by IPAC, GL&L and ITSC
Rolf Günther rezitiert
[Picture of a man in a white suit standing behind a desk with his arms outstretched.]
Sponsored by IPAC, GL&L and ITSC
THE
BOTTLEEK presents the Legendary
SON SEALS
"The best Chicago Blues band in existence"
Village Voice
**Music**
"An awesome display...ferocious attack, vicious, searing guitar"
*Downbeat*
Village Voice "Most exciting blues guitarist and singer in years"
RAW R & B with Special Guest RHYTHM KINGS
RAW R & B
- WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30 *
ADVANCE TICKETS $5.00 available at all CATS outlets and The Bottleneck
THE BOTTLENECK
737 New Hampshire, Lawrence, KS (913) 843-9723
Enjoy smooth, creamy Frozen Yogurt
I Can't Believe It's YOGURT! Frozen Yogurt Stores
97% Fat Free!
--Fine Samples--
Louisiana Purchase Shopping Center
OPEN 11 a.m. 11 p.m. Daily
Noon 11 p.m. Sundays
K. U. Pre-Law Society presents:
Dottie Harder will also be in the Governor's Room from 10:00-12:00 and 1:00-4:00 to answer questions, help fill out applications, or give undergraduates information on classes, etc.
EVERYONE IS WELCOME!
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
Head of Admissions of Washburn Law School Along with a law professor and a law student
Dottie Harder
Tuesday, September 29 7:00 p.m.
Mon - Thurs 11 a.m-2 a.m
Fri - Sat 11 a.m-3 a.m
Sunday - 11 a.m-1 a.m
Kansas Room, Kansas Union
842-1212
MENU
1601 W 23rd Southern Hills Mall
WE FEATURE THE UNIVERSAL SIZE PIZZA
10 INCHES 6 SLIVES FEEDS ONE TO TWO PEOPLE
STANDARD CHEESE
1 PIZZA Our Small
2 PIZZAS Our Medium
3 PIZZAS Our Large
A HAND FASHIONED CROST WITH A GENEROUS,
TOPPING OF TOMATO SAUCE AND CHEESES THE
STARTING POINT FOR YOUR FAVORITE
COMBINATION
$400 $700 $90
EACH ADDITIONAL PIZZA $200
ALL TOPPINGS 50¢ PER TOPPING PER PIZZA
"NO COUPON SPECIALS"
Prime Time Special
3—Pizzas
1—Topping
4—Cokes
$10.00
Everyday
Two-Fers
2-Pizzas
2-Toppings
2-Cokes
$8.00
WE ACCEPT CHECKS (296 Service Charge)
Valuable Coupons
Sunday
Super Special
2—Super Shuttles
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Details page 6
Wednesday September 30,1987 Vol.98,No.28
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
(USPS 650-640)
Former governor becomes KU consultant
Former Kansas Gov. John Carlin has been hired as a consultant for the University of Kansas, Frances Horowitz, vice chancellor for research and graduate studies, said yesterday.
Staff writer
Carlin, who served as governor from 1979 to 1987, is a Topeka resident and on the faculty at Wichita State University as a professor of urban affairs and public administration.
By MARK TILFORD
University one day a month. But his schedule will vary, and he might be here more often.
He will work as an economic development consultant in the Center for International Programs and as a government consultant for the Institute of Public Policy and Business Research, Horowitz said.
He joined the KU staff in August and is scheduled to come to the
Steven Maynard-Moody
The former governor is a very articulate and talented man. And he's had some insights to these problems that you would hate to see go to waste.'
"T
Carlin will be paid $500 a month, and the University will reimburse Wichita State for Carlin's consulting fees. The money will come from state funds
Carlin said yesterday that he planned to speak to a law class in
Institute of Public Policy and Business Research
October and said addressing other classes was a possibility.
lops, then certainly yes," he said.
"It was discussed. And if it deve-
Carlin went to China and Japan several times during his eight years
in office, and he said he helped develop a program through which two KU students were currently studying in China.
Part of Carlin's work will be on a government reform project with Steven Maynard-Moody of the public policy institute.
"Last fall, as one of the last things Carlin did as governor, he commissioned a study looking at the reform of local government," Maynard-Moody said. "This project is sort of growing out of that study."
Maynard-Moody said the project would deal with changing local gov
ernments in the state, including both growing and declining governments
"We're beginning to get more interaction with the rural areas because that's where the real trazedy is." Mavnord-Moodd said.
Carlin also will work with George Woodyard, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs in the international affairs center.
"The former governor is a very articulate and talented man," Maynard-Moody said. "And he's bad at everything." He wasn't sure you would hate to see go to waste.
Honors classes short of teachers
By JENNIFER ROWLAND
The strain of KU's continued record enrollment has jeopardized the number of honors courses. But despite the overflow, University departments continue to offer honors courses.
Sharon Brehm, director of the College Honors Program, said yesterday that University departments and faculty remained committed to offering the smaller 15- to 20-student classes despite the enrollment crunch.
"It is absolutely true that there is more pressure on departments to cover the basic required courses. So they do not have a chance." she said.
as bad as the crunch has gotten.
Brom said, "people have stayed in
- Sharon Brehm
We are intimately tied to the fates and fortunes of the University, and if we can increase the faculty at this University, the honors program will benefit.
Benedict XVI
- Sharon Brehm
Director of the College Honors
Do An Sunim, Lawrence resident and ordained Buddhist monk, uses chants to help him meditate and achieve enlightenment.
Program
Entering freshmen who are National Merit Semi-Finalists, Summerfield or Watkins-Berger Scholars or who have ACT composite scores of at least 30 or SAT scores of at least 1,340 are automatically eligible for the honors program. Students also need to complete a 3.25 Honors students must maintain a 3.25 GPA and enroll in honors courses to stay in the program.
"We are intimately tailed to the fates and fortunes of the University, and if we can increase the faculty at this university our program will benefit," Brehm said.
She said that some larger departments had to reduce the number of honors classes they offered each year. She added that a lack of faculty to teach the courses
Kansas Zen Center residents seek path to enlightenment
Brehm said that the approximately 800 honors students that enrolled this fall reflected about a 30 percent increase from last fall.
"I think it is really a national trend now to be concerned about education.
By BRIAN BARESCH
Staff writer
The center is home to 13 people, including four KU students, who practice Zen Buddhism. Zen, a blend of mystical Buddhism and Chinese Theoist philosophies, is a way of living for thousands of people nationwide.
"All the problems in the world are in yourself," said Dennis Durmeir, director of the center. By clearing distractions out of the mind, one can better understand and live life, while also to achieve enlightenment, he said.
Before the eastern sky was light Tuesday morning, residents of the Kansas Zen Center at 1115 Ohio St. put on gray robes and settled into the house's front room for the day's 5:30 a.m. meditation.
Anyone may attend the exercises,
at 5:30 every morning or at 7 p.m.
Sunday and Wednesday. A discussion
on Zen Buddhism and a question and
answer session follow the Sunday
exercises.
Lawrence practitioners say that Zen is a way of coming to grips with one's problems, which are usually in the way one looks at the world.
Morning exercises start with 108 prostrations, or bowing deeply and standing up. "They wake you up." Do Buddh monk, said with a grit.
Next, the adherents sit and meditate quietly for half an hour, then chant for 45 minutes from a book of Korean chants. The morning's exercises end as Durmeir reads aloud a letter from the Lawrence center's founder and spiritual master, Seung Sahn.
Enlightenment, Durmeier said, is having a perfectly clear mind, which allows the enlightened one to live
See HONORS, p. 6, col.1
The letters are read because Seung travels extensively and is not always available to answer questions, Durmeier said. Each letter addresses a
As many as 10 people usually attend the morning session, including quite a few who don't live there, and some who take sessions draw about four to six people.
with less anxiety and distraction
术
question put to the master about Zen meditaton or life.
"All sentient beings have originally clear minds and a compassionate nature," Durmeiren said. "What we think of as ourselves, our minds, bodies and so forth, covers up that fact."
The exercises are a way of returning to the original state. "It's real simple," Durmeirie said. "You just sit there and watch your mind, and gradually over time your mind becomes clear."
The class met in several places around Lawrence from 1978 until 1983, when some of the members met in a house together to practice Zen.
The Kansas Zen Center grew out of an informal meditation class taught by Stanley Lombardo, chairman of the Lombardo Judi Rothin, professor of math.
Several of the members had stud- led with Zen masters, Roitman said, and eventually Sahn agreed to visit them for exercise. One student of his students to help with exercises.
Sahn, who has helped establish about 25 Zen centers in the United States and Europe since 1972, has prescribed the sequence of exercises the center uses. In Korea, traditional Zen uses only quiet siting to clear mind. Durnier said that Sahn believed that Westerners thought too much.
This means that just sitting is not as effective here, so Sahn added the prostatises and chanting as a way of focusing on the mind instead of distractions, which Durmeir referred to as buzzing in the head.
Sitting quietly is an important part of Zen Buddhist meditation for Xuey Chi, Yang, Kao-hsuing, Taiwan, graduate, student.
The center has about four meditation retreats each year, in which adherents perform exercises 14 hours a day for up to a week at a time. During the retreat, they think about koans, or Zen puzzles.
Koans are questions without answers that can be worked out rationally. They can be solved only an enlightened mind, Durmeer said.
Durmeire gave an example: A Zen master was approached one day after breakfast by a young discipline who wanted to be taught. "Have you had breakfast?" asked the master. The monk said yes. The master asked, "What have you learned? The young monk was enlightened. What had he attained?"
The answer has to do with realizing that enlightenment is an important part of everyday life: the monk had gained clean breakfast bowls.
During the River City Reunion a few weeks ago, poets Allen Ginsberg and Anne Waldman and writer Edie Walker went to meet in order to mediate and meet people
Rotman especially enjoyed Ginsberg's visit. "He's the best advertisement for Buddhism that I know, because he's a nice person."
Lawmaker supports admissions plan
House Education Committee chairman wants to raise quality of students
Bv MICHAEL HORAK
The chairman of the state House Education Committee said yesterday that she would support the selective board to be added to the Board of Residents recently.
State Rep. Denise Apt, R-Iola, said in a telephone interview that she saw the proposal as a way to raise the student quality at Regents schools.
Staff writer
"The open admissions philosophy, I think, is wonderful, but I don't think it is fair," she said. "I think it is criminal that we send some of our kids to college unprepared and give them the perfect opportunity to fail."
She said requiring high school students to take certain English, math, science, social studies and foreign language classes, would help
Apt is one of the first legislators to publicly support the selective admissions plan unveiled Sept. 17 by Stanley Kohlip, the Regents executive director. The plan would reserve admission in the University of Kansas and the Weicha State University and Weicha State University, school graduates who meet minimum curriculum, class rank or test score requirements.
prepare them for college courses.
House colleagues said yesterday that they were not surprised about Apt's support of selective admissions. The department has introduced two bills that would have made a minimum high school curriculum a prerequisite for admis-
The Regents will be considering the proposal this fall.
"I'm not surprised she supports this," said State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence and member of the House Education Committee. "She has been concerned for some time about the money the state is spending on ill-prepared students and students who don't make it through school."
"Representative Apt has looked at education matters for most of her life. She's a very significant player with regard to the Legislature," he said. "I'm not surprised by her support, but I'm pleased."
Koplik said he was pleased to hear of Apt's support.
Apt said she didn't want to see admission requirements for state schools too restrictive. She said she liked the idea of letting each school
make exceptions for some students who do not meet all the requirements.
Legislation that Apt introduced during the last two years on minimum high school curriculum were just ideas for discussion, she said. They had little chance of passing. Now they are the Legislature is different, she said.
"I think there is more awareness of the situation, more concern . . . I think it is possible that something has happened." "But I've always been an optimist."
Any change in the state's open admissions policy would require the Legislature change current state law.
Apt said the committee would work with the Regents on any plan they might want.
By KIRK ADAMS and
Downtown model may appear on TV
VALOREE ARMSTRONG
Staff writers
A model of downtown Lawrence created by KU architecture students may be used in a video about development options.
The television program will show the public that development can be tastefully accomplished in
The Downtown Improvement Committee, an advisory committee of the City Commission, yesterday discussed using the model in a Sunflower Cablevision's Channel 6, tentatively scheduled for Nov. 23.
the downtown area, said Max Lucas, committee member and dean of architecture.
"The idea is to stimulate some excitement," he said.
The program will also include a segment for residents to call with questions and comments.
Earlier this month, about 65 KU architecture students constructed the model of the downtown area to study and give Lawrence residents a better view of how proposed developments might affect the city.
---
The model wasn't built specifi-
See MODEL, p. 6, col. 1
2
Wednesdav. September 30, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Military coup leader declares Fiji a republic, suspends constitution
SUVA, Fiji — Army commander C. Sitiveni Rabuka declared Fiji a republic yesterday, appointed himself head of government and constitution, but he asked not to be compared with military dictators.
"I don't think I am the type of military coup leader (seen) around the world," he told a news conference five days after staging
his second coup in five months. "I don't want to be compared with them."
Rabuka's declaration came in a national address over army-controlled radio. He said Fiji, an ethnically divided South Pacific island nation that is 2,000 miles northeast of Sydney, Australia, was severing constitutional ties with Britain.
OU official is accused of falsifying records
NORMAN, Okla. — A former University of Oklahoma admissions director and a former Norman resident have been accused in district court of conspiring to falsify scholastic and attendance records, accepting bribes and falsifying records, officials said yesterday.
"It would appear they were
selling degrees," Assistant District Attorney Irby Taylor of Cleveland County said.
Taylor said the university's police department began investigations after receiving tips that transcripts were being purchased and a report of an alleged attempt to bribe the director's successor.
Korean opposition disagrees on candidate
SEOUL, South Korea — Opposition leaders Kim Young-sam and Kim Dae-jung failed to agree yes to the plan, so should run for president this year.
Reunification Democratic Party in elections to be held before Dec. 20.
Both indicated they were determined to run, despite fears it could mean defeat for their opposition
The two leaders said they could not break the stalemate during a breakfast meeting, despite an earlier pledge to agree on a single candidacy by the end of the month.
Passengers injured during turbulent flight
NEW YORK — Passengers on an Eastern Airlines jet bound for New York said yesterday they found themselves smashed against the ceiling and dodging flying dinnerware after the plane hit severe turbulence on a trip from Puerto Rico.
The turbulence forced the plane
to make an unexpected stop in Bermuda. Hospital officials said 27 people were treated for minor back and neck injuries.
Airline officials said 21 people were injured. Eastern spokesman Robin Matell in Miami originally reported that 41 passengers and crew members were injured.
Reagan lobbies for Bork
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Senate's second-ranking Democrat said yesterday that Supreme Court nominee Robert H. Bork had lost ground and now appeared to be losing his bid for confirmation.
"I think he's licked," declared Democratic whip Alan Cranston of California.
However, White House spokesman Martin Fitzpatrick said Bork had been meeting with individual senators as part of a continuing effort to win confirmation and that President Reagan in person and on the telephone.
"We have four or five weeks before the vote; there is plenty of time."
He said that Reagan was not considering whom he might nominate if Bork was rejected and "gets angry at the fact of even mentioning a replacement."
"His attitude is that Bork will be the new justice, he won't look at any other one."
Cranston, who keeps vote counts on major issues for the Democrats, asks her Bork count has been changing from day to day — adversely to Bork.
"Opinion polls of the American public show the undecided moving to the anti-Bork column. The same thing is happening in the Senate."
Craston told reporters that his latest head count showd 49 senators likely to vote against Bork and 40 others. leaving 11 undecided or unknown.
"My count before Bork testified was 46 against confirmation, 45 for and 9 undetermined," Cranston said.
Iran masses warfront units
The Associated Press
MANAMA, Bahrain — Military analysts and diplomats in Cyprus said yesterday that Iran was massing up to 20 divisions of Revolutionary Guards in the southern sector of the Persian Gulf battlefront, heightening speculation that Teheran plans a new offensive.
Iranian military units vary widely in length, but a division averages 10,000.
There was no independent confirmation of a buildup on that scale. However, Iran's state-run media, monitored in Nicosia, have reported that as many as 48,000 men have been sent to the front in recent days.
Iran television, monitored in Nicosia, showed some of the battalions parading through Tehran on Monday, carrying giant portraits of Ayatollah Khomeini and red and green banners bearing Islamic slogans proclaiming victory.
Tehanan's daily paper, Arbar,
reported yesterday that as many as
34,000 more men were being sent to
the south to respond to a U.S. attack.
U. S. officials said the Navy would respond strongly if Iran intensified war activities which, they said, have threatened U.S. interests and attacked an Iranian minelayer.
A U.S. source who spoke on condition of anonymity said the Navy's gulf-based resources were already seriously strained.
U. S. warships yesterday escorted a Kuwaiti tanker toward a major Persian Gulf shipping channel where British mine sweepers were searching for explosives believed planted by Iran.
A Greek tanker was attacked in the gulf last night by an Iranian gunboat, but there were no casualties or fire damage, as艘, marine salvage executives said.
The 38,699-ton Koriana sent a distress signal about midnight saying it had been attacked by missiles, and that it planned to anchor for the night near the ship, 50 miles north of Abu Dhabi, the executives said. Lloyd's Shipping Intelligence in London confirmed the attack.
The analysts and diplomats, speaking on condition of anonymity, said they believed the Iranian units were being deployed in the south for a new offensive in October or November when the rainy season starts.
Auto innovator Ford dies at 70
DETROIT — Henry Ford II, who at age 28 took over and rescued the auto company founded by his grandfather, died yesterday from pneumonia complications at a hospital bearing his family name. He was 70.
The Associated Press
Ford won recognition for advocating corporate contributions to social progress, backing Detroit's Renaissance Center and dealing with such corporate lieutenants as Chrysler Corp. Chairman Lee Iacocca, whom he fired as company president in 1978.
From The Associated Press.
Ford died at 7:21 a.m. after $ 2^{1/2} $ weeks in Henry Ford Hospital, where heart and kidney problems complicated pneumonia he contracted while traveling recently in Europe.
His successes included recruiting a young management team dubbed the Whiz Kids that returned the company to profitability after World War II.
He introduced the Mustang, but his failures included the Edsel, a car named for his late father.
He also rejected lacocca's idea for a minivan when lacecuna was Ford president. lacocca took the idea to Chrysler and made it a huge success.
Married three times, Ford lived a full and colorful life, but friends said he sometimes tired of the fane that accompanied his name.
Robertson quits post in ministry
The Associated Press
called his decision to quit as a minister and sever ties to his television ministry "one of the most painful I have ever been required to make."
religious broadcaster.
WASHINGTON - Television evangelist Pat Robertson said yesterday he is resigning as a Southern Baptist minister and cutting ties to Republicans. He proposes to enter the race for the 1988 Republican presidential nomination.
In a statement from his headquarters in Chesapeake, Va. Robertson
In recent months, as public opinion polls indicated voters were reluctant to put a member of the clergy in a high elected office, Robertson has stressed his business background rather than his long career as a
Robertson said he would resign as chairman and chief executive officer of the Christian Broadcasting Network and CBN Continental Broadcasting Inc. Robertson began CBN with $70 in 1960 and built it into the nation's fifth-largest cable network, reaching 37 million homes.
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THE AΦs
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, September 30, 1987
3
Local Briefs
Nominations for HOPE award will be delayed
The Board of Class Officers will not be accepting nominations for the HOPE award this week as originally planned because the class officer elections and other class officers will off Stubbs, senior class president.
BOCO has not decided on a two-week period that seniors will be allowed to nominate faculty members for the award. However, the recipient will definitely be announced Nov. 14 during half-time of the football game between Kansas and Oklahoma State.
HOPE stands for Honor to an Outstanding Progressive Educator, and seniors have been present at the graduation of 890 to a member of the KU faculty.
Police arrest men with stolen bikes
Three Topeka residents were arrested Monday on charges of possession of stolen property.
According to police spokesman Sgt. Don Dalquest, the three suspects, aged 20, 19 and 17, tried to kid- Bike's Hick Shop. 1038 Vermont St.
The owner of the shop recognized the stolen bike. He diverted the attention of the men and called the police.
A second bike was found in the trunk of the car. The two custom-made bicycles, valued together at $1,800, were taken from a Topeka bicycle shop, according to Lawrence police reports.
Japanese royalty will visit Manhattan
Prince Akibih and Princess Michiko, the crown prince and princess of Japan, will visit Kansas State University on Oct. 12. Their visit will include a tour of the university's horticultural therapy program, presentation of a glass sculpture by university glassblower Mitsuki sung, a luncheon and entertainment by musical groups.
KU students earn journalism awards
Four KU radio-television students won the first-place awards in the Mark of Excellence Contest sponsored by the Society of Professional Journalists, Sigma Delta Chi
Dawn Tongish and Bok Kealing won best television documentary for their five-part series on the homeless.
Patty Noland won best spotnews reporting for her story that aired on KANU-FM about protests by Catholics against a campus showing of the movie "Hail Mary."
Matt Ehrlich won best radio news/non-deadline for his report on the near-collapse of the farm economy in Kansas.
328 freshman vote for class officers
A total of 328 freshmen participated in the elections for freshman class officers yesterday, the first day of elections, said Tim Raynor, junior class president and elections chairman.
Raynor said he was pleased with the voter turnout. He said turnout was higher than in past years, and those who are competing in the elections.
Freshmen still may vote today from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the rotunda at Strong Hall.
Rainbow Coalition denies affiliation to party
The Rev. Jesse Jackson and the Rainbow Coalition are in no way affiliated with a liberal political party that plans on supporting Jackson in the Democratic primary, coalition members said yesterday.
By VIRGINIA McGRATH
From staff and wire reports.
Staff writer
The liberal organization, the New Alliance Party, calls itself a blacked, multiraction, pro-gay national political party. Its vice-presidential candidate, Mike Pelletiere, and a campaign aide are in Lawrence
gathering signatures on a petition to get the party on the national ballot
Rainbow Coalition members said they thought the alliance was expressing too much of a connection to the group, and New Alliance said they weren't.
But Charles Meek, interim state chairman for the Kansas steering committee for the National Rainbow Coalition, said, "That organization is so much more than we think they are affiliated with the Rainbow Coalition, and they are not."
Shavonne Carter, youth coordinator for the National Rainbow Coalition in Lawrence, said members of the New Alliance Party were misrepresenting themselves to people when seeking support.
"People have called me who thought they were part of the Nation," she recalled.
Meeks said, "They are trying to get a lot of supporters involved with our organization by implicating that we are involved with them. They are confusing some people."
But Phil Pinheiro, public relations director for the New Alliance Party, said yesterday that the group had a plan to move it were part of the Rainbow Coalition.
New Alliance Party members assume Jackson won't receive the nomination and would like Jackson's supporters to vote for the New Alliance Party as a third party in the general election, campaign officials say.
"We're supporting Rev. Jackson in the Democratic primary. And there are members of the Rainbow Coalition who are also members of the New Alliance Party and members of the Democratic Party, and members of the Rainbow Coalition. But that's the extent of our connection with them," Finheiro said.
Pam Smith, press assistant for the national office of the Jesse Jackson Exploratory Committee in Washington, also said that no affiliation existed between the two organizations, but that she couldn't comment any further.
Late fee to enroll favored
By NOEL GERDES
Ex-administrator returns to classroom
Staff writer
Students might have less time to enroll late at the University of Kansas next spring without paying more under a proposal that the University Senate Executive Committee approved yesterday.
The proposal from the academic affairs office would charge a $10 late fee for students who enroll during the first 10 days after classes begin. The charge would increase to $25 after the first 10 days of classes. For late enrollment in summer session, students would pay $10 through the first five days of classes and $25 after that.
Also, after the first 10 days of classes or the first five days in the summer, students would have to submit a petition explaining why they couldn't enroll on time, and the petition would be subject to a review. According to the proposal, no student should be enrolled in classes or 10th day in the summer unless the class had met less than one-fourth of the scheduled sessions.
Currently, KU charges students $10 for late enrollment until the 20th day of classes or the 10th day in the summer and $25 after that. To enroll after the 20th day of classes or the 10th day in the summer, students must submit a petition, but the petition generally is not reviewed.
The increase in late enrollment fees would encourage students to enroll earlier, Brower Burchill, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, said in a memo dated Sept. 21. If students enroll before the 20th day of classes, they will be included in the official KU enrollment figures, and KU may be eligible for more money from the Legislature.
Any increase in late enrollment fees must be approved by the former Governor and the Regents. They would consider the proposal at their November meeting.
In other action, Judith Ramaley,
executive vice chancellor, told
SenEx that KU could save as much as
$60,000 by locking up buildings
during winter vacation. She said that
buildings used the most energy when
people opened and shut the doors,
and when they closed the doors,
certain buildings, it would not be
necessary to turn down the thermostats.
Last year, KU turned down the thermostats in buildings that are used little during winter vacation,
when Wescoe and Fraser Halls, she said.
She said that if the thermostats were turned down, KU ran the risk of freezing utility systems.
Bob Porter, associate director of physical plant facilities operations, said that KU tried to maintain normal building temperature at 74 degrees Fahrenheit.
FRI
9-12
25
Former Executive Vice Chancellor Robert P. Cobb is back in the classroom. He is teaching English
By JENNIFER ROWLAND Staff writer
It was 1957 and Wilt Chamberlain was KU's star center in basketball, Jimmy Dorsey's band was featured in greek week on campus and fall enrollment hit a nine-year high at 9.030.
Among the list of 90 new KU faculty members was then-associate English professor Robert P. Cobb. Five years later, he began 25 years in KU administrative and research and sciences and most recently, executive vice chancellor.
This fall, Cobb returned to full-time undergraduate teaching, relocating in an office on the third floor of Woolsey Hall.
"Yes, there is life after administration," he said. "I find that my evening activities tend to be more of my own choosing than they had been, as well as my weekend activities."
He taught intermittently during his administrative years, but now spends time attending lectures, visiting with students and grading papers, rather than going to daily meetings and appointments. Cobb's newest assignments are English 105 and 209.
"I told somebody that I always aspired to leave administration before I was carried out, thrown out or burned."
Leaning back in his chair, he talked about his first promotion to dean in 1962, when he was called into the liberal arts and sciences dean's office.
"I recall very clearly, my first reaction was 'What have I done wrong?'" he said.
Visitors to the office can tell that Cobb, 62, had just moved to the location this summer, because the two bookcases against the back wall are only half-filled with books.
Cobb said that since his position shift he had enjoyed more privacy and less frequent newsuser interviews.
"It is a good deal quieter in my office in Wescoe Hall than it was in 231 Strong Hill." he said.
With mandatory retirement age eight years away, Cobbs said he might eventually phase out teaching so that he could retire earlier.
Cobb spent a few weeks last spring in France, and he hopes to learn to speak French fluently. He also traveled to Colorado and New Mexico last spring.
Retire is not a word in his vocabulary.
Cobb takes a low-impact affective class twice a week, which he helped alleviate stress.
"I don't think I've retired," he said, "I think I've never been the arsenal to a certain extent."
"The trick, of course, is to maintain some kind of balance." Cobb said.
He said KU students had changed and seemed better prepared for college since he took his first position at the University 30 years ago.
"When I came in 1957 it was rare to have a student who had had four years of English in high school. It's exceptional now to have students who have not had four years of English in high school," he said.
Student vies with officials to save house
Staff writer
By VALOREE ARMSTRONG
Today could mean D-Day for a house in Lawrence unless Doug Barland can come up with $15,202 to save it.
Barland, Lawrence senior, went before the Lawrence City Commission last week in an effort to stop a house on at 2185 Vermont St.
"The main thing is to save the house." Barland said yesterday.
The house had been scheduled for demolition by the city when Barland bought the house from his father, Ray. Barland appealed the city demolition order at last week's City Commission meeting.
The house has been an eyesore for years, commissioners say, despite attempts by the city to force Barland's father to bring the house up to city code. Commissioners said last week they were wary of granting another extension, but they granted one anyway.
Barland is trying to secure a loan by 5 p.m. today to cover the amount the city demanded he have available for the repairs.
Although Barland estimated improvements would cost less than $5,000, the city's community development staff made its own inspection last week and estimated improvements would cost $15,200.
director, said. "We prepare for the worst." The city's estimate did not take into account work Barland planned to do himself, he said.
"If he doesn't get the money to us, we'll go on with demolition." he said.
we go on with demolition, he said.
The city wants Barland to sign an agreement that if he gets the money but doesn't complete the work promptly, the city will use the money and do the work.
But Lynn Goodell, public works
The agreement would be an effort to assure neighbors and commissioners the problem would be rectified one way or another. Goodell said.
"It's real tough to balance between its neighbors' values and the own. GT
Barland said that he thought the
estimate was too high and that the city was worrying for no reason.
"They don't have to worry about it because I'm going to finish it," he said.
Barland said he contracted a plumber and an electrician but hoped that he and his brother could do much of the construction work themselves.
A senior in mechanical engineering, Barland said he would graduate in December and had considered living in the house himself.
"But I have to go where the jobs are," he said.
SUA
Goodell said he hoped Barland would be able to bring the house up to code. He said he, too, would rather save houses than destroy them.
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4
Wednesday, September 30, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Bungled benefits
Employees expect to be paid for their work.
This simple notion is being forgotten by the state of Kansas. Instead, the compensation package for University employees, both faculty and classified staff, is being chipped away.
boln tienity i consenser sidan is vending bene.
Looking at the trend of trend and benefits, there is little in need to work here.
Now the benefits are dwindling, too.
Pay? Well, there is that "cost of living" increase scheduled for January — 2 percent for six months for classified employees and 3 percent for six months for faculty.
Now the benefits are dwindling too. According to a proposed health plan announced last week, employees' share of premium costs will rise. The state would no longer pay the premium for employees with "single" coverage, which it has done for 10 years, and rates would increase for family plan coverage.
Classified employee will be harder hit than faculty members because in general classified workers have lower salaries.
Let's say an employee made $10,000 last year. That employee got a $100 raise for 1988.
With the proposed health plan, he would pay about $180 more in 1988 for traditional Blue Cross Blue Shield family coverage including dental.
That's an $80 loss.
That's all $0.05s!
Chancellor Gene A. Budig says he hopes that the Regents will step in. They can convey concerns to Gov. Mike Hayden about the proposal. We hope the concerns are addressed.
Employees expect to be paid.
Political purposes
Former Gov. John Carlin raised more than $300,000 in contributions in the four years after his 1982 election. This, in turn has raised questions in some Republican circles about Carlin's political fund.
The controversy recently has arrived at the doors of the Kansas Public Disclosure Commission, which is examining the state's campaign finance laws. The commission plans to propose changes in the laws to the Kansas Legislature.
Carlin added more than $300,000 to the $21,000 that was in his political fund after the 1982 election. Carlin has said that most of the money was used to pay 1982 election debts. About $10,000 remains.
The Constitution limited Carlin to two consecutive terms in office. Although he has repeatedly said that he has no plans to seek office again, the money in his political fund naturally raises questions about whether that's true.
The contributed money was given for a political cause, and it should be used for only that purpose. If Carlin is sure that he won't run for a political office again, then he has no need for the money. If he has future political aims, then he should hang onto the money.
Either way, he needs to make some decisions about the money. It shouldn't just sit in a bank account. That's not what it was contributed for.
Strike two
Maybe football seasons run in cycles - that is, every five years there's a strike.
regardless, devoted fans may once again find themselves on Sunday afternoons in the bathroom regreating tile instead of in the living room perched in front a TV set.
Team owners, however, contrived a plan to keep the pigskin in play. Substitute players will now swarm onto the field to satisfy the athletic appetite of throngs of spectators. TV networks are also relieved to fill the afternoon air with football rather then reruns of "Emergency."
Perhaps these substitute players — referred to as scabs — will add a new twist to an old game. Recruiters soon learn that the best tactic is to pick the best scabs, so to speak.
The Chicago Bears, the 1986 Super Bowl champs, may find themselves groveling for touchdowns. And weak teams, such as the Kansas City Chiefs, may soon be the proud owners of those garish championship rings.
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
News staff
Jennifer Benjamin...Editor
Juli Warren...Managing editor
John Benner...News editor
Beth Copeland...Editorial editor
Sally Streff...Campaign editor
Brian Kablerine...Sports editor
Dan Rustellmann...Photo editor
Bill Skeet...Graphics editor
Tom Eblen...General manager, news advice*
Business staff
Bonnie J. Hardy...Business manager
Robert Hughes...Advertising manager
Kelly Scherer...Retail sales manager
Kurt Messeramith...Campus sales manager
Greg Knipp...Production manager
David Delfeff...National sales manager
Angela Crichton...Classified manager
Ron Weems...Director of marketing
Jeanne Hines...Sales and marketing adviser
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NO
WATER
Author closes mind to America
Whether you know it or not, you are the topic of a very hot debate.
Many think you've been ripped off by America's higher education. They argue that you've been taught the wrong things.
Allan Bloom wrote a current best seller, "The Case for Being Human," in a very busy book on American intellectualism.
The thrust of Bloom's argument is that America, because of its universities, has become a society of trendy relativists. It's a society where one opinion is no more valid than another, where there is no good and no evil, only one truth. It is the truth today might not be the truth tomorrow.
Disguised as openness, we accept everyone's new view of the world. Slowly and mindfully that has that privilege not open,
As a result, we have become a baseless society, a society so compromising as to admit responsibility.
Our refusal to condemn another's views, he claims, has imprisoned us in the fad of the day.
Fads such as feminism, for example, have enslaved women to a double life of family and career. Desegregation, another example, only has an adverse effect on race relations. Even the Bible is now taught as literature and not as a source of truth.
Jim
Farquhar
Staff Columnist
America's modernism, he argues, has yielded the empty society to which we've become addicted. Instead of debating Plato, we watch MTV, a "pre-packaged masturbatory fantasy" for the feeble-minded. We have, in effect, traded Eternal Truth for the Beastie Boys.
Bloom blames society's disintegration on the attitudes of college campuses of the 1960s, an attitude from which we've not recovered.
In the '60s, students demanded classes that would help them compete and survive in society. Colleges have since, in Bloom's view, crumbled into stepping stones to employment.
Bloom doesn't want college to be a vocational school, he would prefer it be the ivory tower it was in 19th-century Europe, where people came to work as part of the practice what they would do the rest of their lives.
Though he raises some valid points, Bloom leaves much room for argument.
Surely, this is my bleeding-heart, relativist mentality showing through, but whose Eternal Truth is he talking about? How nice it must be to have such a firm grip on reality.
Many also find his position on feminism and desegregation debatable. Bloom makes a huge leap of reasoning to suggest that simply because equality has yet to be resolved in this country women were better off in the kitchen and blacks were better off in the back of the bus.
But Bloom's largest fallacy is his attitude
about America. Bloom believes that American culture is only a cheap facsimile of Europe's. Everything it thinks or stands for wallows in the shadow of European intellect.
But Bloom spends his whole book describing and denying American culture at the same time. He criticizes American tendencies like progressism, the importance when, in fact, those are its virtues.
America is, in Bloom's words, a peculiar hybrid of "Nietzsche's nihilism with a happy ending." It accepts nihilism its disregard for tradition but churlies in the face of the eternal
In the final analysis, America is not without culture, as Bloom suggests, it just has a culture
In the book, Bloom gives an account of a cab driver he met who said Gestalt therapy, the psychological treatment of the whole, had cured him of his drug addiction. Bloom lambets the way a European philosophical theory is now used in America something completely different in America.
As Robert Pattition, a book reviewer, wrote, a culture that can turn an abstract German philology "into a common vocabulary for the redemption of dope dealers and give nihilism a happy ending" has found something beyond philosophy. It has found experience. Maybe Bloom just isn't experienced.
But it's all in the wav you look at it.
Portable phones prey on privacy
Jim Farquhar is an Olathe junior majoring in journalism.
A man named Kent, who works for Motorola, was nice enough to send me a note about one of their space-age products.
"You know the importance of deadlines," Kent said, "and the importance of being able to be in immediate contact with people and they with you.
"Consider a Motorola factory direct mobile or portable cellular telephone or combination of the two."
I have to admit that I am a wondrous-device freak. I have a wristwatch that is a combination calculator, data bank, stopwatch and alarm clock.
However, I'm not going to call Kent from Motorola, because if there is one wondrous device I don't want, it is a portable telephone.
Sure, I know the importance, as Kent said, "of being able to be in immediate contact with people and they with you."
But I know something of greater importance — being able to hide from people. And to do that, you need to be a good listener.
Life was better before telephones became common. Back then, if some nuisance wanted to say something stupid to you, he had to sit down and make sure he was at the streetcar and ride several miles to your home.
This took considerable effort. And there were defenses. Even today, if someone rings my
Mike Royko Syndicated Columnist
doorbell, I can peek through a hole in the door and see who it is.
But now, because of the telephone, all he has to do is hit seven numbers and he can come crashing into your life. He can keep ringing dozens of times or call back every five minutes.
And Kent from Motorola wants to make a phone my constant companion?
Consider just one terrible consequence of owning a portable telephone and people knowing your number and being able to make immediate contact.
You are sitting in a bar after work, rewarding your frayed nerves for having earned another day's pay
Suddenly your portable phone rings. You answer it and the familiar voice says: "I was about to put dinner on. Are you on the expressway?"
"What's that noise?"
"Yes, yes, that's where I am, on the expressway, but traffic is terrible. Must be a big accident up ahead."
"What noise?
"All those voices. I thought I heard someone shout 'Bartender, another round.'
on, that? Yes, traffic is so jammed up that drivers are leaning out of windows and shouting things like, 'We better go around.' "
"I hear a juke box."
PAGE 240
"Hello. hello, I can't hear you. Goodbye."
Life is so less complicated, relationships are so much more stable, if the bartender answers his phone and simply says: "No, he ain't been in this year."
So I wish Motorola or someone would invent the kind of phone I've been wearing for.
It would work this way. It would have a little screen on it. And after one ring, the screen would show the name of the person making the call. It would also have a button. And when I pressed the button, the caller's phone would emit an ear-shattering obscurity.
Call me, Kent, when you put that on the market Better vet, drop me a brief postcard.
BLOOM COUNTY
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, September 30, 1987
5
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Lazon
4(Wr)²
/(X-y)²+y
9.30
© 1984 Universal Press Syndicate
"Yes, yes, I know that, Sidney ... everybody knows that! But look: Four wrongs squared, minus two wrongs to the fourth power, divided by this formula, do make a right."
By BRAD ADDINGTON
Senate to meet today
Campus/Area
Staff writer
Student Senate will meet in a special session tonight to discuss postponement of graduate and law classes from next week to later in October.
Jason Krakow, student body president, called for the special session yesterday in response to graduate students' concerns that they would not have adequate time to campaign over next week. The Senate will meet at 8:30 p.m. Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
At a special meeting last week, the Student Senate Executive Committee established that the filing deadline would be Friday and elections would be Oct. 8. That would give candidates less than a week to campaign.
Senate regulations call for the elections of graduate and law senators to be in the first full week of October. The regulations also call for congressional debate between the deadline for filing for candidacy and the election day.
The Senate didn't adhere to those regulations because this year's Senate Elections Committee chairman was not selected until Sept. 9.
"We realize that a reasonable elec-
ture can't take place next week.
Krankenhaus"
Krakaw said that he, Stephanie Quincy, student body vice president, and Roger Templin, StudEx chairman, had drafted a strategy that would postpone the filing deadline to Oct. 7 and the election to Oct. 28.
Although StudEx established the candidacy filing deadline at last week's meeting, only the Senate can approve a bill stipulated by Senate regulations.
Krakow said he and other Senate leaders had spent a considerable part of yesterday and would spend time today notifying senators about the KFM radio will also announce the special session today, Krakow said.
All Senate elections were in the fall until Senate changed them last school year. Elections for all seats except graduate and law students now are in April. Graduate and law seats were kept in the fall because some graduate students are at KU for only a year.
Although selection of this year's Elections Committee chairman in September made difficult the organization of graduate and law student candidates, Query said it would have been very untraditional for the summer's Elections Committee chairman to begin organizing the elections.
Fraternity paints letters often, for fun
By BEN JOHNSTON
Staff writer
For six years, the concrete letters in front of the Kappa Sigma fraternity house have been painted dozens of times with different colors to form a myriad of designs ranging from the U.S. flag to tiger stripes.
And for years, students and residents who have seen the letters wondered why the fraternity member was so often in and in such a variety of designs.
Mark Klimiuik, Omaha, Neb., senior, and president of Kappa Sigma, 1045 Emery Road, said yesterday that the members got together in groups to discuss ideas for painting the letters.
"Someone will just put ideas on a bulletin board, and then on Friday night we'll talk about the ideas and how we can make it we'll get started." Klmik said.
Klimiuk said that the fraternity
members had a variety of design ideas for the letters, and since anyone in the fraternity could paint the letters were constantly being repainted.
Scott Navarro, Wichita sophomore and fraternity member, said, "Everybody does what they want. Why it why it gets painted all the time."
The concrete letters, which are about five feet high and eight feet wide, are the Greek letters for Kappa and Sigma. They were designed by a civil engineering student as a pledge class project in 1978.
Klimiuk said that the house members painted the letters an average of once a week, but have painted them as often as four times in a week.
"It has been something to do for the house," Klimiuk said. "The real response tension We want to give it off, usually, people have good ideas."
Each spring during final exams, the house members compete to see who can produce the best design, Klimik said.
"The competition is kind of an alternative to throwing eggs at people," Klimiu said. "Groups of five or six people paint the letters each other and decide who has the best design. The winners get a six-pack of beer."
Last spring, the winners of the competition painted a design that echoed the mood of the park.
Klimiuk said that he and four or five other members of the fraternity painted tiger stripes on the letters during country club week this fall.
"If we don't drink beer, the painting is not that messy." Klimiuk said. But sometimes someone will get in a fight, and then it gets kind of messy."
SanDee Nossaman, who lives across the street from the Kappa
"I like the fish they painted on there," she said. "They looked like they were swimming around. I enjoy seeing the new colors and designs. In fact, it is a conversation piece for the neighborhood."
Sigma house, said that she and everyone else in the neighborhood enjoyed seeing the letters change color and design.
John Davis, Leawood sophomore and fraternity member, said that he helped paint the current design, an art project he wrote on the letters for about two weeks.
"Soon we will get bored and feel like making a change." Davis said. Before we painted the flag on there, we decided to make it bigger, so we decided to make a change."
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A UNIQUE BICYCLE RACE
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If you have a bicycle in LAWRENCE, riding uphill is nothing new. Give it a shot, just for the FUN of it!!
If You Missed it Last Week Don't Miss it This Week! SUA SPECIAL EVENTS'
Aard Vark
Great Dancing!
CAFE
Great D.J.
9 p.m.-1 a.m., October 2, 1987 Kansas Room (6th floor) Kansas Union KUID Required $2 admission charge
metropolis mobile sound
featuring Ray Velasquez
6
Wednesday, September 30, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Honors
Continued from p. 1
So II'm not surprised that our numbers are increasing," she said.
Official figures indicate that enrollment in English 105 increased by 47 from last fall, with four additional sections offered; English 205, which had only one section this year and last year, decreased by three students. Western Civilization 144 was reduced by four sections and 31 students from last fall. Political Science 111, which had one section this year and last, decreased by three students. One section of political science 151 was added and drew six students; the class wasn't offered last fall.
Peter Casagrande, associate chairman of English, said that the department wasn't surprised by its honors section enrollment surge.
"We expected an increase because we knew that enrollments were up across the board." Casagrasead said.
But Burdett Loomis, chairman of political science, said his department's honors enrollment had decreased. The department has been encouraging students usually. Loomis said, the department had about 45 honors students.
Loomis said that the increased use of a device that instructors were being assigned
to large lecture classes as opposed to the smaller honors sections.
One example of this is political science 150 and honors section 151, which are being taught in one class this fall.
"Ordinarily that would have been taught separately," he said. "This wear they're folded in together."
Model
Ted Vaggalis, teaching assistant and Western Civilization scheduling officer, said that all of the Western Civilization honors sections combined had about 120 students, roughly the same as last year.
Continued from D.1
callv for the video.
Barry Newton, assistant professor of architecture and supervisor of the project, said the project was meant to help people see how proposals such as a downtown mall might affect the city. It will help an architect develop study their own ideas for downtown.
The model was displayed downtown earlier this month and was reassembled last week in Marvin Hall.
Each block of the model can be separated into two to four pieces, allowing other models to be inserted so people can see how their ideas would look if they were constructed.
"We decided that one thing the students could do was make a range of proposals from small to large-scale projects." Newton said.
The original project, which took about $2\frac{1}{2}$ weeks to complete, was built in sections at each of the four
architecture design studios. Two or three people were assigned to construct each street block.
Cramer said the model was unique because it was about the only way people could get an overall view of the downtown area.
"All the students were in awe when we finally put it together," Cramer said. He said each student put in about 80 to 100 hours on his part of the project and spent about $30 of his own money. He said the entire project cost about $2,000.
On Campus
Retirees Club coffee is scheduled at 10 a.m. today at Adam Lounge in the Adams Alumni Center. Music will be at 11 a.m.
"Search, Screening and Selection,
'an affirmative action workshop by Mike Rollet, is scheduled at
10 a.m. today at 208 Strong Hall
"Musical Life in Poland today," a University Forum by Daniel Politosek, professor of music history, is scheduled at 11:45 a.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
German Club meeting is scheduled at 4:30 p.m. today at the Counsel Room in Miller Scholarship Hall. Rolf Gunther, a German actor who will perform at Murphy Hall tomorrow, will be present.
Campus Christians meeting is scheduled at 6:30 p.m. today at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union.
KU Democrats meeting is scheduled at 7 p.m. today at the Kansas Room in the Kansas University.
Model United Nations meeting is scheduled at 7:30 p.m. today at
Parlor C in the Kansas Union.
Parlor C in the Kansas Union.
“*Continuity versus Creativity in Afro-American Culture*,” an African studies lecture by Merwyn C. Alleyer, author of *Walt Wetland* is scheduled at 7:30 p.m. today at the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union.
• Washington, D.C., and Toppea summer internship meeting sponsored by the department of political science is scheduled at 7:30 p.m. today in the Centennial Room in the Kansas Union.
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Lawrence Forecast
TODAY Sunny and Mild HIGH: 75° LOW: 47°
Fair conditions will prevail over the region for the rest of the week and into the weekend. Today the high will be in the mid-70s and the low will be in the mid-40s.
5-DAY
THU
Sunny
78/50
HIGH
LOW
FRI
Sunny
80/52
SAT
Mostly sunny
73/48
SUN
Mostly sunny
69/43
MON
Mostly sunny
73/47
TODAY
Sunny and Mild
HIGH: 75°
LOW: 47°
Fair conditions will prevail over the region for the rest of the week and into the weekend. Today the high will be in the mid-70s and the low will be in the mid-40s.
5-DAY
THU
Sunny
78/50
HIGH LOW
FRI
Sunny
80/52
SAT
Mostly sunny
73/48
SUN
Mostly sunny
69/43
MON
Mostly sunny
73/47
North Platte
75/40
Sunny
Omaha
71/45
Sunny
Rain
F-Storms
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Goodland
75/45
Sunny
Hays
76/46
Sunny
Salina
77/46
Sunny
Topeka
76/44
Sunny
Kansas City
73/49
Sunny
Columbia
72/47
Sunny
St. Louis
73/50
Sunny
Dodge City
76/49
Sunny
Wichita
78/49
Sunny
Chanute
78/49
Sunny
Springfield
76/47
Sunny
Forecast by Scott Dergan and John Dolusic.
Temperatures are today’s high and tonight’s overnight low.
Conditions are forecasted for this afternoon.
Tulsa
80/51
Sunny
UNDERGRADUATES;
For the first time in K.U. history, underclassman photographs will be allowed in The Jayhawker! And what a great time to start a new tradition!! This is the Jayhawker's 100th edition. This year's theme "A step ahead-A glance back" emphasizes the type of book it will be.
We encourage you to join with us and help build a NEW JAYHAWKER TRADITION... A Yearbook photographer will be setting up at your location... All you need to do is smile!! Below is the schedule, please place your date on your calendar. There will be a $1.00 sitting fee to have your picture in the yearbook. (This fee will be waived if you have purchased a Yearbook).
UNDERGRADUATES
YEARBOOK SCHEDULE
SEPT. 30
OCT. 1
OCT. 4 - OCT. 5
OCT. 6 - OCT. 7
OCT.13-OCT.14
Get your tickets NOW at SUA, CATS Mother Earth, and Budget Tapes and Records (Topeka)
J.R.P. HALL
TEMPLIN HALL
NAISMITH HALL
BATTENFELD HALL*
PEARSON HALL*
STEPHENSON HALL*
GRACE PEARSON*
DOUTHART HALL**
MILLER HALL**
SELLARDS HALL**
WATKINS HALL**
TIME: 4:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m.
*Location of photographer will be at Stephenson Hall.
*Location of photographer will be at Miller Hall.
For more information contact the Jayhawker at 864-3728 or University Photography at 843-5279.
Off campus undergrowers are to most convenient location
SUA SPECIAL EVENTS & KJHK Present
Hoodoo guru
This Sunday, October 4,8 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom $9 with KUID, $10 Public
CONGRATULATIONS to the winners of "JUST FOR KICKS"
Women's Bracket 1st Wild Watkins Women 2nd Kappa Alpha Theta
Men's Bracket 1st Tau Kappa Epsilon 2nd Phi Kappa Psi
And A Special Thanks To The Following Sponsors:
DOMINO'S PIZZA
KLZR
ARISTOCRAT FAVORS
FIRST DATA RESOURCES
MAIL SORT INC.
VAN DE BERGHE BROS., INC.
GRANDY'S RESTAURANT WICHITA
SCOTT SIMPSON &
BOBBY WILLARD
LAIRD NOLLER
TAYLOR & BASSFORD CPA'S HOWARD EDDE INC.
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ROBERT E. MARTIN CPA
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Thanks to all the teams that participated!
love,
The Alpha Gamms
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, September 30, 1987
7
WE'RE CONVENIENT AND WE HAVE IT ALL!
Food Barn
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PRICES
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REGISTER NOW TO WIN!
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RULES
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1. Must be 18 years of age to enter.
2. Only one entry per visit.
3. Need not be present to win.
4. No purchase required.
5. Photo copies or otherwise duplicated tickets are invalid.
6. Safeway Employees and their families & Safeway's Ad Agency are not eligible.
TELEPHONE
7. Licensing & registration fees not included.
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8
Wednesday, September 30, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
N.E.R.O.
Fred Sadowski/KANSAN
Beverly Finger, Rozel senior, and Joe Babka, St. Louis senior, write letters to Governor Mike Hayden requesting that he support the Margin of Excellence proposal. The Higher Education Rescue Operation is organizing the letter-writing campaign.
An organizational meeting for the Higher Education Rescue Operation will be at 7 tonight at the Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
H.E.R.O. meeting set for tonight
By a Kansan reporter
Martie Aaron, KU campus director of the Associated Students of Kansas, said she would discuss different ways in which people can get involved with H.E.R.O. a grassroots student lobbying campaign to build support for the Board of Regents Margin of
Margin of Excellence is a proposal by the Regents to raise state financing of Regents institutions to about the level of KU's five peer universities, which are universities similar to KU in size and mission.
Excellence program.
cy, student body vice president. They will discuss such issues as faculty salaries, overcrowded classes, dwi-
nings, and acquisition s急sances and cancelled courses.
Also speaking at the meeting will be Mark Tallman, ASK legislative director; Jason Krakow, student body president and Stephanie Quin-
Students involved with H.E.R.O. will be on Wescoe Beach today from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. to encourage students to participate in the campaign. Baby must be present as the recruiters distribute pamphlets, buttons and balloons.
Film shows women are idealized in ads
By a Kansan reporter
Women are idealized in advertisements and portrayed as sexual objects to attract attention to products, Barbara Ballard, director of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, said yesterday at a workshop in the Kansas Union.
About 45 people attended the workshop, "Portrayal of Women in the Media," which was sponsored by the Taylor Women's Resource Center.
The workshop featured a film called "Still Killing Her Softly" followed by a discussion session.
The film, narrated by Jean Kilbourne, a media analyst, lecturer and writer, addressed the exposure and idealization of women in ads. Women are portrayed with regard to looks and image only, thus creating an alternative to a de-humanized ideal that no women can relate to, she said in the film.
of journalism, talked about the coverage of women in the print media. Patricia Schroeder, the Democrat who recently backed off as candidate for president, was portrayed recently as emotional, she said.
Susanne Shaw, associate professor
Although women in politics have received greater news coverage, it still focuses on their families and still doesn't take into account the case of Schroeder, Shaw said.
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The Higher Education Rescue Operation
MEETING TONIGHT
7 p.m.
Alderson Auditorium
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, September 30, 1987
Campus/Area
9
Insurance experts debate law
Experts disagree on changes in malpractice insurance law
By MICHAEL MERSCHEL Staff writer
The calm manner of discussion hid some sharp differences between three malpractice insurance experts who discussed tort reform yesterday afternoon in Green Hall.
Representatives of doctors and state insurance officials said the state needed to curtail rising insurer duties and increasing malpractice law restrictions that malpractice lawsuit restrictions wouldn't be fair to patients.
Jerry Slaughter, executive director of the Kansas Medical Society, said, "If you're a family practice doctor and your insurance payment is $25,000 to deliver 15 babies in rural Kansas, you're going to say, 'I just income' You can't generate that much income to pay that insurance policy."
But lawyer Richard Mason said it wasn't an explosion of lawsuits that caused the high rates. He cited statistics that showed the number of lawsuits being brought to trial had only grown at the same rate as the population.
Ted Fay of the Kansas Insurance Commissioner's office; Mason, executive director of the Kansas
Trial Lawyers Association; and Slaughter took part in a 50-minute panel discussion, moderated by Robert Jerry, professor of law.
About 50 people attended the discussion.
At issue was whether new laws should make it harder for malpractice suits to be brought against doctors, either by limiting damages against doctors, changing the way attorneys collect fees on malpractice cases or eliminating or changing jury trials for malpractice cases.
'v
You can't expect perfection out of physicians. They're only human, and they make mistakes.'
Jerry Slaughter Executive director Kansas Medical Society
Fay and Slaughter both said the need for changes in how malpractice suits were decided was critical.
ance industry wasn't being as hurt by high awards as it indicated because insurance companies made billions of dollars in profits each year.
Fay said that only two companies still offered malpractice insurance in Kansas and that they would quit offering it if they could.
Fay said that wasn't always true, and that juries didn't always realize the effect of their decisions.
Mason said that regardless of the money issues involved, unlimited trials were the only fair way to guarantee that injured parties were fairly compensated. Jurries now best what is fair and what isn't, he said.
Mason said if there were rising claims, it might be because there was more malpractice going on. But Slaughter said there was no link between a doctor's quality and his likelihood of being sued.
Slaughter said that the system was in error in demanding perfection from doctors, and that just because a doctor made the error in judgement, it didn't mean he was right.
But Mason claimed that the insur-
"You can't expect perfection out of physicians," he said. "They're only human, and they make mistakes."
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The Lawrence Bicycle Club Invites You To
OCTOGINTA '87
Sun, Oct. 11, 8 a.m. Haskell Indian Junior College.
Last year we hosted this challenge in 80' mile tour
it's the wind up event.
- Join us for a
weekend of cycling events:
* Moonlight Ride
GEOGRAPHY
- USCF sanctioned 10k Time Trial
- Le Tour de Paradise Brunch Ride
- Tonganoxie Tango
* Biking Across Kansas
Slide Show
Entry forms and T-shirts
Unplanned pregnancy? Decisions to make?
Understanding all your alternatives makes you really free to choose. Replace pressure and panic with thoughtful, rational reflection.
For more information contact:
Charles Gebo, Coordinator, at 749-8458 or 842-0307.
For a confidential, caring friend, call us. We're here to listen and to talk with you. FREE PREGNANCY TESTING.
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STUDENT SAVE 28% WHEN YOU ADVERTISE IN THE KANSAN GROUPS:
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Nibbles...
for GREAT FOOD
DELIVERED
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5 Sources To Choose From
• Bucky *J* Bakey
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HELP!
When you need it, we can help.
We can put you in contact with:
Rape Victim Support Services Human Sexuality Counselors
Gay and Lesbian Peer Counselors
Counseling Center Crisis Intervention
University Information Center
864-3506 Open 24 Hrs.
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Kol Nidrei - Friday, Oct. 2, Services at 7:30 p.m.
Hillel House Shabbat Dinner, 5:30 p.m.
RSVP required (small charge)
RSVP required. (small charge)
Morning · Sat., Oct. 3 · 9:30 a.m.
(Violation) · 11:30 a.m.
(Yizkor · 11:30 a.m.)
Evening - Sat., Oct. 3 - 4:30 p.m.
No RSVP required. (small charge)
Break-the-Fast, Sat., Oct. 3, 7:00 p.m.
No RSVP required, (small charge)
All services to be held at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center,
917 Highland Dr. For rides, RSVPs and more info., call Hillier, 749-4242.
3. 99
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2210 Iowa (23rd & Iowa)
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10
Wednesday, September 30, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Campus/Area
Business admissions tougher
By MARK TILFORD
Staff writer
Beating tomorrow's application deadline isn't the only requirement prospective School of Business students will have to meet.
Last spring, the school started a competitive admissions policy. A lack of teaching resources caused by an exodus of business school faculty was the main reason for the beginning of the policy, Dave Shulenburger associate dean for academic burgess, the business school, said yesterday.
"That's the main thing that's driving this, just a lack of resources," Shulenbauer said.
The base requirements for admission have not changed, but the competitive policy will take into consideration a student's grade point average, ACT scores and, if necessary, the difficulty level of a student's elective courses, Shulenburger said.
Students may enter the business school as juniors.
In 1882, the school had 64 faculty. Now it has 49. Shulenberger said.
At the same time, business student enrollment increased from 807 in 1983 to 1,150 in 1985, but then decreased to 624 in 1990. This was because of competitive admissions.
Shulenburger said an increasing number of graduate teaching assistants and lecturers were being used instead of tenured faculty.
"I'm very pleased with the performance of our lecturers and TA's, but it's just not the same." Shulenburger said. "I think ultimately what happens is that commitment increases when you have a faculty member who knows he will be here 10 years instead of just a semester."
Shulenburger said salaries for business professors at KU were significantly below those at KU's peer schools. Peer schools are schools similar to KU in their size and mission.
"Many of the people we lost last year went to universities were they could make over $10,000 more," Sulenburger said.
Kent Smith, a junior and president of Delta Sigma Pi, the professional business fraternity, said that he supported the competitive policy, but that he also supported higher tuition for KU.
"I think competitive admissions is a good policy because the school is beginning to get flooded with people trying to get in," Smith said. "Personally I would rather pay more tuition and get more professors."
Smith said teaching assistants were probably being asked to do too much by pursuing graduate degrees in engineering or hundreds of undergraduate students.
Don't do without the things you really want. Simply because of today's high prices, we can't afford all of them. Your items available in stores are listed at lower prices than those on sale or bargain down an already low price, since many items in classified are sold by private parties. Don't do without - it with children.
If you can't buy it . . . bargain.
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University Counseling Center, 116 Baily Hall (864-3931)
809 Vermont
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
1120 E. 23rd
749-2360
Headmasters.
WARNING
Need help finding the best career for you?
We're here to help.
Call or stop by:
University Counseling Center, 116 Baily Hall (864-393
MasterCard
NEW PHONE NUMBERS
Emergency 911
Information 864-9500
Appointments 864-9507
Health Education
Learn all about your choices in an open and relaxed atmosphere.
864:9570
Mental Health 864:9580
Deciding about sex is an individual choice, but the prevention of pregnancy should be a shared responsibility.
or 864-9500 Nutritional Counseling
Wart Removal
Wed.-Thurs. 9:00-3:00
Walk-in
Pharmacy
INH (Tuberculosis)
Tues. 1:00-2:00 p.m.
Walk in
SHARED RESPONSIBILITY
Nutritional Counseling 864.957
864-9512
Blood Pressure Screening
Mon.-Fri. 8:00-5:00
Walk-in
EMERGENCY PROCEDURES CLASS
EAGLE
Learn how to intervene quickly and effectively when an emergency strikes! An emergency procedure class is being offered on October 1.2, from 6:30-8:30 p.m.
Call to register
The Department of Health Education at Watkins Memorial Hospital is ready to present a variety of health-related topics to you, organized living groups and student organizations. For more information, call 864-9570.
Call for more information or to register!
WATKINS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
864-9500 864-9570
WE ARE RESOURCEFUL
Hours
Attempts to lose significant amounts of weight through severe food restriction and/or fluid deprivation are dangerous to your health. Avoid excessive induced starvation) and Bulimia (binge-purge syndrome) have increased dramatically in recent years. Eating problems are serious, damaging, dangerous off-life-threatening and psychologically addictive. However, they are not hopeless and can be treated. You should work with individuals or speak to your particular group about this concern.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, September 30, 1987
11
Campus/Area
Reunion rich in art but not financial return
By JULIE McMAHON
staff writer
River City Productions didn't expect to make money from the River City Reunion and it didn't.
But organizers predict River City reductions will at least meet its goals.
"We didn't quite break even yet," said Bill Rich of River City Productions. "It depends on merchandise sales. It might take awhile."
Rich said River City Productions, which financed the off-campus stores for the remaining City Reunion Trirhits and other mechandise are sold.
Rich said, River City Productions could break even or make a profit.
River City Productions was financed by loans, credit and donations. Rich said he and James Grauerholz, also of River City Productions, were responsible for the loans.
"Our names are the ones on the loans." Rich said.
But even if the Reunion doesn't make money, it was a success in the eyes of many.
"SUA felt it was a very big success," said Katherine Giele of Student Union Activities.
The free readings at the Kansas
We didn't quite break
e didn't quite break even yet. It depends on merchandise sales. It might take awhile.'
River City Productions
Union Ballroom were well attended. About 750 people heard Anne Waldman and Andrei Cordescu on Sept. 16. People heard Allen Ginsberg on Sept. 9.
Liberty Hall, said, "Artistically it was great, and we made our hall rental fees. We made our normal amount of money."
Rob Fitzgerald, an employee at
George Wedge, associate professor of English and organizer of the on-campus events, said he also was happy with the Reunion.
Wedge said the on-campus events did well with its budget. The on-campus and off-campus events were financed separately. On-campus events received money from SUA, the college lecture fund, academic affairs and the department of English.
Team of 3 from Japan to speak about economics
U. S. business and political leaders
Three Japanese representatives will be in Lawrence tomorrow and friday as part of the Japan Caravan, a private, non-governmental exchange between the United States and Japan.
The team is composed of Hideo Sato, a political scientist from Tsukuba University; Akira Kojima, senior economic writer for "Nihiko shimubu," a publication similar to the Wall Street Journal; and Hideki
U.S. business and political leaders.
The team will speak at a public forum at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union.
Harland Pridle, Kansas Secretary of Commerce, also will speak.
Kaihatsu, director of international relations for Fuji Xerox Co. Ltd.
Sato will speak on "The Politics of U.S.-Japan Economic Relations," Kojima will speak on "Structural Adjustment of the Japanese Economy and Industry" and Kaihatsu will speak on "Successful Joint Ventures in Japan and the Reasons Why."
a Kansan reporter
Center for East Asian Studies and the Japan Society, as well as the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, the Kansas Department of Commerce and several local businesses.
High school student to be suspended
The Caravan will be sponsored at the University of Kansas by the
By a Kansan reporter
The Japanese delegates will speak in Kansas City, Mgo., on Friday.
Proceedings are underway to suspend indefinitely one of the Lawrence High School students involved in a fight last week, Lawrence High School Principal Brad Tate said yesterday.
The fight left the other student, Yuk "Kenny" Cheung in critical condition last week. Cheung was transported to the University of Kansas Medical Center on Thursday afternoon for a closed head injury he received. Cheung has been released since the incident.
According to police reports, the fight between the two students began in gym class, but a teacher broke it up. After school, the students began to fight again. Cheung was thrown against the school building and on the ground before a teacher broke up the second fight.
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Tate would not comment on what the suspension proceedings entailed or whether the youth had a history of disciplinary problems.
The district attorney's office is still examining whether criminal charges could be filed against the juvenile.
Best Choices,
The Caravan, in its eighth year, is three person team from Japan: one business executive, one academic and one media representative. The team will visit different cities to meet
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The entire University of Kansas Campus is invited and encouraged to attend Renewal Week classes Sept. 27 - Oct.1. Fr. Luke Byrne from Rockhurst College in Kansas City, Mo., will lead the sessions. We hope that everyone will have the opportunity to attend all or any of the sessions. The schedule is as follows:
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12
Wednesday, September 30, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
State/Local
Campaign confuses lottery officials
The Associated Press
TOPEKA—A Maryland man hired to an executive position with the Kansas Lottery told Baltimore reporters yesterday he was still a candidate for public office in Baltimore. But Larry Montgomery, director of the Kansas Lottery, said the man had said he had pulled out of the race.
The confusion was created by the public statements of the new Kansas Lottery employee, Larry Gray.
After talking to Gray by telephone after Gray's news conference, Montgomery said he was convinced that Gray had abandoned his bid for the office of city comproller in Baltimore and was now the full-fledged director of administration for the Kansas Lottery.
"He's not a candidate any more as far as we're concerned," Montgomery said. "That's what he's told me, and I've got to believe him."
Montgomery said he hired Gray on
week and planned to announce it
next week.
Gray has been investments analyst for the Maryland state lottery.
He also is the Republican candidate for city comproller in Baltimore's municipal elections this fall, challenging a Democrat who has held the job for about 25 years. With Democrats holding a 4-1 advantage in registrations in Baltimore, Gray is not favored to win.
But Gray told reporters at the Baltimore news conference that his family and campaign aides would
continue to campaign in Baltimore and that if he won, he would resign his new Kansas job and take the city position.
When asked if he had told that to Kansas Lottery officials, he said the matter hadn't been brought up.
Montgomery said Gray's statements were a surprise.
"We knew he was running for office," Montgomery said after being informed of Gray's news conference. "But he said he would step out of the race to accept the job here. That's exactly what he told us."
Montgomery called Gray in Baltimore after the news conference. Based on that conversation, Montgomery said, he was convinced Gray had given up his Baltimore campaign
and was permanently with the Kansas Lottery.
Montgomery said it was too late for Gray to withdraw as a candidate so his name would be on the Baltimore ballot.
Nancy Zogelman, information officer for the Kansas Lottery, said a news release announcing Gray's employment would be prepared and probably distributed to the media, probably next week.
As director of administration, Gray will have charge of purchasing, personnel, computers, budgeting and forecasting, formal auditing (or the Kansas Lottery).
Gray was expected to return last night from Baltimore, Montgomery
Court honored for reducing case delays
The award, which will be accepted by Chief Justice David Prager at a ceremony Oct. 24 in Atlanta, comes under the foundation for Improvement of Justice.
TOPEKA - The Kansas Supreme Court has been awarded $10,000 by a national foundation for the court's ability to dramatically reduce the case backlog in the state's judicial system within the past six years.
The Associated Press
The foundation is privately endowed for $1 million, and its awards are designed to recognize
and reward those who make improvements in the judicial system.
behalf of the court.
It was founded by Judson W. Chapman, a newspaper editor who died in 1952, and his wife, Zena, who is continuing his work.
The Kansas Bar Association nominated the Kansas Supreme Court for the award "in recognition of the court's significant progress in reducing delays in the state's trial courts," said a statement from the state Office of Judicial Administration.
nate cases within certain median time periods.
Under former Chief Justice Alfred G. Schroeder, the court began a program in December of 1980 to speed up the handling of cases in the state judicial system. It implemented time standards which required judges to strive to termi-
Since the standards were adopted, the number of civil cases pending for two years or more has been reduced from 2,218 to 404, and the number of cancer cases pending 12 months or longer has decreased from 625 in 1980 to 82 at present.
Ron Keefoever, the court's information officer, said that no decision had been made on what the money will be used for, but that discussions are under way to apply it toward some statewide purpose to benefit the public.
The Kansas program has been cited at numerous national seminars as a model for reducing litigation delays, including the Conference of Chief Justices.
Prager will go to Atlanta to accept the cash award and a gold medal on
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, September 30, 1987
13
Sports
Volleyball team will meet 'Cats
By ROBERT WHITMAN Staff writer
If Kansas State had been the only team the KU volleyball team played last year, the Jayhawks' winning percentage would have been even better than the .742 percentage they ended the season with.
The Jayhawks defeated the Wildcats in four out of five matches last year. Kansas, 4-9 overall and 0-2 in Big Eight Conference matches, has a chance to continue that success tonight when it travels to Manhattan for a 7:30 match against Kansas State.
"We did get kind of tired of playing them last year," said senior setter Monica Spencer.
But a victory, which would break the Jayhawk's seven-game losing streak, probably wouldn't be boring. Of the five times KU and Kansas State met last season, three were in tournaments. The other two were Big Eight Conference matches.
The one match the Wildcats won was a five-game, conference match in Manhattan, the same of type match KU will play tonight.
"We beat them in all the matches except one that counted," KU coach Frankie Albitz said. "I'd like to get the finals of the Big Eight tournament and in order to do that, you have to do well in conference match-
But so far this year, the Jayhawks have lost both conference matches
"We lost to Nebraska at home and we lost to Iowa State on the road, so we're about where we were last year." Albizt said.
spencer said, "You want to win all your home matches because that's where you have the advantage. The other team wins home the crowds at away matches."
But this year's schedule is tougher, Spencer said.
"I would rather play these harder teams," she said. "We are improving each match, we're just not consistent. The mental aspect of the game is inconsistent right now."
The Jayhawks never lost more than two straight matches last season. Their next loss will give them more losses than all of last year.
Albitz said the Wildcats defeated Michigan State and lost in three games to Iowa State. KU lost to Michigan State on Sept. 18, the see-catcher of their losing game and lost to Iowa State in five games Saturday.
"Sounds like at this point if logic prevails, we have an edge." Albizt said. "But you never know. These Big Eight teams are tough at home."
ASCIA HALL
TENNIS
THE CHAMPIONS
Junior college transfers Otis Livingston, left, and Lincoln Minor, right, will compete for starting point guard on the KU basketball team.
Transfers to try for point guard spot
Rv DARRIN STINEMAN
Staff writer
With Cedric Hunter, the all-time Kansas assist leader, gone from the men's basketball lineup, there are some large high-top shoes to be filled.
The Jahayk coaching staff has turned to two junior college transfers, Lincoln Minor and Ols Livingston Minor, a junior transfer from the University of Texas, and Livingston, a junior transfer from El Camino Junior
"There could be a lot of competition in practice," Livingston said. "He can play. He can shoot and run the floor well."
Minor echoed Livingston's tones. "He's tough," Minor said. "The guard position is going to be a tough position. There's no give-me positions except for Danny's, I guess. It's not going to be a cakewalk. Practice
is going to be real intense every practice."
Neither Minor nor Livingston was highly recruited out of high school, and both turned to junior colleges to secure themselves academically.
"The juco route was the best route for me," Minor said. "My grade point average was kind of low. I thought I could get more offers and get a decent two-year degree from there."
similar reasons. He said he hoped going to a junior college close to his home would help him improve his study habits.
Minor and Livingston's value increased drastically by the time they graduated from junior college. Minor was recruited by national powers such as Nevada-Las Vegas, Oklahoma, Auburn and Ohio State, and Livingston was recruited by
Livingston chose junior college for
See TRANSFERS, p. 14, col. 1
Tennis team to face tougher tournament field
By DARRIN STINEMAN Staff writer
After dominating its first tournament of the year, the Kansas women's tennis team will step up to a higher level of competition at the Midwest Intercollegiate Invitational, which begins tomorrow in Evanston, Ill.
The Jayhawks swept through the Kansas State Invitational tournament, placing four singles players in the semifinals and two doubles teams in the finals. Because the remaining matches involved KU players, Kansas coach Scott Perelman opted to bring the team home on the last day of the tournament to decide the winners here.
The doubles champions have been decided. Senior Tracy Treps and junior Jeanette Jonson defeated the freshman and freshman Mindy Lepk last week.
The singles champion will be decided this week. Treps will play Hibbard, and Jonsson will play Husband (last). The winners will meet for the finals.
Kansas will send Treps, Jonsson.
Hibbard, Berglund, along with freshmen Stacy Stotts, Kathy Bird and Michele Balsom to Evanton for the singles competition. Kansas 'doubles teams will include the Treps-Jonson and Hibbard-Pelz teams and the漭man duo of Stotts and Balsom and the team of Bird and Berglund.
Northwestern, the host team of the tournament, has been ranked in the top 10 nationally the last few years and be the team to beat, Perel-Valle salix.
would be a good test for Kansas, which was obviously not challenged at Manhattan last week.
"At K-State we did what we were supposed to do, and now the competition will be better," he said. "It's just a matter of time before we present. We'll see where everybody is."
man said. Perelman said the tournament
Besides Kansas and Northwestern, the double elimination tournament will include teams from Michigan State, Minnesota, Tennessee, Iowa, and Notre Dame. The tournament finals are scheduled for Sunday afternoon.
Four battle for starting quarterback
By CRAIG ANDERSON Staff writer
Kansas went through a three-hour practice yesterday in preparation for its game Saturday against Southern Illinois, which has a 2-2 record but has won its last two games.
The battle for the starting quarterback position has become a fourplayer race, Coach Bob Valesente said. Senior Mike Orth, sophomore Kelly Donhoe, freshman Kevin Verdugo and freshman Lance Flachsbart all are competing for playing time.
During the Jayhawks first three games, Donohoe started the game at quarterback and was relieved each time by Orth. The top two Kansas quarterbacks have completed only 35 precent of their passes and have thrown one touchdown and seven interceptions. Valesente said he seriously thought about using Verduro on Saturday but stuck with Orth.
In an Athletic Department release this week, Orth was listed as the starting quarterback. In the previous three weeks' releases, Donohoe had been named as the first-team quarterback. But Valesente said the press release had nothing to do with who would start the game Saturday.
The quarterback spot is still up for grabs." Valesente said. "We want to keep the competition open, so hopefully when Saturday comes around we can find someone who can put some numbers on the board."
several players spent yesterday's practice on the sidelines throwing medicine balls and doing sit-ups because of injuries: senior defensive tackle Von Lacey has hitches above his eye from a cut in the Louisiana Tech game, junior cornerback Johnny Grandson tore knee ligaments in the Kent State game, freshman tight end Wolf Blairster strained a knee during a tackle. guard Steve Isham has sore knees, freshman safety John Autenreth has a sprained ankle, freshman running back Tim Jenkins is redshifting because of a shoulder injury, and redshift freshman offensive lineman Bryan Cohane is rehabilitating from an injury he suffered last year.
Senior tight end Brad Wedel missed practice yesterday because of a recurring back injury, and senior napper Rob Foster is questionable for because of a concussion.
However, freshman tailback Frank Hatchett practiced yesterday at full speed. Hatchett missed the Louisiana Tech game because of a lower back bruise. And sophomore wide receiver Quintin Smith, who sprained an ankle last week during practice, participated in all drills.
MISCO CLEAL
Mitro
Marc Boussaguet, right, and teammate Mark Makore battle for possession of the ball during practice. Boussaguet has scored two of the soccer team's four goals in their first three games.
Defender changes stopper to scorer for KU soccer club
By ROBERT WHITMAN
Staff writer
When Marc Bousquet scores a goal from his defensive position for the KU men's soccer club, it says more about his ability and experience than any inability on the part of the forwards.
From his stopper position, Boussa-guet has given the four of the four goals KU has scored in its first three games. The team has won all-to-last defender in front of the goaltender.
"His ability to read the game and understand the game is a level above most players," Shirtlife said. "You can draw a similarity with chess. He's reading three or four moves ahead play while most of the Americans read only the one move ahead."
But KU coach Glenn Shirtlife said he had given Boussaguet the freedom to roam on the field.
Boussaguet is one of seven graduates of the School of Business of Clermont-Ferrand currently attending the University of Kansas. He is doing graduate work in the School of Business toward an MBA degree. Boussaguet he and five others received scholarships from their regional government, the rough equivalent of state governments in the United States. The other Clermont-Ferrand graduate was invited to the University as an exchange student, he said.
Boussaint learned to play soccer in his native France, where he played for the French national team.
The last two years, Boussaguet, played with his club, Stade Ruthenrois, the team played in French fourth division. In France, the best professional soccer players compete in the first division, other professionals play in the second and third divisions.
As soon as he arrived, Boussaguet said, he inquired about whether there was a man in the room.
He found a soccer team, and one he said he liked playing for, but he also
found a different style of play.
"What is a bit surprising is they play a little differently. I think it's a question of culture," Boussagut said. "In Europe, we play collectively. Most of the players here play as individuals."
"We never pass the ball back to the defender when we're in the midfield. When I played in France, if we couldn't go further with the ball, we'd pass it back to the defense and they would look again to the wing to see if they could pass it there.
"When I started playing, I was taught this way. When they started playing, they were taught another way."
Boussaguet said he didn't get as tired during games for the club as he did when he played in France.
"What is easier for me is the pace is much slower," Boussaguet said. "I can play forward in the last 15 minutes of the game and not be more tired at the end of the game. In France, I could not do that. It's not that I was not allowed to, but it was so hard to do that."
Both of the goals Boussaguet has scored have come in the second half of games, one each against Nebraska-Omaha and Kansas State.
"He's definitely a threat to score anytime," Shirtlife said. "First and foremost, he's a defender, but when he's in charge he's very much a part of the attack."
But Boussaguet is a threat only as long as opposing teams don't know much about him. That's why Shirtliffe said he hoped Boussaguet's style of play rubbed off on fellow defender Alan Klenke, the team's sweeper.
"I hope Allan Klenke learns a lot of these aspects of the game. It would be very easy to shut Marce down if you put one or two guys on him," Shirliffe said. "But if we have another defender who is good on attack, there's no way they can shut us down."
Bo hits two-run homer as KC defeats Mariners
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Bo Jackson hit a two-run homer, and the Kansas City Royals took advantage of three Seattle errors, scored six unearned runs off Mark Langston last night and beat the Mariners 6-3.
Jackson hit his 22nd home run in
Jackson hit his 22nd inning as Bud Black
raised his record to 8-6. Langston,
18-13, had two of the errors but had
nothing else go on. He can
League-leading total to 252 and
erase his own club record of 245.
The Mariners took a 1-0 lead in the first inning when Donell Nixon was hit by a pitch and eventually scored on Mickey Brantley's infield out. With two out in the Kansai city outfield, the Rangers scored an error by third baseman Jim Presley, and Jackson followed with a towering home run into the left field bleachers.
Rey Quinions doubled in the Seattle fifth and gave the Mariners a 2-tie on an RBI single by Harold Reynolds. On Thursday, he visited to the Kraa.
Gary Thurman singled in the Kansas City fifth, took second when Langston threw wildly to first on a pickoff attempt, took over on an anfleth score and the score on an infield single by Bili Pecota.
Danny Tartabul singled to begin the Royals three-run sixth. After Steve Balboni walked, Madison tried a sacrifice bunt, which Langston fielded. The American League's strikeout leader threw to third to force Tartabul, but the ball sailed into foul territory for an error, and Tartabul scored. Balboni went to third, and Madison took second.
After Jackson and Thurman struck out, Ross Jones singled, and Balboni scored. The Mariners caught Jones in a run-down between first and second, but Madison sped home during the run-down, barely beating a throw home by first baseman Alvin Davis.
Davis began the Seattle ninth with a homer, his 28th, off reliever Gene Garber.
Cards sweep doubleheader to cut magic number to two
The Associated Press
ST. LOUIS — Tommy Herr and Willie McGee hit sacrifice flies to key a three-run sixth inning, giving St. Louis a 3-9 victory over the Montreal Expos last night and a doubleheader sweep that moved the Cardinals close to a National League East title.
The Cardinals, held hitts through five innings of the second game, erupted in the sixth against Bryn Smith, 10-9. They won the opponent 1-0 on Joe Magrane's three-hitter and Herr's sacrifice fly. The Cardinals had three hits in each game of the doubleheader.
With the two victories, combined with the Philadelphia Phillies' 1-0 victory over the New York Mets, St. Louis reduced its magic number to two for the divisional crown. Any
combination of two Cardinals victories or New York defeats will win for St. Louis.
Montreal, which had seven hits in the doubleheader, fell five games off the pace with the two defeats and can now hold the tie for the NL East championship.
The Expos' Tim Raines and Mitch Webster singled to start the seventh, but Todd Worrell relieved Mathews, 11-11, and extinguished the threat with two strikeouts and a pop foul.
Mathews gave up three hits in six innings and Worrell one the rest of the way as he picked up his 33rd save.
The first-game victory was the Cardinals' first over Montreal in the last six games between the teams and snapped a four-game winning streak by Martinez.
14
Wednesday, September 30, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
Transfers Continued from p.13
Clemson, Seton Hall and Fullerton State, among others.
The first contact Kansas coaches Larry Brown, Alvin Gentry and Ed Manning had with Minor was at the National Junior College Athletic Association championship tournament at Hutchinson last spring. They talked to him again at Midland before he signed a letter of intent.
Gentry called Livingston after the junior college season and invited him to come to KU. He accepted the offer, arrived a few days later, and signed.
Both players said a combination of factors swayed them to decide on Kansas.
"It was a good school and a chance to get a good education," Minor said.
"Also, I have some relatives in Wichita, so I have a little family nearby. Good school, good coach, good plavers."
Livingston said, "I always wanted to play in a good Division I school. And I felt Kansas was the best opportunity for me academically and athletically because KU had high standards in both."
Livingston is quick and passes well. In his two years at El Camino, he averaged 8.3 points and 12.5 assists a game.
Livingston said he was strictly a point guard, but Minor said he could play both point and off-guard positions. Minor led Midland in three-point field goals last year and averaged 9.6 points a game.
So even though Cedric Hunter left some large shoes to fill, Livingston and Minor are eager to try them on.
Sports Briefs
KU golf team places 7th in tourney
By a Kansan reporter
The Kansas men's golf team finished seventh in a field of 18 teams at the Butler National Invitational tournament at Lemont, 11
Kansas finished with a team score of 923 for the 54-hole tournament, 21 strokes behind the winning team, Illinois, which was the
Junior Jon Bruning led the Jayhawks with a 76-74-75 - 225, giving him a tie for seven place as an
individual. He was followed by junior Rudy Zupeitz, 76-75-78 — 229; senior Brian McGreewy, 78-77-77 — 235; sophomore Clay Deverys, 75-78-84 — 237; and junior John Erickson, 83-92-86 — 261.
Mike Small of Illinois was medalist of the tournament with a three-day score of 218, helping his team to a 902 total. Arkansas placed second with a 904, South Carolina placed third with a 910 and Oklahoma finished fourth with a 912.
Scoreboard
Baseball
American League
National League
New York 6, Boston 0
Detroit 10, Baltimore 1
Milwaukee 5, Toronto 3
Chicago 1, California 0
Kansas City 6, Seattle 3
Texas 7, Minnesota 5
Oakland 5, Cleveland 4
Cincinnati 5, Atlanta 4
St. Louis 1, Montreal 0, 1st game
St. Louis 3, Montreal 0, 2nd game
Philadelphia 3, New York 0
Los Angeles 6, Houston 1
San Francisco 5, San Diego 3
Chicago at Pittsburgh, ppd., rain
Weekly
Monday — 50¢ Draws
Tuesday — 75¢ Pitchers
Wednesday — $1.95 Super Schooners
Thursday — 75¢ Pitchers
Friday — $1.45 Corona
&
Coolers
The image contains a decorative design with a stylized tree and sun motif. The tree is depicted in a vertical orientation, featuring branches that extend upward towards the sun, which is represented as a round black disk centered within a larger circle. The background consists of two horizontal bands: one dark gray and another light gray, creating a contrasting effect. There are no visible texts or additional graphics in the image.
Saturday — $1.50 Well
&
$2.00 Call
the Sanctuary
a roadhouse
Sunday — $1.95 Super Schooners
the Sanctuary
7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 300 clubs 843-0540
FISH TIES
FISH AND GAME
SUNFLOWER
INTERNATIONAL
SUNFLOWER INTERNATIONAL
803 MASSACHUSETTS ST.
IN THE CASBAH
DUSTIN HOFFMAN GP
"LITTLE BIG MAN"
Technicolor
NV JOHN FORSYTHE
SHIRLEY MACLAINE
ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S
THE TROUBLE
WITH HARRY
MOVIE POSTER
- Lobby Cards
- Still Photos
- Rare Classics
- Contemporary Releases
Monday, Sept. 28-Friday, Oct.
9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Visa, Mastercard, Amerx accepted
Sponsored by Student Union Activities
ICONOGRAPHICS
ORIGINAL MOVIE POSTERS
BODITONICS A revelation in taking off inches!
STUDIO 1000
Side Side Table. Stretches the lower torse from side to side, toning the gluteus maximus and encing the lower back, all over muscle tightness, improved and walastatin is reduced.
SURFACE ANALYSIS
Circulation Table Massages the muscles in the chest and can be useful in releasing muscle tension and relieving stress. It improves blood circulation without increasing pressure.
The extraordinary exercise tables strengthen, tone, firm massage, and Slenderize your body. Come in for a
Come in for a
located in the Louisiana Purchase Shopping Center. 23 & Louisiana 841-7070
Free Demonstration.
Ask about our student rates!
BOTTLENECK presents the Legendary SON SEALS
THE
1982
SON SEALS
BOTTLENECK presents the Legendary
"The best Chicago Blues band in existence"
"Most exciting blues guitarist and singer in years" Village Voice
"An awesome display...ferocious attack, vicious, searing guitar"
Downbeat
RAW R&B
The best Chicago Blues band in existence Village Voice
with Special Guest RHYTHM KINGS
*A universum display, freecircuit attack, vicious*
- WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30 *
ADVANCE TICKETS $5.00 available at all CATS outlets and The Bottleneck
BOTTLENECK
737 New Hampshire Lawrence, KS (913) 843-9723
舞作
Rolf Günther rezitiert
SHAKESPEARE, SCHLAGEL, SCHILLER GOETHE, BUCHNER, AND HEINE
At 8:00 p.m., on Thursday, October 1, 1987
In Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall
Tickets at the Murphy Box Office
Students : $3.50
General Public : $5.00
Phone : 864-3982
Sponsored by IPAC, GL&L and ITSC
NEW
842-51
HURRY!
Don't miss a chance living with all your friends this year!
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
1301 W 24th
(one block East of Gammons)
842-5111
The apartment complex built
The apartment complex built with the STUDENT in mind!
SUNDAY 2ND OCTOBER 1980
Featuring:
LEASING NOW!
Amenities
- one bedroom apt. ($345)
- on bus route
- 3 outside hot tubs
with two full bathrooms
10 Month Leases Available!
- two bedroom apt. ($395)
- drapes are furnished
- large indoor/outdoor pool
- fully equipped kitchen with
- weight room
- laundry facilities
- satellite extra
- ample parking
MICROWAVE. DISHWASHER and ICEMAKER
842-5111
Classified Ads
ANNOUNCEMENTS
ask For Nibbles. Great food Delivered (to any dormitory) 842-109-60 m. to midnight
FILM INTERESTS? Call Greel, at 749-0217
Heading home for the weekend, Reading Workshop, Valley, 843-5608
Reading for Comprehension and Speed Workbook,
Tuesday, October 6, 13, and 20; 7:30-9:30 p.m.
Materials fee: $15. Register, pay by 5:00 on
Monday; $6. Student Assistance Center;
121 Strong
MUSEUM GIFT SHOP
Museum of Anthropology Univ. of Kansas
Mon.- Sat.
10-3
Sun.
1-4
AFRICAN Baskets and Jewelry
PRE-BUSINESS SOPHOMORES
Applications for School of Business for Spring, 1988 Due Oct. 1
for more information call 864-3844
Apply Window 3 Strong Hall
MASSAGE VS. BEER-A massage from Lawrence Massage Therapy - a professional nurse, nerves can 'break' you hungover, and costs less than an evening at Gammon's! Still not convinced? Call Bruce Mason or his team of members of Members of Della Sigma Team to KU camps, please contact Dave Browles, 843-3895.
Moving Sale-8 a.m. to 5 p.m., October 2nd, 2145
Rhode Island. Antique living room set, washer & driver, microwave & much more.
Organizing campus war games club. Tournaments, players index games, exchange interest? Call Rob at 841-147 anytime.
Be A H.E.R.O.
HIGHER EDUCATION RESCUE OPERATION
Meeting -
Wednesday,
Sept. 30
Alderson
Auditorium
Kansas Union
7 p.m.
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, September 30, 1987
15
Boys go skiing over Christmas Break! Sunchake Gorsh Sixth Annual Collegiate Winter Skis. Freaks Fourth Annual College Winter Skis. Winter Park for five or seven nights including holidays/piences, races and more from boots to skis. Transportation available. Call toll free for your complete ski break brochure 1-800-321-9111
Looking for RIVER CITY REUNION shirts and skirts? See Exile Records, 13 E. 8th.
ASSERTIVENESS TRAINING
Tuesday,
October 6, 1987
7:00-9:00 p.m.
Pine Room,
Kansas Union
This workshop will provide information about and practice with expressing thoughts and feelings clearly and directly. Situations addressed will include academic, work settings.
Barbara W. Ballard Ann Ewensloe
Associate Dean of
Student Life Organizations
and Activities
This workshop is sponsored by members of the Assertiveness Training Task Force who are in the offices of "The Dean of Student Center, The Organizations and Activities Center, The Office of Residential Programs, and the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center.
For more
Pam Lathrop 864-3552
KEYSTONE for Thanksgiving, November
25-29. Low package费, includes air/hoist/
rental transfers/fift tickets. Call 843-5608
Package available without air.
ENTERTAINMENT
AM Your Request is Lawrence's Best and Most Afordable B41. Sound and Lighting for Any Occasion 841-1465
If you missed it last Friday, don't miss it this Friday! Avarkvard Cake-great dancing, g大d J.D. in the Kansas Boom (thirth floor) of the Union. It m.d.m. d.i.a.n. October 2, Be there!
**MUSIC*** **MUSIC*** **MUSIC**
*Red House Audio-Mobile Party Music, 8-track studio, P.A. and Lights, Maximum Audio Wizard-*
*Brad Cafr 749-1275.*
Rent a hot tub for your next party. Call Tub-to-go,
841-3091.
metropolis
metropolis
mobile sound
1 DJ Service in Lawrence
Experienced Club & Radio DJ's
Music for all Occasions
Superior Lighting 7083
is happening for live music this week;
Tonight, Sept. 29th
ALEX CHILTON
(Cult Idol from Memphis)
Wed., Sept. 30th
SON SEALS
(Legendary Chicago bluesman)
Fri., Oct. 2nd
COMMON GROUND
(Hometown World Beat)
Sat., Oct. 3rd
TRIP SHAKESPEARE
FORRENT
ULTIMATE ENTERTAINMENT
Eliminate Mobile DJ System For All Occasions.
Ball: 842.739.2904
Why spend $5 on Bowen when you can catch the
WiFi speed here right on campus for only $9
?? Don't miss them - Sunday, October 4, 8 p.m.
tickets at SUA and GATS.
For rent: 2 bk apartment with off street parking.
new paint: $260/month. 1-881-6789.
Little room lit in cozy little house. Prefer
orient student Japanese-speaking female or
orman-speaking male. $150 Utilities paid Call 811-0714.
For rent: nice furnished 1 bedroom apartment.
835/8月 plus utilities. Near campus. Callay.
864-0499 and night, 842-1325.
1 a classroom api, some utilities paid, off street parking, 1 block from University. No pets.
841-5500
Furnished 1 bedroom room. Quiet, comfortable, convenient. R720 plus utilities. Available October 15. Robs at h484-1429 or 842-5885.
Guaranteed space at Naisimith for spring semester. Female only. Call Sharon at 443-8588 JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE Apartment for apology. Great location 875/month plus lease
Burgess townhouse to share. All amenities iniding W.D.W. FP/DW, DEC/dore/gear/fullement. A special place in a quiet neighborhood. Please contact! 1-709-4760-968-5125 (days).
Great lease. Single room apartment $260 per month, low utilities, water paid. Bus route.
563-5634 anytime.
I sat satisfied with where you're living! Naimshim has one female space available for入住, a fully furnished residential lease liability, excellent "All-ICL-Marriott" amenities, weekly service desk and you'll see what luxury services like hotel housing at KU1R. For more info, call or come by Naimshih Hall, 18Naimshi Drive,
Start 1/3 of three bedroom townhouse. $150 plus utilities. No deposit. On bus route. Call Maria Lori at 841.9298.
一
SUNRISE PLACE 9th & Michigan
Sunrise Apartment
entering luxurious townhouses
and apartment living.
Stop by to see our
show unit at
9th and Michigan
or call . . .
841-1287
for an appointment.
Office 603, 1-5-F-M
Studio apartment for sublease. Full kitchen and
bath. 1423 Ohio-2 minutes from campus.
SUNFLOWER HONEY. Rooms available as members graduate in September. Low rates, great location. 749-0871, ask for Ann, Deb, or
FOR $ALF
1972 Honda Motorcycle CB350. Perfect condition.
Must sell!! 864-64148.
1979 400 Yamaha. Very good condition. Must sell.
8475 OBO. Call Luke at 864-4921/841-9689.
**Fiscal Year Ended:** Excellent condition.
dition. Call to see this camper. 842-8017.
3 foot ball python. Healthy and includes tank,
two backpacks, water bowl. Call 844-9561
saucer, and waffle bowl "Call for
sauce." KET for sale. Best offer. Call
841-327-9035
AMPLIFIER-Posey Detect 2-channel, 3-12" AMPS
Amplifier-Posey Detect 2-channel, 3-12"
Must sell. Must $29. 740 -1180.
Must sell. Must $29. 740 -1180.
Absolutely Awesome Array of Antiques, collectibles and neat stuff we have: hardback and 1/2 price paper backbook books, full line of new comic books, and all our fine antique jewelry, Indian, and contour jewelry (giltter and good stuff), the right vintage clothes for any occasion, the best quality furniture, miniatures, flesta, and the best selection of antique furniture in the area. Quintriles Fruit Market, 1 New Hampshire, Open Sat & Sun.
AQUARIUM. Too many fish tanks. Will sell 30 gel. hexagon tank and accessories. Will sell and set up for $175 OBO. Just add fish. 842-1192, Kelly.
BOSTON TICKETS Lower level, section 100A.
Row G. Can you afford to miss this one? If not,
call 729-0473.
Class Out-Satin Sets. From only $25.00 for a complete set. Waterjacket; 711 W, 32rd, JB-64.
Close out sale! We have several odds & ends that will be offered direct to public at wholesale prices. Bunk beds $49, barn beds $89, odd mats $49, waterbeds $18, sofa & chairs $38 & more. Hurry, supply is limited. Inspect at Mark & Quin Furniture house, 8th & New Hampshire,
FLIU MUNITAIN BIKE Perfect condition. The
MULTI mountain BIKE A match up with the
MATCH BIKE full after p. a.m. at 749-723
GOBERMENVER Surpliar! | Camelflage clothing, overcoats, raincoats, jungle boots, hoodies, and cargoes "A*H" S*H "A*H" Carhartt衣橱, much more! Open Mesh-9-4.7. Murray Surpliar Sales, St. Marys, KS 492-680-3111
GUTTAR-Gibson RD Custom. Humbuckers, active electronics, excellent action. Looks, feels areat. Must sell $200 obo. 749-1130.
great Hamilton 37" x 60" Dial-a-light VR-20 drafting table with parallel. Best offer 842-9724.
JVC Stero; stereo, turntable, cassette, 70-watt
gap, cabinet, 2-foot speakers. 843-5330
VJ. Stetler, oiler, danktanker,
amp, cabinet, two floor speakers. 843-5330
**** MOTHBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE
**** MOTHBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE
Monday-Friday 10:50 p.m. - Saturday 10:2 p.m.
539 F. 789-496-696
Mountain bike. Specialized Hard Rock. Extra equipment. Two months old. Must sell. $50.
441-727-957 Ask for Chris.
MUST SELL, '81 Honda Passport 1,600 or
1,450 mile. Good condition. free helmet & lock
1499
100,000
100,000
BOOK SALE
Friends of the Lawrence Public Library
Fr., Oct. 3
10 to 8
Sat., Oct. 3
10 to 5
Sun, Oct. 4
*Night to 5*
Everything
HALF PRICE
Mon, Oct. 5
*5 to 8 p.m.*
$3 per
Sack Full
Library Garage
7th & Kentucky
Very Low Prices
Naisimm contracts for sale. Will pay $160 security deposit. Contact Frank at 749-2338.
***** New Cordless Bell Phone*****
Overstocked and must be sold by EOM!! Only
60% retail $130. Call 841-6244 or 749-2729.
PEUGEOT 12 SPEED TOURING BIKE
PERFECT CONDITION W/PUMP & BAG BAG
CALL 841-3388, OR LEAVE MESSAGE.
Racing bike 1677 Bancash $90 cm, $400 Ross
Racing bike 1677 Bancash 59 cm, $400 Ross
Canton 841-757-3272 Canton 841-757-3272
Rock n-roll- Thousands of used and rare albums
are on every Saturday and Sunday in the
Baltimore International Auctions.
STEREO SPEAKERS. Omega 502-3 way speakers alphas Alpha subwoofer w100 capacity
Suzaki G5 450E, great condition. Must sell soon.
ET50 or best offer. 841-7767.
U2 TICKETS for sale. Call: 541-9623, Saturday,
October 2, between 8 and 10 a.m. Highest offer
takes it all
TRIS 12k model 560 23" feature-4256, in storage for last year. Wool layer, 6m²/1,2'x 1/2', excellent shape-425. 749-2658 after m. 1.975-5412 (Perry)
Vaccums - save mg injury. Retrofitted
months guarantee. Prices start at $14.98.
Lawrence Vacuum & Sewing Center, 916 Mass,
643-127.
U2 Tickets. Third row on the floor. Call Petter after 5 p.m. (bib) 931-2485.
WATERBED-King complete plus sheets. $100.
Call 842-8820 after 3 p.m.
1970 WV Beetle. White. Great condition. Heater
varnish works. 8750, 749-1837
1980 Chevrolet Monza; very clean, A/C, AM/FM cassette, great gas mileage. $1500/best offer.
844-5734
AUTO SALES
1833 Mada Rx7, 5-speed, A/C, cruise, AM/FM
6000 for best offer. Call 749-2139 or $6000
for best offer. Call 749-2139
18% Super Belle convertible-new: top paint, interior, times coated. Porsche wheels. Complete restoration. $4250 OBO. Call Dave at 864-6726
1976 Fiat X 1/3 convertible. Good condition. Must
sell. Make offer, 864-2032.
1976 Pontiac Astre 89,000 miles. Good transportation. AM/FM cassette, 30 mpg. 843-5897 after 8 p.m.
904-263-1500
Carryall runs well, low miles, PS, PB,
'garrettly' jacket, 880, obo. 943-393-100
20 Honda Accord-AM/FM cassette, runs great,
gas good mileage. 843-4297.
1974 TBL New motor, new paint, in Shawnee.
1-631-6447.
ORDER NEW 1988 CARS--TRUCKS-
OVER COST, DELBERT D.
THOMAS D.3459-89
TAMARIS D.3459-89
if true you can buy jeeps for $44 through the U.S. government; **get the fact today!** Call
1-800-352-9000.
10 Chev. Carryall RXL 350.
diestract good tires. $895 obo. 943-3983
74 Camaro LT 350. PS, PB, auto. New paint-
ing.
79 Ford truck for sale-Sur-lie that problem-it runs and for $100 or best offer, whaday wants!
Bertone X19/ 9.8. Fun sports car? 5-speeds,
leather interior, power window, New stereo,
amplifier tires and more. Look great! Small
tire, $1K, 816-400, 814-600 weekdays, 381-4724
Need a new or used car or truck? Want low payments and no hassles? I have a wide variety of vehicles available for immediate sale at LOW prices. Call Store at 843-3500.
74 Camaro LT 350. PS, PB, auto. New paint tires-wheels and exhaust. Nice. 862-2406.
LOST-FOUND
Relieable 1912 Pinti wagon. 50,000-ly only 21,000 ly (New age). (New weight.) 450-ly little rust. 740-ly 1183-ly
VOLVO. 1962 244 DL, must sell-moving, low mileage. Excellent condition 40,448 after $4
FOUND men's ring in restroom in Lindley Hall.
"oil Kirk at 84-361 and describe.
*found--Mens gold class ring found last week in 1st
room restroat of Watson Library. Call Sheldon
and describe. 841-0093.*
Found: Calculator in 300 Strong 97/87. Come to Classics Department, 2003 Wesco.
round: Calculator in 300 Strong 9/21/97. Come to
assess Department, 203 Wescoe.
Found: Casio watch outside of Wescoe Hall on
'bess test. Call to identify, 843-0376.
Found -watch at Robinson tennis courts. Please
to identify: 843-0756.
HELP WANTED
810-660 Weekly / up mailing circulars: Rush self-adhesive stamped envelope: Opportunity, 901 Wilshire Blvd, Box 226, Dept. Q, Beverly Hills, CA 92111
Leet-Professor's black attache case-important papers-reward. 749-2069 or Room 2 Bailey.
6:18 am internet banking Monday: Thursday 5 and 9
Sunday: Monday nights. Flexible scheduling. Lencene
locationcarped from Lawrence for interview.
call: cpl M. Lacey at 149-4602.
Lost. Yonex R-7 tennis raquet. It was left on a bus September 22. Reward of $20. Please call Roger. 864-1125.
Data-entry position available 15-20 hours per week including saturday a.m. Flexible hours. Complete application at Reed Medical Group, 404 Maine.
Do you love infants and toddlers? The Lawrence Day Care program has infant/toddler morning care giver positions available. Come by A10 or 140 Bristol Terrace (in the Midbrook Apartments).
Part-time morning front office help wanted for local physician's office. Non-smoker, able to type 30 wpm, outgoing personality and neat appearance. Send replies to: Carry, c/o 3130 Church Street,
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16,140-$59,230/yr. Now
Hiring. Call 865-687-6000 Ext. R-9758 for current
federal list.
Part-time days. M 8. f.a.m. to noon. Also each Wednesday morning, M 9. a.m. to noon. Students need access to local financial institution. Some listing. Dependability and ability to perform in a press situation at a mast. Call (714) 560-2000.
FEMALE. VOCALIST wanted for established dance band. 749-369.
Jamie needed at Rainforest Montessori School,
454 Clinton Parkway. Flexible evening lessons.
5:30 p.m. on. Transportation required. Call
845-6800.
Part-time help wanted. Prefer grad student. 2 students-morning, 6 a.m., noon & baker. 2 students-dusk, 6 a.m., noon & said vacation after one year. Apply between 1 a.m. and noon weekdays at Munchers Bakery
Sub&Stuff Sandwich Shop
Periodical publications editeur for challenge 3/4 time to expand full-time position in tech-technology journalism. Requires Journalism degree, excellent communication and education production, including planning, scheduling, design, and layout. Background in technical writing/editing or education journalism. Demonstrated subject area preferred. Apply by submitting resume and samples of previous work by October 7. Human Resources, Ergystaff Associates, Inc., 910 Massachusetts Suite 622.
Attention!!
Not accepting applications from energetic, hardworking, responsible individuals. Openings available on all shifts.
Now accepting applications for drivers, 20-40 hours, hourly wage, plus CASH PAID NIGHTLY. Please apply at
Singer needed for working bluegrass band. Must play bass or guitar. Background in rock and roll is good. 841-6496.
Teachers aides need to child care program. 12:30 p.m.-infant room. 7:45 a.m. to 2 p.m.-5 year olds. Classroom experience and/or study required. Bring resume to Children's Learning Center.
Volunteers needed. Volunteers in court is looking for volunteers interested in working with children who are court-involved. Call Ann at 841-7000, ext. 923, afterwards.
Technical typist. Start 10-19 at 8:17 to 12-31 at 4:17 for appointment for spring semester. Salary $6.25 per hour. One 20-hour and one 10-hour appointment per week. Offer of required word processing experience
Waiters, waitresses, hostess, kitchen help, and dishwasher wanted. Contact Human's restaurant. 116 W. 2rd St., 843-8222.
on the Macintosh. Microsoft Word experience.
Apply to Dr. Bavel, 18 West Boulton, Tues Thurs (9am-5pm)
and Sun-Sat (10am-4pm) and
Deadline for applications 10-12-87.
Interviews by appointment. EOE
Want your own business? Now is the time to start earning as an Avon representative. Call Julie at 43-0634 evenings.
Wanted: Male personal care attendant for 27-year old male quadriplegic. 2 to mornings a week. Will train the right person. For interview, call 842-7940.
YOM KIPPUR SERVICES
MISCELLANEOUS
We have a new store that you can get cash on almost anything of value. Also, good buys on cameras, jewelry, stereo equipment (auto & home) and much more. 180W watt 60-190V 740-1390
Hillel קולט
All services to be held at the Lawrence
Allens Community Center, 917 Highland
Dr. For, rides, RSVP's and more info, to
Hilllet, 749-4242.
PERSONAL
Ki Skeyone over Christmas. January 5-10
Package includes transport/skis/tape/
discount on lift tickets. Only $189.
Contact Martin at 841-0277
Friday, Oct. 2
Service at 7:30 p.m.
Dinner at 5:30 p.m.
Hillel House
Please RSVP.
9:30 a.m., 4:30 p.m.
(YIZKOR at 11:30 a.m.)
Break-the-fast at 7 p.m.
Saturday, Oct. 3 Services at
ROLL OUT
THE BARREL
Have extra U2 tickets? See our plea in wanted section.
jgL: JIL
Jule-Nice to see you finally scored. I'm glad I was there with you. Here's to four more and sees. I love you, FISH
the unifier and conveyed a message.
Christine V - Suspicious - we really enjoyed the trip. I had a blast at Triad. I'm very happy I met you and I hope you feel the same. Your man in the blue suit.
It Could Only Happen At...
QUEENIE, HAPPY 20TH BIRTHDAY. LOVE,
TODD.
Dan R, I. WANT YOU to be at the top of my list! CB
Hands, you can teach me a lesson any day OR
eight. Ishi Daniels
Spanning the basis of the beginning of time, we bring you the KANSAN games. Adjies from all walks of the converse to compete and test their skills and to experience the thrill of victory and the agony of defeat. Tune in tonight at 6:40 for the battle of Badger vs. Time, same time, same backstory.攻贝 to bad. Bonnie.
REWARD-for any information leading to the
invention of a Nishiki Cascade Mountain like stone
from campus in front of Wecese on Thursday 9-24.
Call please 841-6521. No questions asked. HUG
Monday thru Thursday
Brazen Raisin-you hating chuck. Thanks for the dream and your question. You're a sweetie
Jn, yes, you do turn me on!! Is that Mickey calling? JJ.
Refill your "HAWK" glass only
Seve S-LEver rug burns on grass stains! *laying out of the weeds, you taps tax bauxidy* **@** Roxanne and Warren. Thanks for being great customers with the sniffers! *Thanks Almost* *Thinking Aloud*
$1.00
Like Workshops-- our mechanical will teach you how to change flats, true wheels, matte finishes and more. Each of 10 sessions. $8 each. Saturday, 9 a.m., begin. September 19. Sunflower, 844 Massachusetts, sunflower.org
THE HAWK·1340 Ohio
NE COUNTY of 02cd & Iowa, 841-4294
DAD, BEEFHELPY and WAR GAMES, BOUND
COUNTY Books & Tutorials, Far Side, Dr.
Woob, Star Ticker & More!
CONFIDENTIAL LOANS up to $800 made without credit check or prior credit. For information, call 843-4344.
Entrepreneur wanted. Aggressive, outgoing person interested in business of business. Call David at 749-5034 or Trevor at 749-5033.
Weekly Beer Specials
GREENS PARTY SUPPLY 808 W.23rd
Sept. 30-Oct.6
Herman Joseph 6 pk. $2.99
Coors Light 6 light. $2.99
Lite Beer 12 pk. $5.29
Miller Draft 6 pk. $2.99
Miller Bank 10 pk. $7.39
Old Milwaukee 24 pk. $7.39
Busch 12 pk. $3.98
Old Style 12 pk. $3.69
Wiedemann 12 pk. $3.19
that performed his design hair, bump into Carl &
Company Air Designers at 2118 W. 5th St., in
the holiday Plaza on the Bus Lane. Tuesday-
saturday 8 a.m.-6 p.m. Special Tursdays and
Saturdays.
HEADAMC, BACKACH, ARM PAIN, LEG PAIN AND student and most insurance accepted. For complete quality chiropractic care call Dr. Mark Johnson 845-3979.
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-8212 Confidential help/free pregnancy testing.
Skir. Winter Park, $199. Thanksgiving trip leaves
Thursday night on sleeper bus. Stay in Snow
balcony condominiums 2 nights. Abo. 2 days is
rental and lift tickets. For information, call
NEW
ankle
brackets
AFRICAN
broadcasts
ADORNED
for unusual jewelry
5 E. 7th
842-1376
Sunflower Mt. BIke Workshop-How to repair & adjust your Mt. BIke-Thursday evening, 6: 8 p.m., begins September 17 . 45. 804 Massachusetts, Lawrence. 835-6900.
STUDENTS! Please order your "school" and "shared" items to the following locations:
1. Office, 10-9 September, 23, 45
2. Classroom outside Wescoe, 10-9 September, 23, 46
926 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass.
WED., Sept. 30 New Age Beauty with DAVID FRIESEN
Graystone Athletic Club
Special Student Membership
Racquetball, Tanning
Exercise Equipment
2500 W. 6th Street 841-7230
The Jazzhaus
LITTLE SAINTS
THURS., Oct. 1
Nashville Rockers
LITTLE SA
FRI. & SAT., Oct. 2 & 3 King of the Chicago Blues
YELLO- SUB now accepts (good) checks on delivery. This change in policy was made so Yello Sub delivery can better serve you, seven days/week. 5-midnight.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered third Miwaukee Driving school, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
WEEKEND SPECIAL: "Magical Mystery Tour" on CD, only $12.99. PENNYLANE RECORDS, 844 Massachusetts
MAGIC SLIM AND THE TEARDROPS
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ekstasekra
processing within 24 hours. Complete *B* W-service.
PASSPORT 6.00, ADR & Design Building.
**Dann Rite Home Maintenance**
**Custom carpentry custom painting, mish-
repire repairs building, detailing, etc.**
C a l l I 1 1 1 1 4 8 4 4 5 3 4 5
JAM FAVORIS for all your party favor needs.
Hats, shirts, glories, glasses. If you have a unique favor idea, call us and we'll find it for you.
843-8770
Do you need a tutor in math? Then call 843-8554 after 6 p.m.
English Tutor $45-hour. Call Mark at 814-6546.
FLASHBACK PHOTO. Send and dependable party
photo. Call 848-8770 to book your next
Is "parlez-vous" Greek to you? French-English bilingual clears the confusion! Quality tutoring. 842-306.
COMPUTER CONSULTING: Tutoring and programming for elementary computer science students. Work with engineering, projects and other works. Reasonable prices for individuals and groups.
OPEN OCT. 5 9:00
Capture that golden tan with a boudoir portrait from Photos Plus. Call Mike or Gracie at 749-3706 evenings or weekends.
KIM'S ALTERATIONS-QUICK SERVICE Suits COINS. Jaws. Zippers. All types of alterations: 210-F West 25th St. B4-92212. (Bread Food L4) KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES. Ektrachrome
BOB'S CYCLE SHOP
IS MOVING TO
701 E. 22nd
843-8882
OPEN OCT 5 9:00
SERVICES OFFERED
"CRIMISON SUN PHOTO" is looking for young women interested in developing a modeling portfolio. 15% over cost. Call 641-8090
MAINT. 300-781-5647
TUTOR since 1976, M.A., 88/hr, 843-9032
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Over-Open Park...411-697-6874
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
0
AIRLINE HOTLINE
NOW is the time to let us make your travel arrangements with Thanksgiving and Christmas Holidays just around the corner.
LOWEST FARES
841-7117
TRAVEL CENTER
Southern Hills Center 1601 West 23rd
M-F 9-5:30 • Sat. 9:30-2
Seaanders. All ladies' dresses can be made here in town. You choose your favorite design or styles from the latest fashion magazines. I will make them for you. Call Me: 814-3400
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence 841-0716
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-2316
1/2 off any service only when you ask for Cathy
Shiver Clipper
842-1822 2201 P.W. 25th behind Gilson's
AAAbsolutely Fast Typing Is Back! Dependable,
Reasonable Hates, Late Night Typing Available
TYPING
cessing on letter quality printer. 749-7643
2 Smart Word Processing. Spelling Corrected.
Very Reasonable. Call Foster 749-2740
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing.
847-7945 or Liau, 841-1915.
Very reassurance. Can Paper II.
A-1 reliable professional typing. Term papers,
Theses, Resumes, etc. Reasonable IBM Electronic Typewriter 824-3246
i plus Typing, Letters, resumes, thesis, law typing,
etc. 14 years experience. Call Terry 824-4734
or 834-2671 evenings and weekends.
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term papers, thesis, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter
quality printing, spelled corrected. 82:47-247
WRITING LIPELINE 841-3989
DESSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS
MOMMY'S TYPIING is back from Australia !!
841-3989 before 9 am please
Kathy 841-249-0355, 841-249-0356
ACT NOW: PAPERS-THESES--RESUMES
WRITING LIFELEINE 841-349-035
printer and copy services
For papers that exacting professors like to see call 841-5557. Optional editing and spelling
For professional typing/word processing, call Myra. 814-860. Fall special $1.20/page, double-space, pica
TIPING SERVICE AND WORK HOURS
TRANSCRIPTIONS
1012 Massachusetts St. Suite 200
Lawrence, Kansas 60444
(Right above Morris Sports)
(913) 842-4619
24 Hour Advance Notice to Insure Professional Quality
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Quality Typing includes excellent spelling, punctuation, grammar, editing. Fast reliable service. Digital resources available. 814.0247
Quality tying or word processing for theses, dissertations, resumes, term papers, applications. Professional editing, composition available. Have M.S. Degree.
TOP_NOTCH SERVICES professional word processing, manuscripts, resumes, theses, letter quality printing, etc. e43-5062
WORD PROCESSING: Fast, accurate, experienced; thesis, papers, resumes; discount available. 841 8633
WRIGHT'S TYPING SERVICE. Term papers, theses, miscellaneous. IBM Selectric. Spelling corrected. 843-9534
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertation papers, letters, applications. Course M. S. MES. 841-6254
electricity and phone. Pool, on RU bus route.
Available immediately! Call after 5. 841-1780
Patients needed to telephone at 9th and
Policy
Female upperclassman she shares to 2 br
apartment at Harvard Sq. $200/month plus 1/2
electricity and phone. Post on KU bus route
Roommate needed for townhouse at 9th and Michigan. Private room $175 and 1/3 utilities.
Female roommate needed $155 per month plus 1/3 utilities. No deposit needed. Trailridge,
841-9288
Roommate wanted for 2 bedroom apartment
Furnished but bedroom. Rent negotiated and 1/2
utilities. Call after 11 a.m. F79-1867
U2 Tickets Dedicated fans desperately seek
tickets, call 864-2448 or 864-2475.
Want to buy U2 tickets to October 36 concert? Call 749-218 and leave message.
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
Bind box ads please add $4.00 service charge.
Tearsheets are NOT provided for classified advertisements.
Found ads are free for three days, no more than 15 words.
- Prepaid Order Form Ads
Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Daily Kansan.
Deadline is on Monday at 4:00pm 2 days prior to publication.
Deadline is on Monday at 4:00pm 2 days prior to publication.
CLASSIFIED RATES
| Words | 1 Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | 10 days | 15 days | 1 month |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 0.15 | 2.85 | 4.20 | 6.00 | 10.00 | 14.95 | 18.90 |
| 16.20 | 3.35 | 5.00 | 7.05 | 11.30 | 16.55 | 20.75 |
| 21.25 | 3.90 | 5.80 | 8.10 | 12.60 | 18.10 | 22.60 |
| 26.30 | 4.40 | 6.55 | 9.15 | 13.90 | 19.70 | 24.40 |
| 31.35 | 4.95 | 7.35 | 10.20 | 15.25 | 21.25 | 26.25 |
100 announcements 300 theater tickets 800 user list, offered
100 entertainment 310 auto sales 700 personal 800 lifting
100 merchandise 600 user list, offered
Classified Mail Order Form
ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW HRS/AM
Date ad begins ___
Total days in paper, ___
Amount paid ___
Written off ___
___
University Dallas Kansas
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
---
}
16
Wednesday, September 30, 1987 / University Daily Kansan
DOUBLE COUPONS
(See In-Store Details)
from our Floral Shop
Bonus Special 8" Tropical Plants $1099
Ea.
Soup & Salad Bar...
"Italiian Festival Month"
At Your Dillon Salad Bar, This Week Featuring Fresh Italian Zucchini, Hidden Valley Ranch Spices And Herbs Dressing, Monteray Tortellini Salad And Shredded Mozzarella Cheese. (Available Only In Stores With Salad Bars.)
COUPON
25c Off
The purchase of any salad of your choice from our Salad Bar.
Rollbones
NEW YORK
Rollins
Limit One Coupon Per Customer.
Coupon Included in Double Coupon Program.
Coupon Good Thursday, Oct. 6th, 1987.
--from our
Pharmacy
Now Available At Dillon Pharmacies...
Replacement Contact Lens
Order Yours Today!
Just bring us your soft contact lens prescription. Your eye doctor's prescription will be filled accurately by a licensed optometrist and dispensed by your registered Dillon pharmacist.
Unconditionally Guaranteed For 30 Days
Deli
Bonus Special
One Whole
WondeRoast
Chicken
$349
Ea.
-Bonus Special--
One Whole
8 Piece Golden
Fried Chicken
$349
Ea.
"Pick Of The Crop"
Produce
Bonus Special
Fancy Yellow
Popping Corn
29¢ Lb.
-Bonus Special--
Colorado Extra Fancy
Red Or Golden
Delicious Apples
33¢ Lb.
5
Dillons FOOD STORES
L
HOTEL MAN
Prices Effective Sept. 30 - Oct. 6, 1987. Limit Rights Reserved.
Bonus Special
Dillon's Wafer
Sliced Meats
Assorted Varieties, 2.5 oz.
Additional Purchases...39¹
Super Coupon!
Limite 2 Pages With This Cooper
Limited One Cooper Per Customer
1. $897.00 2. $1,897.
Super Cooper Program.
Double Cooper Program.
DHlon's Wafer Sliced Meats Assorted Varieties, 2.5 oz.
25¢
Dellmans
Limit 2 With Coupon
p 41260 D9814
HONDA
MILK
Jackson's 100% Pure Orange Juice
Super Coupon!
Half Gallon
Additional Purchases ... 1.19
Limt. Lifet With This Coupon
One Coupon Per Customer
Coupon Good Deal 30/14 & 18/17
Good Deal 5/12
Doubled Coupon Discount
Jackson's 100% Pure Orange Juice Half Gallon
79¢
Willow
MADE IN USA
Limit 1 With Coupon
Dellmore
MADE IN USA
0 3
41260 09007
0 3
41260109007
Coffee
美式咖啡 450毫升
Dillon's Coffee
1 Lb. Can
Additional Purchases... $2.09
Super Coupon!
Dillon's Coffee
Assorted Grinds, 1 Lb. Can
$149
Limit 1 Can With The Coupon
Limit Over Coupon Per Customer
Coupon Good Saps, 30 Oct. 6, 1987
Super Coupon Not Included in
Burger Coupon Program
0 7
41260-00012
Super Coupon!
Rattlesnake
NEW YORK
Dillon's Coffee
Assorted Grinds, 1 lb. Can
$149
Limit 1 With Coupon
$149
Rollbacks
www.rollbacks.com
0 7
61260-09012
0
41260 09012
---
Surf Removes dirt and odors!
Surf Detergent 40¢ Off Label, 42 oz.
Additional Purchases $1.99
Super Coupon!
Limit 1 Box With This Coupon
One Box With Coupon Per Customer
Coupon Good Fee 10 Oct. 8, 1987
Good Fee 20 Oct. 8, 1987
Double Coupon Program
Surf Detergent 40c Off Label, 42 oz.
Dellmann
$129
Limit 1 With Coupon
Limit 1 With Coupon
Rillows
MADE IN USA
0 1
41260-09014
0 1
41220709012
---
Penny
Vuriched
Bread
Bonus Special
Dillon's Enriched Bread
20 oz.
Additional Purchases ... 39*
Super Coupon!
Limited 1 Leaf With This Coupon.
Limit 1 Leaf Each Customer Per Coupon.
Coupon Good From 30-Oct-8, 9/187
Good From 26-Jan-8, 9/187
Doubled Coupon Discount.
Dillon's Enriched
Bread
20 oz.
29¢
Limit 1 With Coupon
Dalliance
NEW YORK
0 41260109812 3
Dellman
0 41260109812 3