Wednesday January 13, 1989
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 74 (USPS 650-640)
Hayden assists Margin plan
Gov. Mike Hayden shakes hands with legislators after delivering his State of the State address yesterday evening in the House of Representatives chamber.
The Associated Press
Gov. Mike Hayden proposed earmarking $41.3 million for the Margin of Excellence program for Kansas Board of Regents schools during his State of the State speech last night. The plan represents a major infusion of money into the state's universities.
Hayden also endorsed the Regents selective admissions plan that would keep some Kansas high school graduates from being accepted as students at the Regents schools. Currently, any graduate of an accredited Kansas high school must be admitted.
See related story p. 6.
As part of his proposed $4.18 billion state budget for the fiscal year that begins July 1, including spending $1.99 billion from the state general fund, $4.13 million was set aside to increase salaries for teaching faculty members and new faculty positions.
The governor also proposed spending $85 million of the $135 million income tax windfall to balance his budget.
The governor's proposed budget includes an increase in state aid to local school districts that will allow for an average 4.5 percent increase in public school teachers' salaries next year.
The proposed budget includes $1.878 billion for primary and secondary schools, higher education, and teacher retirement programs, including $1.221 billion in state general fund money. The recommendations represent increases of $94.3 million or 5.3 percent in spending on education over the current fiscal year.
"Demands in our society for increased productivity and higher-order skills require that education be assigned our highest priority." Hayden said. "When students attend a
Regents university, they must have a highly qualified faculty."
The governor's recommendation would add another 150 new teaching positions to the Regents institutions. Instructional salaries would increase by 8.5 percent, but those increases would range from 7.8 percent for teachers at Emporia State University and the University of Kansas to 10.2 percent at Fort Hays State
University and Wichita State University.
Other Regents schools include Kansas State University and Pittsburg State University.
The Margin of Excellence program, proposed by the Regents, sought $47 million in additional state money to upgrade faculty salaries and programs. As originally proposed, it is a three-year program, but
Hayden said he wants only to fund the first year.
Hayden recommended that KU's operating expenses would be $224 million for fiscal year 1989, compared with $213.5 million for the current fiscal year. He proposed that the KU medical center's expenses would be $205.2 million for the next fiscal year.
Secure Cab canceled after fare increase; new service possible
By Christine Martin
Kansan staff writer
Students who depend on Secure Cab to take them home after a night of drinking or to drive them a distance they feel unsafe walking will have to find other ways to get home until a new program can be established.
The Secure Cab program, sponsored by Student Senate, was canceled last month because the fare rose from $2.50 to $4, said Charles Bryan, coordinator of KU on Wheels.
Secure Cab, nicknamed "Tipsy Taxi," was established in March 1986 to offer free rides home to students who had been drinking or did not feel safe walking home late at night.
Bryan said that the Senate could pay $2,000 for the program, but he estimated that the cost would be between $33,000 and $40,000.
"We feel that we owe the students a little more responsible use of their money." Bryan said.
Bryan said that last semester Secure Cab had 80 to 1,000 fares a month, but usually two or more students rode at the same time.
"So it could have been more like 2,000 students a month who used it," he said.
Bryan said that other programs were being considered and that a new proposal would be discussed at a Transportation Board meeting tomorrow night.
Since 1986, Student Senate has financed the service by paying Union Cab Co., 1045 New Jersey St. $2.50 for each ride they give to students. Bryan said that bids
from other companies would now be considered.
He said a possible option could include vans running every 30 minutes from taverns to student living groups both on and off campus.
"Once the board decides what direction it wants to go, it could be four to six weeks before a new program goes into effect." Bryan said.
Matthew Kerr, Student Senate treasurer, said the new shuttle system would help the program. He said that under the old system, some students gave false addresses to the drivers so they could get free rides to taverns.
"Fixed routes would eliminate abuse by taking people straight home" Keerr said.
Bryan said that it could be late February before the new system could take effect because contracts had to be signed and the program had to be approved by the state.
Carol Martin, Roeland Park junior, said she depended on Secure Cab for getting home at night because the buses stopped running before she got off work at Watson Library. She also saidSecure Cab had taken her home a few times after she had been drinking.
"Fixed routes wouldn't be as good because some people live way out and might get left out," she said. "I don't think it's fair because a lot of people rely on it."
The Transportation Board will meet at 7:30 p.m. to morrow in the Daisy Hill Room at the Burge Union.
Financing, admissions proposals facing hurdles
Bv Donna Stokes
Kansan staff writer
Legislators said recently that they expected the Margin of Excellence proposal to pass, at least in part, during the 1983 session, but that they were less optimistic about a qualified admissions plan.
KU's peer schools, similar in scope, mission and size, are the University of Colorado, University of Iowa, University of Oregon, University of Oklahoma and University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.
Margin of Excellence is the Board of Regents three-year budget proposal. It would bring the KU budget from 86.5 percent to 95 percent of the University's peer school average.
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said, "I believe the state has the means to appropriate full funding, at least for the first year, and maybe for a long-term commitment. But it would take reducing the amount of windfall returned to citizens and funding for other interests."
State Sen. Gus Bogina, R-Lenexa and chairman of the Senate Nays and Means Committee, said it must be decided where the estimated $135 million tax windfall would go before anything is done about the proposal.
"I want to give half back to the taxpayers," Bogina said, "but I am certainly considering some funding for the Margin of Excellence proposal."
Solbach said that the state had seen more "fiscal sunshine" this year than in the past five years, and that there were many demands on the windfall money.
About $20 million of the windfall automatically would be returned to public schools. Solbach said.
"To a great extent, we can return windfall more effectively by wisely investing it for benefit of all Kansas citizens, instead of just giving back a few dollars here and there to individuals," he said.
Although legislators said they were optimistic that a portion of Margin of Excellence would pass, they were less optimistic about a qualified admissions plan.
The Regents approved a proposal Dec 17
that would require students to meet certain standards for admission to a state university. The proposal would require freshmen to have a C average in a high school preparatory curriculum, score 23 or higher on the ACT composite or rank in the top third of their high school class.
That plan and others may be considered in hearings starting as early as next week, said State Sen. Joseph Harder, R-Moundridge and chairman of the Senate Education Committee.
"Many legislators are very much opposed to qualified admissions," Harder said. "It may even have trouble getting out of committee."
State Rep. Denise Apt, R-Iola and chair
man of the House Education Committee, said, "I would assess right now that 30 percent of the legislators are for it, 30 percent are against it, and 40 percent are on the fence."
Apt used a two-year foreign language requirement as part of a high school curriculum.
However, some legislators that originally were opposed to the plan have become more open-minded about it.
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, opposed selective admissions last year, but said she had "mellowed out on it since then" and had an open mind on the issue.
See LEGISLATURE, n. 6, col. 1
Commission hears gay rights opinions
By Joel Zeff
Kansan staff writer
The Lawrence City Commission last night heard public comment on a proposal to amend the city's human rights ordinance to prohibit discrimination based on sexual preference.
The city commissioners, addressing an overflowing chamber room, decided to hear public comment on the issue last night and to delay action until next week's meeting.
The ordinance, passed in 1983, prohibits discrimination based on race, sex, religion, color, nationality, ancestry, handicap and age.
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"This is one of those things that how we decide will say a lot on the nature of Lawrence as a community." Commissioner Dennis Constance said. "I've got more input on this than any other issue since I've been elected. More than the mall issue."
The proposed amendment was suggested after an ad hoc committee formed by the city's Human Relations Commission researched the issue and found that discrimination against homosexuals does exist, said Lig Gowdy, spokeswoman for Citizens for Human Rights in Lawrence.
"There is a lot of discrimination everywhere for a lot of reasons,"
For example, Gowdy said a friend of hers received a death threat when involved in planning a dance for lesbians.
Gowdy, whose group presented a petition to the commission, said 1,654 people had signed the petition
Marie Kelly, Tulsa, Okla., junior, distributes safer-sex packets to students during fee payment yesterday in the Kansas Union.
Gowdy said, "Human characteristics. People wonder who is gay and who is not. It's human nature to make judgments. I do believe this is a civil rights issue — not morality. Are we affording everyone the basic human rights to live in Lawrence?"
Opponents of the amendment, including a group called the Alliance of Citizens for Traditional Values, last night said that discrimination against homosexuals to the extent described in the relations commission's report was not evident. In addition, opponents cited state law prohibiting sodomy, and references from the Bible against homosexuality.
The commission has since June refused to consider the committee's proposal. However, Commissioner Bob Schumm said that in June, the commission did not think many people were interested in the issue. He said the commission had waited for the level of interest to rise.
Constance said the meeting last night was informative and included a mass of emotion. He added that the opposing groups respected each other.
"Homosexuals do have rights in common with all Americans. They want a right that others do not have," said Gordon Gruber, an opponent of the amendment.
"Everyone is speaking beliefs that are sincere — with good intentions. Hopefully, there will be a vote next week," Connause said.
Condom handouts attract attention
By Joel Zeff
After weaving through reporters, television camera crews, photographers, protesters and interested onlookers, David Campanini walked up to pay his fees with registration card, checkbook and comon in hand.
Campanini, iola senior, was among almost 10,000 students who received saer-sex packets from the Student Senate Task Force on AIDS. The packets, containing three informational pamphlets and a condom, were distributed Monday and Tuesday during fee payment in the Kansas Union.
Kansan staff writer
See related story p. 7B.
"It's a great way to create awareness," Campanini said Monday. "People say everyone who has a rubber will use it; that's not the case. This will get people to face the facts and consequences, not get it on."
The safer-sex packets, which cost about $4,000, or 40 cents each, to distribute, were paid for by student activity fees and handed out by members of the task force. The task force was created last summer to begin taking steps against acquired immune deficiency syndrome, said Stephanie Quincy, student body vice president.
Quincy said the condoms were so popular that student senators ran out of packets at 1:30 p.m. Monday and at 12:30 p.m. yesterday. The task force prepared 5,000 packets for each day, she said.
"I was surprised," Quincy said. "A lot of people asked for more, and a lot of older students got them for their teenage children or younger brothers and sisters."
"This is saying — Look, AIDS is an issue. It is an issue we have to face. People say it's just a gay disease. People must realize it's an issue they must deal with. AIDS doesn't discriminate." she said.
Rebecca Newburn, Columbia, Md., junior and a member of the task force, said reactions to the safer-sex packets varied from serious to humorous. She added that it was important for people to understand that the main reason Senate was there to educate, not to offend.
Quincy said not only did the money
used to purchase condoms bring priceless attention in the area to the AIDS crisis, but the attention the safer-sex kits received was more positive than negative.
were in front of the Union Monday morning.
"There are some sincere people in Senate. But, but there are homosexuals in Senate and on the task force. What we have is a homosexual response to the AIDS issue." Hermesch said.
Hermesch said handing out the condoms in the packets was not a solution. Condoms, he said, promote immorality and sex before marriage and endorse the very activity that spreads AIDS.
---
See CONDOMS, p. 8, col. 1
2
Wednesday, January 13, 1988/University Daily Kansan
Weather Forecast
From the KU Weather Service
LAWRENCE
Sunny but cold
HIGH: 23°
LOW: 13°
Expect mostly sunny skies and cold temperatures as the high struggles into the lower-20s. Continued fair overnight but cold low in the lower-teens.
REGIONAL
North Ratio
32/5 Sunny
Omaha
24/7 Sunny
Goodland
34/10 Sunny
Heya
31/14 Sunny
Salina
25/13 Sunny
Topeka
23/12 Sunny
Kansas City
23/13 Sunny
Columbia
20/10 Mostly sunny
St. Louis
20/9 Windy
Dodge City
34/17 Sunny
Wichita
30/15 Sunny
Chanute
26/18 Sunny
Springfield
29/16 Sunny
Forecast by Kevin Dermotal and Jamie Zahara. Temperatures are today's high and tonight's low.
5-DAY
THU
Mostly sunny
32 / 19
HIGH LOW
FRI
Partly cloudy
36 / 24
SAT
Partly cloudy
40 / 26
SUN
Mostly cloudy
44 / 30
MON
A.M. showers
35 / 19
Local Briefs
ICTHUS CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP
Chancellor Gene A. Budig presented the award to Murphy in the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art in front of 250 people. Budig credited Murphy with starting a major building program at KU and establishing the endowed professorship program.
EX-CHANCELLOR RECEIVES MEDALIATION: Franklin D. Murphy, KU chancellor from 1951 to 1960, received recognition Dec. 8 from the National Association of State Universities and Land-Grant Colleges. Murphy received a medalion from the group for his influence in medicine, higher education, art, publishing.
business and science
On Campus
THURSDAY NIGHTS, 9:00
The Kansan offers two features that list campus and area events, the daily On Campus column and the weekly Calendar.
Items for both features should be directed to Camille Krehbiel, news clerk. On Campus and Calendar items must be delivered in person or by mail to 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Items will not be taken over the phone. Items are printed free.
On Campus now appears on page 2. Items must be turned in two days in advance of the event and displayed on the day of the event. On Campus items are limited to events that are on campus and are free
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Police Record
A car stereo valued at $350 was reported stolen from a car parked in the 700 block of Mississippi Street Thursday or Friday.
The Calendar, which now appears on page 5, will run Mondays. The deadline for Calendar items is 5 p.m. Tuesday the week before the calendar is published.
A car stereo amplifier valued at $250 was reported stolen from a car in the 1300 block of Tennessee Street on Saturday.
A portable cassette player, speakers and miscellaneous items, valued together at $315, were reported stolen from a car parked in the 1100 block of Tennessee Street between Saturday and Monday.
A black Honda moped valued at $350 was reported stolen from a house in the 1100 block of West 10th Street on Friday or Saturday.
A car stereo valued at $100 was reported stolen from a car parked in the 900 block of Arkansas Street Jan. 2-8. Between $300 and $500 in damage was done to the car.
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Making the Difference Every Day
University Daily Kansan/Wednesday, January 13, 1988
Campus/Area
3
Hall residents will pay more
By Rebecca J. Cisek
For the first time in three years, students living in KU residence halls will face increases of more than $100 in their annual housing payments this fall.
Kansan staff writer
Under a plan approved by the Board of Regents in December, fees for residence halls, scholarship halls and Jayhawker Towers will increase to help offset higher operating costs, said Ken Stoner, director of student housing.
Stouffer Place and Sunflower Apartments will not be affected by the increases.
According to the plan, fees for double occupancy rooms in all residence halls, except Hashinger Hall.
will increase $104, or 4.9 percent, for
the year. Single occupancy also will
go up $104, or 3.3 percent. For
Hashinger, fees will increase $120
or 5.4 percent for double occupancy
and 3.7 percent for single occupancy.
The Regents approved the rate changes because of increases in the cost of utilities, food, salaries, supplies and maintenance at KU, Stoner said.
In recent years, Stoner said, the housing office was able to avoid increases in housing costs because of mild increases in utility costs and energy-saving measures in the housing units. But the office was no longer able to cut costs and still provide adequate services to students.
he said, referring to increased costs. Stoner said that the increase for Hashinger was greater than other halls because it is a center for creative arts and has a theater.
rees for all scholarship halls except Miller Hall and Watkins Hall will increase $80, or 4.7 percent. The increase for Miller and Watkins will be $64, or 8.9 percent. The smaller increase at Miller and Watkins is because those halls don't have food service. Stoner said.
At Jayhawker Towers, fees will increase $192, or 4.2 percent for single occupancy in a two-bedroom apartment; $86, or 4.7 percent for double occupancy; $80, or 4.3 percent for triple occupancy; and $48, or 4.2 percent for quadruple occupancy.
According to cost comparisons compiled by the housing office, the increases in fees will help pay for a 5-percent increase in staff salaries, a 4.9-percent increase in food costs, a 5.8-percent increase in utilities, a 19.3-percent increase in telephone costs and a 2.3-percent increase in supplies and other expenses.
Telephone costs jumped almost 20 percent because of the new phone system the University installed, Stoner said. He said the system costs more now but will save the University money in the future as phone costs increase overall.
Jeff Weinberg, associate director of financial aid, said that any increases in housing would be considered in determining a student's
Residence hall fees are going up in Kansas Regents institutions. These figures reflect overall increases for double-acquancy rooms.
Residence hall tails are going up in Kansas Regents institutions.
These figures reflect overall increases for double occupancy rooms.
$104 increase
up 4.9%
University of Kansas
Kansas State University
Wichita State University
Emporia State University
Hilstung State University
Fort Wayne State University
Kansas Technical Institute
up 4%
up 4%
up 9.3%
up 3.7%
up 5.8%
up 3.6%
up 1.4%
financial need.
Yvonne May, Topeka senior, who has lived in Lewis Hall for three years, said she first found out about the increase in fees last fall.
the increase in fees was said to
"I think employees should be paid a competitive rate," she said, but she
said that because the residence halls are state-supported, they should be cheaper to live in than an apartment.
图2-16 钢结构厂房爆炸现场
"We're paying almost $300 for a dinky room that you have to share," she said.
But Scott Heim, Little River junior, took the news of increases more lightly.
"It's something everybody has to do," he said. "And there are a lot of things I get here that I don't have to pay for."
Fire won't delay library's completion
A fire that started Saturday evening when leaking propane gas ignited caused between $5,000 and $10,000 damage to the construction site of the new science library.
By Elaine Sung and Michael Carolan
Kansan staff writers
A fire that destroyed part of the foundation of the new science library Saturday night caused between $5,000 and $10,000 in damage but the completion date for the library will not be delayed, the project manager for the construction company said yesterday.
The progress of the construction will be delayed by only three days, which is the amount of time needed to rebuild the concrete forms that were destroyed, Stan Claassen, the project manager for R.D. Andersen Construction Co., Inc. said.
Robert C. Johnson, site superintendent for the company, said, "The fire won't have any overall effect on the job."
The new science library is being built behind Hoch Auditorium and the Art and Design Building
Two concrete columns and about 25 feet of the south wall of the foundation were scorched and need to be replaced, Johnson said.
The fire began when propane leaking from a storage tank ignited when it came into contact with a portable heater. The heater was being used to keep the cement from freezing.
Fire alarms wow off at 5:55 p.m. Four firewelling vehicles responded within five minutes. It took 15 firefighters more than half an hour to reach the base were shooting up from tanks near the base of a crane on the site.
The propane was used to fuel a portable heater to keep some newly poured concrete from freezing. Workers from the construction company had finished laying the concrete Friday.
Claassen said the concrete had to be kept around 50 degrees Fahrenheit for three days in order to set properly.
At the site were four tanks of
propane, three of which were in use. The fourth was only partially full and was not in use.
Claassen said that the fire had damaged the leaking tank so severely that investigators from the company could not determine whether a defective valve or an improper connection had caused the propane to leak.
Huge billows of white steam rose from the area as firefighters sprayed water to prevent the tanks from softening and melting. The water also kept the tanks cool so
the gas would not expand and explode.
Maj. Paul Findley of the Lawrence Fire Department said the fire might have created a major hazard if the tanks had been cooled.
"There is always a danger when you deal with these kinds of fires," he said. "The safest way is just to control it."
Findley the best way to put out the flames was to let the contents of the propane tank burn out.
Sparks and smoke from the fire could be seen as far away as 15th Street, and onlookers could hear the propane as it leaked and fueled the fire.
Both Claassen and Findley said that the fire was accidental and that arson was not involved.
Johnson, the site superintendent, said R.D. Andersen was covered by a builder risk insurance policy. He said the insurance company had not yet investigated the fire and assessed the damages.
Students might keep GSL checks despite failing requirements
By Jill Jess
Kansan staff writer
Students who fail to fulfill grade requirements for their guaranteed student loans may be able to keep their loans if KU officials determine that extenuting circumstances caused poor grades.
Jeff Weinberg, KU associate director of financial aid, said holds were placed on the GSL checks for students who failed to achieve required grades. When those students try to pick up their GSL checks, they will be given a card stating that they failed to achieve minimum standards.
But students who think a mistake was made can bring a copy of their transcript to the financial aid office, and if an error did occur, the hold on the check will be released. Weinberg said.
The grade requirements for GSLs are the same as all KU financial-aid standards and are on a graduated level depending on how long a student has been in the University. For example, a student in his first semester at KU must have a minimum of six credits and a 1.4 grade point average, but a student in his fourth semester must have 42 credits and a 2.0 GPA.
Students who fail to meet these criteria can appeal to an academic standards committee by filing a petition at the financial aid office, Weinberg said.
The committee members, who remain anonymous, read the petitions and determine whether extinguishing circumstances caused poor grades. Those circumstances include a death in the family, hospitalization or a personal problem, Weinberg said.
'O
sur standards tend to be somewhat more lenient than other four-year institutions.'
Jeff Weinberg
KU associate director of financial aid
There is no form to fill out to petition, he said, and the appeal does not have to be typed. It should state why the student thinks his circumstances merit review by the committee.
"The appeal does not have to contain, under any circumstances, documentation from anyone other than the student," he said.
Grade requirements for the federally sponsored GSLs are set by individual universities, said Alden K. Shields, vice president of the Higher Education Assistance Foundation, a nonprofit guaranty agency that guarantees about 80 percent of KU's student loans. Both Shields and Weinberg said KU's grade requirements for GSLs were less stringent than those of many comparable universities.
Weinberg said, "Our standards tend to be somewhat more lenient than other four-year institutions."
A student who is unable to successfully appeal the hold on a GSL check can apply again for a GSL after his grades improve to the required level, Shields said.
He also said that if a student lost his GSL because of poor grades, that student was not required to pay back the loan any earlier than a student who met the grade requirements. As long as a student is enrolled at least half-time, the repayment schedule will not change. Shields said.
New library photocopiers feature more services, higher copy price
Rv Kathleen Faddis
Kansan staff writer
The bad news for KU staff and students is that getting photocopies at KU libraries will cost either a penny or a nickel more this semester.
The good news is that there are 19 new self-service 3-M photocopiers on the Lawrence campus, replacing the old copiers. Also, there are two new copiers at the Regents Center in Overland Park.
The libraries are replacing the old copy machines because they made poor copies and were breaking down frequently, said Sarah Couch, periodical supervisor at Watson Library.
New copies on the Lawrence campus have been installed at the Watson and Spencer libraries and at the science, music, art and architecture, engineering libraries, and the Howey reading room in Summerfield Hall. There also are three new reader-printers in Watson that will copy from microforms.
The card system is the main feature affecting students making copies. The new machines will still accept coins, but the cost per copy for coin use will go up from a nickel to a dime. For a dollar, users can buy a card that allows them to make copies for 6 cents.
*Any student who plans to make more than 25 copies will benefit from the card.* "Couch," 32, p. 417.
Couch said library officials changed to the card system because it allowed them to raise or lower the price of copies without being governed by particular coin denominations.
The card itself has no encoded value. By placing the card in the machines, the user can buy any amount of usage up to $9 at all machines and machines will take coins, $1, $2 and $bills.
The credit remaining on the card is shown when the card is put in the machine. The card does not expire, and as long as it stays in fairly good condition, it is reusable.
Cards can be bought during enrollment at a table set up in the fee payment area in the library.
except the Howey reading room.
Enlarging to 154 percent of the original or reducing to 65 percent, margin shifting, ledger size copying on request, and two-page book coving are new features.
Mary Hawkins, assistant dean for public services at Watson, said that library officials liked the new machines because the machines provided better instructions.
"For information, you can simply press a button and get instructions on how to proceed." Hawkins said.
They also were impressed with the quality of the copies. Couch said that a student with an original in good condition should get good, clean copies.
"Students seem very appreciative and anticipate better copies," she said.
Students buying cards generally expressed a dissatisfaction with the old machines and hoped for better service.
Hawkins, who has been manning the table at enrollment, said students have been reacting favorably.
Jackie Krause, Lawrence junior, said, "I like it because I do a lot of research, and it's a hassle to have a whole pocket full of dimes."
Sharon Cox, Olathe senior, said. "All I hope is that they work during final week. It's nice to see a little progress."
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Wednesday, January 13, 1988/University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Student Senate's efforts help in fight against AIDS
According to the national Centers for Disease Control, if AIDS continues to spread at its current rate, 10 percent of the student population on college campuses will be infected. For KU that means about 2,500 students, says Charles Yockey, Watkins Hospital chief of staff.
In light of these facts, the Student Senate and its AIDS task force should be commended for their efforts in educating KU students through "safer-sex" kits.
There is no cure for AIDS. And once it is contracted, death within a few months or years is inevitable.
Abstinence is one way of avoiding AIDS, but at KU, as on other college campuses, between 50 percent and 70 percent of the student body is sexually active. Virtually none of these students are using condoms, which experts say help protect against AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases.
Many other sexually transmitted diseases thrive at KU. For example, about 10 percent of us have chlamydia, an infection with symptoms similar to those of gonorrhea. And last semester, Watkins Hospital treated 1,400 women for venereal warts, which if untreated can cause cervical cancer.
Senate and task force officials said the condoms they distributed were included in the kits to spark controversy and discussion about AIDS and safer-sex practices. The condoms did just that.
Acquired immune deficiency syndrome is a health threat without parallel in our time, and information and education are two of the weapons available to combat it.
Another weapon is increased use of the condom. But before use will increase, attitudes must change.
Alison Young for the editorial board
Give the coach a chance
Add another loss — make the 1887 KU football record read 1-10-1. Yeah, we blew it again.
Only this one we were supposed to win, right? What else had we been hearing and reading for days but that Earle Bruce, former Ohio State coach, would be our next football coach, that he was ours, in the basket, lid down, take him home and hang him up.
Oh, well. On Dec 16, the few and the true (fans, that is) were treated, once more, to that which had so effectively corroded their livers the previous three months — the familiar fleeting glimpse of victory flying quickly away.
So. what did we get?
We got Glen Mason, a coach with no big-time college experience who kept us waiting two weeks while keeping his own eyes firmly fixed on the available coaching job at Ohio State, the school that eventually spurred him.
What could be better than that? Seriously, it could be the best deal KU never wanted.
Here we've got a young man who's hungry, full of scratch and spit, facing his first shot at coaching a big-time university in a big-time league. So far, it's the opportunity of his lifetime.
Bruce has made his name in sports. He could have walked in here, totally fouled up everything that wasn't already totally fouled up, walked out, and he'd still be a rich, successful retired coach. Besides, his most recent coaching memories are of a good team slowly worsening.
Mason, however, remembers a mediocre team slowly getting better. He took Kent State to 5-6 in 1986, 7-4 in 1987. If he screws up this job, it's probably back to the salt mines of the Mid-American Conference, from whence he came.
Bob Frederick, KU athletic director; Give the guy at least five years to show his stuff. Don't can him in the meantime. Alumni: Just hand over,your checks, enjoy the games and butt out.
Students, faculty, innocent bystanders, everybody: Go and cheer for your team, the fighting Jayhawks.
Coach Mason: Approach the job as an end in itself, not as a quick steppingstone to a better job. (Thinking of you, Mike Gottfried.) Pour your heart into it, turn the program around, and then you can go anywhere you want, although in that case you would certainly be welcome to stay.
Paul Belden for the editorial board
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the Kansan editorial board.
News staff
Alison Young...Editor
Todd Cohen...Managing editor
Rob Knapp...News editor
Alan Player...Editorial editor
George Robello...Campus manager
Jennifer Rowland...Planning editor
Anne Luscombe...Sports editor
Stephen Wade...Photo editor
Richard Stewart...Graphics editor
Tom Ebble...General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Kelly Scherer...Business manager
Clark Massad...Retail sales manager
Brad Lenhart...Campus sales manager
Robert Hughes...Marketing manager
Kurt Messersmith...Production manager
Greg Knipn...National manager
Kris Schorno...Traffic manager
Jennie Brown...Classified manager
Jeanne Hines...Sales and marketing adviser
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Letters, guest columns and columns are the opinion of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University Daily Kansas. Editorialists are the authors.
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THE DOLLAR
Kansan to focus on campus news
Since it was first published nearly a century ago, the University Daily Kansan has become one of the nation's leading college dailies. It has become a regular part of the lives of its readers and an obsession for many of its staff members.
Each day, the Kansan brings its nearly 16,000 readers the news of the University, Lawrence and surrounding areas, along with the important national and international news.
Our first priority is to cover the news as it relates to KU and University life. This includes covering the University administration, professional schools, the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, housing, the Kansas and Burge Unions, libraries, the arts and student government.
We recognize that for many students, the Kansan is their primary, and in some cases only, source of news. For this reason, the Kansan will work to provide greater coverage of national and international news.
Our reporters will give you the city, county and police news. And two reporters will cover the Kansas Legislature, telling you how its actions will affect you and the University of Kansas.
These stories will be on page 7. This redesigned Nation / World page will have more national and international news summaries, giving you a wider survey of the day's events.
A. G. H.
Keep in mind that we do not seek to be a primary source for national and international
Alison Young Editor
news. We have neither the space nor the resources
Page 2 now will be the home of such regular items as a crime map, Police Record, On-Call and案件档案.
Another change in the spring Kansan will be the addition of a features page each Thursday. The focus of this page will rotate among the areas of leisure, health, living and science.
The arts will receive greater coverage throughout the week on the news pages. And the Friday events will be broadcast on ABC.
Regular Kansan features, such as Sports Monday and Tuesday Forum, will continue.
All of this will be brought to you by our staff of student journalists.
Imagine working 50 or more hours a week — and not getting paid for it. Add to this a full slate of classes. This is reality for our 22 staff reporters, who are expected to write a story each day.
Kansan editors also put in long hours. And each semester, everyone from reporters on up are new
to their jobs.
Despite this newness, several Kansan staff members have professional journalism experience. Many have completed or will complete internships on such newspapers as the Chicago Tribune, Philadelphia Inquirer, Boston Globe, Des Moines Register, Kansas City Star and Times, Wichita Eagle-Beacon and Topeka Capital-Journal.
Even with these credentials, the Kansan cannot do its job without help from its readers.
We need to know what stories interest you. Do you know someone with a special talent? Let us know. Are you caught in the University or government bureaucracy? Let us know. That's why we're here?
Did we leave something out of a story or make a mistake? Let us know that, too.
If you want to voice your opinion about something, give us a call or, better yet, write us a letter. Your letter can be published and your opinion shared with others. If you have a lot to say, talk with our editorial editor about writing a guest column.
Just remember that the Kansan is your newspaper, and we'll work to provide you with the news you want and need.
Alison Young is an Omaha, Neb., senior majoring in journalism.
Overdue accounts can still cause fear
Computer-printed letters replace bill collectors, but intimidation remains
My phone just rang and a man identified himself as being from my favorite bookstore.
I said: "Huh?"
He said: "Your account is $4.29 overdue."
He asked me when I intended to pay the $4.29 that was overdue on my account.
He sounded very businesslike.
He said: "Your account is $4.29 overdue." He sounded very businesslike.
I said: "I'm $4.29 overdue?
"Uh, gee, how long have I been overdue?"
"Three weeks," he said.
"If that is true," I said, "I will pay it immediately."
"Fine," he said, and hung up.
I checked. He was right. I hadn't paid the $4.29.
I wasn't trying to beat the store out of it. Honest, it was an oversight.
The fact is, I usually pay my bills on time. I have to be prompt because of the terrible consequences. When I hear from a bill collector or get an angry letter from a computer, I give the shakes. My mouth gets dry, my heart pounds and I begin panting like a thirsty basset bound.
I have a morbid fear of bill collectors. This stems from a traumatic childhood experience. Almost everybody who grew up in the old neighborhood has it.
For a few days each month, everybody in the neighborhood would turn out all their lights when the sun went down. And they would all sit around their apartments or houses in pitch darkness.
That wasn't the reason. We were ducking bill collectors. Until the next paycheck came, nobody answered the phone or a knock at the door. All the
"It is good for your eyes," the old man would explain.
Mike
Royko
Syndicated Columnist
THE DEAR LORD BURTON
cars were parked six blocks away so they wouldn't be repossessed.
You couldn't scare any of the kids in my neighborhood by saying the booie man would get us. But we were all terrified of Friendly Bob Adams.
To this day, the fear lingers. People don't hear from bill collectors very often. Instead, we have the computerized letter that begins:
'Dear Customer: WARNING - YOUR
*Dear Customer* IS OVERDUE IF YOU WISH TO
*REMAIN*
I once got that kind of letter from a credit card company. I hate credit cards. But if you don't have one and try to pay cash, nobody trusts you. That evening, I turned out the lights, locked the
That evening, I turned out the door doors and wouldn't respond to any knocks.
I wouldn't even answer when my kids yelled: "It's us, Dad, unlock the door." Bill collectors can disguise their voices. The kids slept under the porch that night.
As a result of this deep-seated fear, I have developed my own way of shopping.
Unlike most customers, I don't necessarily look for the most sturdy product, the lowest price, or the brand that Ralph Nader says won't turn me into a tumorous mouse.
I deal only with companies that send out gentle.
kindly letters. If I forget to pay a bill on time, I want to hear from a nice computer that says:
"Hi, Cherished Customer: We hate to bother you, and we're sure it is only an oversight or the Postal Service's fault, but we thought we'd drop a little reminder that you are a tense bit late on your account. If your remittance is already in the mail, feel free to spit in our face, hear?"
So that is it with me and the bookstore. Even before my $4.29 gets there, they will have a letter telling them to scratch me off their credit-card list.
It's not that I think they shouldn't have called. They were absolutely right in doing so. If I owe them $4.29, and I'm three weeks late in paying, I don't blame them for getting nervous and phoning me at work. For all they know, I might have skipped out to Costa Rica.
suggested one to take.
They are in business. And as Franklin Pierce Adams once said: "Christmas is over and Business is business." (I know he said that because I looked it up in Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, which I bought at that store.)
But from now on, it is cash on the barrelhead at some other bookstore.
It has to be this way. I might forget again. And the next time, it could be for $4.99. For that amount, they might have somebody call me up and yell, and I'd probably choke on my tongue.
As it is, I'm the only person in the office today who is typing his column in a closet.
Editor's note: Mike Royko is on vacation for two weeks. While he is gone, we are reprinting some of his favorite columns. This first appeared July 19, 1977.
BLOOM COUNTY
YOUR FLAGRANT ANTI-
FAMILY EDITORIAL POSITION
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DON'T
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University Daily Kansan/Wednesday. January 13, 1988
5
'Selective' dropped from Regents name for admissions plan
By Donna Stokes
Kansan staff writer
The name of the proposed Board of Regents admissions plan has been changed from "selective admissions" to "qualified admissions" to clarify that the requirements would be uniform for all state universities.
"Qualified simply means that the system is uniform throughout the state," Stanley Koopik, Regents executive director, said yesterday. "Students must qualify before being admitted to any state university.
1. "Selective admissions implies that there would be some selectivity involved, that different universities would have different requirements for admission." Konlik said.
State Sen Joseph Harder, R-Moundridge, said, "I like the word qualified better. It's a more accurate reflection on the proposal, but I don't know that a name change will make a difference in a decision." The qualified admissions policy gives students three options to enter one of the state universities. Students must fulfill at least one of these
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Qualified simply means that the system is uniform throughout the state. '
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a rank in the top one-third of the high school graduating class.
In addition, each university would have an admissions "window" of 15 percent of newly admitted students. The window would enable a state university to admit athletes and other students who could provide special talents to a university but lack preparation.
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STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
1
TIPS FOR TIP-TOP HEALTH
1. Eat breakfast every day. You may find you have more energy and won't be tempted to pig-out at lunch.
2. Exercise regularly. If you haven't been exercising, start now!
3. Relax at least twenty minutes a day to help relieve stress. Stress is related to a number of health conditions including high blood pressure and ulcers.
44
Laugh it up! Laughter and a positive outlook enhance health.
5. Cultivate personal relationships. Being a friend and having friends gives you the sense of belonging.
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If someone at home is drinking, it is affecting you. The monthly workshop for adult children of alcoholics will be offered on Jan. 19 from 7-9 p.m. Call the Department of Health Education at Watkins Memorial Hospital/Student Health Services at 864-9570 to register.
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THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH EDUCATION
6
Wednesday, January 13, 1988/University Daily Kansan
Legislature
Continued from p.1
"Qualified admissions is extremely controversial, but there seems to be a little more support because of the endorsement by the Regents," she said.
"One of the chief concerns with the proposal is whether or not we are going about this in the wrong way by
restricting admissions at the universities instead of putting more funding in the public schools." Branson said. "Couldn't beured wouldn't be remedial problems."
Solbach, who has been opposed to the proposal, said he viewed it differently now than when he first heard
about it.
"I thought it was a mistake at the time it was first introduced, but I would like to keep an open mind," Solbach said.
"In my opinion, to a great extent the proposal would still leave admission open.
Although legislators said they were optimistic that a portion of Margin of Excellence would pass, they were less optimistic about a qualified admissions plan.
Governor says education top priority
By James Buckman
Kansan staff writer
Modern demands for increased productivity require that education be assigned top priority, Gov. Mike Hayden told legislators in last night's State of the State address.
Because of that, Hayden said he was endorsing the Board of Regents Margin of Excellence proposal to upgrade university faculty salaries and enhance university programs.
The governor put $41.3 million for the Margin of Excellence program into his budget request for the coming fiscal year in order to increase salaries of teaching faculty members an average of 8.5 percent.
"When students attend a Regents university they must have a highly-facultified faculty and a classroom environment conducive to learning. It is the goal of our recommendations." Hayden said.
The Regents had sought $47 million over three fiscal years. Hayden chose to finance 88 percent of the plan in one year rather than try to commit
future legislatures to completing the program.
Most local legislators said yesterday that they were pleased with the support Hayden gave the program but that they thought it would take time to get the program approved for the program would be as large as promised.
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, said, "The are the best budget recommendations I've seen in six years and probably in history. But I think we have more work to do. . . I'm not satisfied until we get 100 percent."
State Rep. Denise Apt, R-Iola, chairman of the House education committee, said, "Last year was difficult for all of us because we walked in the door and had to make cuts. With the new money proposed this year, we can step forward from the recession and we were in last year because of the recession."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said Havden's still appearance was too low.
"It was encouraging, but I'd rather start further up the ladder," he said. "I think members of his party in the Legislature will trim more out of it."
Hayden also endorsed the Regents controversial qualified admissions proposal, which would end automatic admission of Kansas high school graduates to the state's universities. Many legislators won't want to end the open admission policy.
"With freshman dropout rates reaching 20 to 25 percent and millions of dollars dedicated to remedial education, reform must be considered," Havden said.
Solbach said that he had mixed feelings on the proposal and that restricting admission could erode support for higher education.
"I think we need to look at the proposal very carefully," he said. "We need to make sure that it is not a plan to reduce education for higher education or more quality education and more quality students."
State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, said that she would not support the proposal and that it appeared to her that the Regents must have been instructed to accept it as a tradeoff for Margin of Excellence.
The Associated Press supplied some information for this story.
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7
NationWorld
Number of reported cases of AIDS passes 50,000 in U.S., officials say
ATLANTA — AIDS struck more than 20,000 people in the United States in 1987, and the total number of cases reported nationwide passed the 50,000 mark as 1988 opened, federal health officials said yesterday.
The Centers for Disease Control, which keeps track of AIDS cases and deaths in the U.S., received reports of 20,620 new cases last year, or nearly 400 a week, said spokesman Gayle Lloyd.
That was up 58.5 percent from the 13,008 new AIDS cases reported in 1986, according to CDC figures. In 1985, the number of new cases reported was about 8,300.
By Jan. 4, the last date for which figures are available, the total count of AIDS cases nationwide had reached 50,265, Lloyd said. In all, 28,149 Americans, including 458 children.
Canadian jet lands safely after bomb threat
have died from the disease since it was recognized in 1981.
The CDC estimates that the disease
strike 270,000 Americans and kill
179,000.
EDMONTON, Alberta — A Canadian jumbo jet bound from Amsterdam to Vancouver with 263 people aboard landed safely yesterday after anNOTE was found in a washroom having explosives were on the plane.
Timothy Dondero, chief of the CDC's AIDS surveillance branch, said homosexual activity still accounts for about two-thirds of the AIDS cases, and about 17 percent can be attributed to contaminated needles.
Harry Hull of New Mexico, president of the Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists, said there was little comfort in the consistency of AIDS statistics.
Sgt. John Metcalfe of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police said one of
"The fact that we've reached 50,000 cases is cause for concern," he said. "The cases we're seeing now are in people who were infected from two to 10 years ago."
the 13 crew members found the note and gave it to the pilot when the Canadian Airlines International DC-10 was about 30 minutes from a scheduled stop at Edmonton.
Flight 43 landed 10 minutes late, and all 250 passengers left the plane safely.
News Roundup
AIRPLANE ACCIDENTS INCREASE$The scheduled U.S. airlines large aircraft had 31 accidents during 1987, the highest number in 13 years, including four fatal crashes that claimed 231 lives, the federal government reported yesterday.
BIDEN MEETS KINNOCKSeen, Joseph Biden, who quit the presidential race after being accused of plagiarism, met Labor Party leader Neil Kinnock, the man whose stirring campaign speech Biden borrowed heavily from, yesterday in London.
LASER CLEANSES BLOOD: A medical research team in Texas, financed in part by the Pentagon's "Star Wars" anti-missile program, has successfully used a laser along with a non-toxic dye to cleanse donated blood of the deadly AIDS virus and other infectious agents, including the herpes virus.
PARENTAL KIDNAPPING PROTECTED:The Supreme Court ruled 80 yesterday that Federal courts are powerless to curb the growing phenomenon of "parental kidnapping" in child-custody disputes. The 1880 Federal Parental Kidnapping Prevention Act
doesn't authorize federal courts to resolve conflicting custody rulings by courts in different states.
MOSLEM FUNDAMENTALIST KILLED Dishraeli troops shot and killed a Moslem fundamentalist in a violent demonstration yesterday, and a U.N. envoy's attempts to inspect refugee camps were frustrated by soldiers and protesters. Military spokesman said the army imposed curfews on five of the eight Gaza Palestinian refugee camps.
FIRE ON TANKER: Firefighters struggled yesterday to put out a fire aboard a gasoline-laden Greek tanker struck in an Iraqi missile attack that killed two seamen and left six missing. Two Iraqi missiles slammed into the tanker Monday night, setting the engine room and crew quarters ablaze.
OIL SPILL DISPISIPATING The million-gallon oil spill that has contaminated northern stretches of the Ohio River and threatened public water supplies is already thinning and should dissipate before it reaches the Mississippi River. In West Virginia, officials downstream from Wheeling took steps to keep the oil from entering their water system.
Dorm Shirts Team Uniforms Party Favors
Valentines
Restaurant
OFFERING DIRECT PRINTING OR TRANSFERS FOR THE INDIVIDUAL, TEAM, OR ORGANIZATION
Quality Printing from the Plains
Quick Service Quality & Affordability
PRAIRIE GRAPHICS
ALL YOU CAN EAT BUFFET 7 days a week 11-12 Lunch 5-9 Evening
2325 PONDEROSA DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KS. 66046
$1.00 or 50¢ VALUE
$1.00 off Evening Buffet 7 days a week, or 50% off
Luncheon Buffet 7 days a week. One coupon per
customer, offer expires 1-27-88 at Valentino's.
Not good with other Specials
$1.00 or 50¢ VALUE
$1.00 off Evening Buffet 7 days a week, or 50% off
Luncheon Buffet 7 days a week. One coupon per
customer, expires 1-27-88 at Valentino's.
Not good with other Specials
749-4244
This Week at The Jazzhaus
926 $ \frac {1}{2} $ Mass.
. . . .
Wednesday, Jan. 13:
Lonnie Ray's Blues Jam
Thursday, Jan. 14:
Common Ground-Reggae
Friday and Saturday, Jan.15 & 16 Rock your Soul with The BelAirs
The Athlete's Foot CLEARANCE SALE
Make sure to take advantage of the super savings as we make room for new merchandise. Choose from a variety of famous-brand footwear and activewear.
NIKE
Nike shoes as low as $31.99
Reebok
NIKE APPAREL
OVER 50% OFF
841-1166
Reebok shoes as low as $39.99
HIND AND NIKE
TIGHTS starting
at $19.99
544 West 23rd
as low as $5.99 Check out Nike's newest shoe THE NIKE AIR ASSAULT
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841-
6966
LEVI'S JACKETS
Til
see
styl
seen
fe
Levi's " Denim Jacket . . .
Nothing's changed except where
wear it
SALE
Times and fashion change. But you still see this classic everywhere. Levi's* fit and styling are a fashion tradition that never seems out of place. So you'll always look and feel great whether you're dressed for the
swing shift or a night on the town.
Designed for comfort. Built to out-last trends. Styled to go with double heavyweight den with double stitched seams, classic copper buttons and side pockets. Levi's *den* jacket. Setting the pace in style and comfort.
Reg. $39
Today through Sunday e.
$2999
- Blue denim only - unlined
LEVI'S
JEANSWEAR
SALE
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$49^{99}$
Reg. to $65
• Blue denim only • lined
Open Thursday Evenings and Sundays
740 Massachusetts
KING Jeans
LEVI'S
LITTLE NEVER GREW OUT OF STYLE
843-3933
SallieMae
SALLIE MAE
EMPLOYMENT
OPPORTUNITIES
The Loan Servicing Center/Kansas, a division of SALLIE MAE, has immediate openings for part-time/on call employment. Desirable qualifications include knowledge of common business practices and procedures, good written and oral communications skills, and flexibility in typing preferred for most positions. Responding to data entry, note examinations, customer service, document and file retention, microfilming and other started
customer service, document and file
container service and other clerk's
work. Must possess K-4 training.
We are a participating state work-study employer, students are urged to apply. Full time positions also available. Must be able to work either 8:30 a.m. p.m. or 12:30 p.m. p.m. Apply in person at The Loan Servicing Center/Kansas 2000 Bluffs Drive, Lawrence K8 66044. We are an Equal Opportunity Employer.
SALLIE MAE EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
What Should You Wear For Safe Sex?
婚戒
Paid for by Free Methodist Church 802 W. 22nd Terrace Lawrence, Kansas 66046
8
Wednesday, January 13, 1988/University Daily Kansan
Condoms
Continued from p. 1
Other organizations speaking out against the distribution of the condoms are the St. Lawrence Catholic Center and the Free Methodist Church.
Father Vince Krische of the Catholic center, 1631 Crescent Road, said he had received a number of complaints from parents of students enrolled in the University. In a letter he sent last week to the parents of Catholic students who are registered at the center, Krische recommended writing letters to the University administration protesting distribution of condoms.
AIDS...
WHAT EVERYONE SHOULD KNOW
AIDS
QUESTIONS
AND
ANSWERS
Jeff Klein/KANSAN
The contents of the AIDS prevention kit that was distributed at the Kansas Union during enrollment.
"I think it's bad for the University. It promotes promiscuity and doesn't say anything about morals. The illusion that is this safe sex. Some say that only 70 percent of condoms are safe. We should educate people about AIDS, not give out condoms," he said.
Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Hospital, said that the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta estimate that by the year 1991, 10 percent of the college population in the United States could have AIDS. That translates to about 2,500 students at KU. He added that even with the use of a condom, there was still no guarantee that the disease would not be contracted.
Jason Krakow, student body president, said the task force included the condom in the packet to create publicity and send a signal to people that AIDS is a threat.
"The University needs to move forward on this issue," Krakow said. "This is a step in the right direction. It will create some spark. A lot of people are interested. The response varies from people laughing to people who are serious. Anytime we are reaching people and bring focus to this issue, the task force and Student
Senate should be proud."
Krakow said that KU was the second university in the United States to use student activity fees to distribute condoms. The University of Iowa spent $65 from a presidential contingency fund, but distribution at Iowa was limited.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the spending of student activity fees for the safer-sex kits was in accordance with University laws and procedures.
Plan for elementary school boundaries provokes petition
By Kevin Dilmore
If parents had known about proposed elementary school boundary changes before they voted on a bond issue that generated $8.6 million for the Lawrence school system, the bond might not have passed, said one parent during a public hearing last night.
"Had neighbors known about the boundaries, the bond issue would have been different," said Kathryn Ramp, KU associate professor of human development.
The final public hearing for proposed changes in school boundaries and the school "pairing" system drew a crowd of about 200 to the Lawrence High School.
Proposed districts draw fire
Kansan staff writer
Parents and a 10-member panel discussed a boundary realignment plan proposed to the Lawrence school board Nov. 30. The proposal also would pair six elementary
schools in an effort to decrease class sizes.
He pairing plan would match Pinckney with Riverside; Grant with Woodland; and East Heights with New York. One school in each pair would house kindergarten students, and the other would be for third through sixth grades.
Ramp, who has a son in kindergarten at Hillcrest Elementary School, said she had circulated a petition throughout her Alvamar neighborhood.
She said the petition asked parents if they would like the option of having Quail Run, when opened for the 1988-89 school year, considered their neighborhood school. She also encouraged to stay at the Hillcrest school would be allowed to do so.
"Of the 75 households I asked to sign the petition, virtually 100 percent did so." Ramp said.
No membership fees
Electric Beach
Looking for ON CAMPUS?
Please see page 2
1601 W. 23rd Southern Hills Mall (next to Gammons)
Electric Beach
lamping salon
$5.00 off 10 tanning sessions
Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9-9
Sat. 8-5
Sun. 12-5
Tanning is our business!
Sun. 12-5
(next to Gammon's)
841-3759
SAVE
ON THE BEST SELECTION OF USED BOOKS IN TOWN
NOW PRELEASING FOR FALL NAISMITH PLACE APARTMENTS
Shop Early Avoid The Lines!!
ku
with a min. of $50 purchase not valid with other garment coupons Expires 1/15/88
$500 off any sweatshirt
Jayhawk Bookstore
We Hope
To See You Often!
ON CAMPUS...please see pg.2
1420 Crescent Rd. At The Top Of Naimish Hill
FREE PARKING (913) 843-3826
Open Jan. 13th 8 a.m.-8 p.m.
Jan. 14th 8 a.m.-8 p.m.
Jacuzzi In Every Apartment!
Two Bedroom Satellite Television Fully Equipped Kitchen 1 Block from KU Bus Route Immediate Openings Available
Park-like Setting Laundry Facilities On-site Management Private Balcony or Patio Furnished or Unfurnished
HOURS: Monday-Friday 2 to 6 Saturday 10 to 4
Ousdahl & 25th Court 841-1815
HAPPY HOUR
AT Costello's Greenhouse Restaurant 3400 W.6th 749-1255
Monday Night—Pizza
Tuesday Night—Taco Night
Wednesday Night—Pasta
50 $ ^{¢} $ Draws
1. 25 Margaritas
1. 25 House Wine
Thursday Night—Chicken Wings 1.00 Wells
"Great Sunday Brunch" 1.00 Bloody Mary's
The munchies start at 5:00
Sunday Night—All Lasagna You Can Eat for only 5.95
TAKING CARE OF YOU
I
T
The KU Bookstore Staff are available to assist you in finding every book required by your instructors.
Shop after five and avoid the crunch. The KU Bookstore in the Kansas Union will be open till six this evening.
Taking care of you with quality, new and used textbooks and study guides. That's what the KU Bookstore is all about
KU Bookstore Kansas Union Extended Hours 8:30 - 6 thru January 15th
TEXT Books KUBookstores KANSAS UNION
9
University Daily Kansan/Wednesday, January 13, 1988
China rejects idea for Soviet summit
The Associated Press
BEIJING - China yesterday indirectly rejected a Soviet suggestion for a summit between the two communist powers, repeating the condition that Vietnamese forces must withdraw from Cambodia.
The Foreign Ministry issued this statement responding to an overture by Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev for a summit:
"Chairman Deng Xiaoping has made quite clear the conditions for a high-level meeting between China and the Soviet Union. It is the strong aspiration of the international community that Vietnam should withdraw all its troops from Kampuchea (Cambodia) promptly."
Soviet-backed Vietnam invaded Cambodia in December 1978, outing the Klimber Rouge regime supported by China, creating a new communist government.
China previously has included two
other conditions for talks between the leaders: a withdrawal of Soviet troops from Afghanistan and a reduction of Soviet military forces on the 3,000-mile Sino-Soviet border.
This time the ministry statement did not mention those issues.
Gorbachev, in a recent interview in Moscow with the Chinese weekly magazine Outlook, made the summit conference suggestion.
The last top-level meeting was in 1969, when Soviet Prime Minister Alexei N. Kosygin met with Premier Chou Enlai. Ten years earlier, Chinese and Soviet party leaders Mao Tse-tung and Nikita S. Khrushev met; but the following year, the two nations split in an angry dispute over ideological matters.
In his remarks on Sino-Soviet relations, Gorbachev said "both sides believe the objective conditions exist for holding a summit."
Commonwealth
Bangalore Mainteers & Senior Citizens $2.50
Granada
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847-819 R (R) 7.20, 9.45
NUTS
Producers and the Empire
10206 Massachusetts
847-819 R (R) 7.30
Varsity
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RAW
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847-819 R (R) 7.30, 9.20
Hillcrest
WALLSTREET (R) *4.30, 7.10, 9.30
OVERBOARD (PG) *4.40, 7.30, 9.40
DANCERS (R) *5.00, 7.25, 9.20
BROADCAST NEWS (R) *4.35, 7.15, 9.45
THROW NEMA (PG-13) *4.50, 7.35, 9.35
Cinema Twin
847-819 R (R) 6.00
BATTERIES NOT INCLUDED (PG) 7.10, 9.10
THREE MEN & A BABY (PG) 7.25, 9.35
Showtimes for Today Only
FOR WOMEN ONLY
40% OFF IN JANUARY
• Certified Instructors
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Aerobics/CPR
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Body Composition
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Whitpool and Sauna
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Message by
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Transferable to 2500
Clubs
Semester Memberships
Available
NEW! GERSTRUNG
AEROBIC FLOOR
Body Shapes
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601 Kasold Westridge Shopping Ctr.
843-4040
RL
Rissman Liquor
FOR WOMEN ONLY
40% OFF IN JANUARY
NEW! GERSTRUNG
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Rissman Liquor
Wide
Selection!
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1302 W. 6th
843-1301
BodyShapes
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601 Kasold Westridge Shopping Ctr.
Commonwealth
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1202 Massachusetts
843-7690
NUTS
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(PG) 4.40, 7.30, 9.40
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1013 Massachusetts
843-1650
RAW
(R) 7:30, 9.20
Hillecrest
Wo & Wide
843-2400
WALLSTREET
(R) 4.30, 7.10, 9.30
OVERBOARD
(PG) 4.40, 7.30, 9.40
DANCERS
(R) 5.00, 7.25, 9.20
BROADCAST NEWS
(R) 4.35, 7.15, 9.45
THROW MAMMA
FROM ME TRAIN
(PG-13) 4.50, 7.35, 9.35
Cinema Twin
2341 & Downtown
843-1400
BATTERIES NOT INCLUDED (PG) 7:10, 9:10
THREE MEN & A BABY
(PG) 7:25, 9:35
Sometimes for Today Only
RL
Rissman Liquor
Wide Selection!
Competitive Prices!
1302 W. 6th
843-1301
Bass
Since 1876
Rangeley
1 Shoe
On The Hill
Men's $46.95
Women's $44.95
Semi-Annual Clearance Sale In Progress
College Shoe Shoppe
837 Massachusetts
9:30-5:30 Mon.-Sat.
til 8:30 p.m. Thurs.
BodyShapes
Bass Since 1876
Bass
Since 1876
Rangeley
1
Shoe
On The Hill
Men's $46.95
Women's $44.95
Semi-Annual Clearance Sale In Progress
Rangeley
1
Shoe
9:30-5:30 Mon.-Sat.
'til 8:30 p.m. Thurs.
Sun. 1-5
S
JANUARY Clearance SALE
JANUARY
Cleanance
SALE
UP TO
50%OFF
FALL & WINTER
MERCHANDISE
Malls Shopping Center
711 W 23rd St.
Hours: Monday-Thursday 10-8:30
Friday & Saturday 10-6
Sunday 1-5
UP TO
50%OFF
FALL & WINTER
MERCHANDISE
carousel
Doreta's Decorative Arts
• Baskets • Dry flowers
• Rugs • Mirrors
• Candles • Frames
LESSONS, SUPPLIES, GIFTS,
WOOD PRODUCTS,
CRAFTS
Retail and Wholesale
If you can write your name,
you can learn to paint.
2340 Alabama
9:30-5:00 Monday-Saturday
9:30-8:30 Thursday
843-7255
H.E.R.O.
Higher Education Rescue Operation Lobby Day '88
On Tuesday January 19 nearly 200 students will visit the statehouse in Topeka and lobby for increases in State funding for KU
There's still time to join our effort!
SUNROAD
Call the Student Senate office at 864-3710 for more information.
Just think of it as a 4x4 tanning booth.
See Us in the
Southern Hills Mall Saturday, Jan.16th
8:30 a.m.-Midnight
$7995.
SUZUKI
No Payments until May!
*Plus Freight and dealer installed options With approved credit
Olathe Ford-Suzuki
I-35 & 150 Hwy. Kansas City (913)782-0881
30 minutes from Lawrence!
10
Wednesday, January 13. 1988/University Daily Kansar
Short period for adding classes irks students
University's attempt to stabilize rosters forces premature decisions, some say
By James Buckman
By James Buckman Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Students hoping to add a class this semester may see increased difficulties associated with the process. For the second consecutive semester, the add period will last only two weeks.
Last year, students could add classes during the first four weeks of the semester. That time was cut to two weeks last fall.
The idea of limiting add time was conceived by a committee studying enrollment at the University of Kansas.
Last year, the proposal was recommended to the University administration, but no final action was taken. Each of the University's presidents adopted the policy on their own and cheated to continue it through this semester.
The intent of the policy, which is popular with instructors, is to stabilize rosters earlier, limiting the distractions caused by late additions to classes.
For some students, the policy is a problem, in large part because they aren't aware of the change. Also, some students said two weeks wasn't enough time to decide whether they wanted a particular class.
Kathy Siren, Prairie Village graduate student, said, "I've been on both sides of it. I've been a graduate teaching assistant, so I can see the teacher's point of view, but I really think that the point of add-drop is to give the students a chance to see how the class works for them."
Part of the problem is that the shorter add period doesn't match the time period for dropping classes. The longer add period drops classes over a period of five weeks.
The three-week time difference means a student can drop a class
after the add period expires, wasting a class space that could be used by someone who needs it.
Patrick Brungardt, Leavenworth sophomore, said, "That really irks the hell out of me. If I'm sitting in a class trying to decide if I want to take it but there aren't any slots open, I end up having to audit the class or something like that, which means I'm basically just wasting my time."
Dave Platt, Roeland Park senior,
said. "I can understand some of the
logic behind it because you get into a
class too late if you are adding. But I
don't think that gives you time to
add other people are not dropping."
Warren Lucas, Lawrence graduate student, said he didn't think the shorter period would cause problems.
The Student Senate is trying to work out a compromise on the add-
drop time. It recently passed a resolution calling for a three-week add period and a 17-day drop period.
Jason Krakow, student body president, said that the Senate would work at getting the policy changed for next year.
"The shortened period doesn't really allow the student the best opportunity to get a solid feel for the class," he said. "An extension of that by a week would certainly allow people in classes that meet once a week or that meet even twice a week the opportunity to really get a feel for what the class is about."
Brower Burchill, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, said that to help students with the shorter add period and to help alleviate long lines at Strong Hall, notices announcing which classes had been closed would be posted around campus and updated daily.
Mane Tamers
$5 OFF
Shampoo, Haircut
& Style
Clip
& Save
$10 OFF
Perm & Cut
2338 Alabama
841-5499
Exp. 2/10/87
SPRING BREAK SPECIAL
$55.00
From Now Until March 13th
You Can Join Junkyard's Jym
For Eight Weeks For $55.00
JUNKYARD'S
842-4966
535
Gateway
JYM
JUNKYARD'S
FURNITURE RENTAL
Quality Furnishings at
Affordable prices
.
Month to Month Rentals • Rent to Own
Sofas • Sleepers • Dinettes • Desks
Beds • Chairs • Tables • Bunk Beds • Televisions
Book Shelves • Lamps • Dressers • Recliners
Entertainment Centers • VCRs • Stereos
Thompson-Crawley FURNITURE RENTAL 520 E. 22nd Terrace 841-5212
SPRING BREAK SPECIAL
$55.00
From Now Until
March 13, 1988
You Can Join
The Body Boutique
For Eight Weeks
For $55.00
BODY
BOUTIQUE
The Women's Fitness Facility
925 Iowa 749-2424
BODY BOUTIQUE
The Women's Fitness Facility
Supplies Meet Demand
We're stocked up on all of the Pens, Pencils, Notebooks and Materials needed for a successful semester.
DATA COMP 4
Spiral notebook with pockets
regular price: $1.25 SALE PRICE: ¢.75
JANSPORT BACKPACK
Mid-term nylon backpack
regular price: $16.55
SALE PRICE: $10.00
EAST-PAK BACKPACK
520 Cordura Backpack
regular price: $15.45 SALE PRICE: $10.00
BIC PENS
Big package of 10
regular price: $1.79
SALE PRICE: $1.00
Free Student Planners
Free Hershey Candy
All items while supplies last!
KANSAS UNION
EXTENDED HOURS
OPEN 8:30 - 6
Thru January 15th
BURGE UNION
OPEN 8:30 - 7
Mon - Thur
8:30 - 5 Fri
regu.
SUPPLIES
KU Bookstores
KANSAS UNION BURGE UNION
SUPPLIES
KU on WHEELS SPRING SERVICES Passes Now on Sale
in the Kansas Union (4th level) at the options table and the Burge Union (3rd level) at the candy counter and the SUA Office
K
University Daily Kansan/Wednesday, January 13. 1988
11
New Jersey principal decides to stay at job
The Associated Press
PATERSON, N.J. — Controversial principal Joe Clark, who roams the hallways of his high school armed with a baseball bat and bullhorn, said yesterday he had changed his mind and planned to stay at the school, rather than join the Reagan administration.
"Winners don't quit, and quitters don't win," Clark said, adding he wouldn't allow his clash with the opponent in a battle that would run him out of town.
Clark told reporters on Monday that he planned to accept a job offer from Gary Bauer, head of President Reagan's office of policy development.
Bauer said he didn't have anything special in mind for Clark but said he would be willing to talk with Clark if
he lost his job at Eastside High School after a fight with the school board over the expulsion of 60 students.
Clark said he was reconsidering a move to the nation's capital after discussing his decision with Mayor Frank X. Graves, school Superintendent Frank Napier and his church pastor.
Clark said he planned to visit Washington on Friday and make a trip to the White House.
"Come next year, I will be right there at Eastside doing my job in the most formidable manner imaginable." he said yesterday.
Clark, 50, came to national attention after Reagan and U.S. Education Secretary William Bennett praised his stern approach to dealing with chronic truancy.
Total Tanning
Total Tanning
beds
booths
accessories
THE TOTAL LOOK
15 sessions
for $30 (reg. $37.50)
842-5921
Offer good with this coupon. Only one coupon per customer.
Coupon expires 3/15/88
THE TOTAL LOOK
WEDNESDAY, JULY 23, 1965
Welcome Back Sale...
Winter Jackets...30% Off
Men's fashion winter jackets
Sportshirts...30% Off
Mexx•Generra ... 50% Off
Young men's related separates, sweaters, slacks, shirts.
Khaki Slacks...20% Off
Pleated, cuffed and reverse leg style.
Fashion Jeans...$1999 Stonewashed and white washed styles.
Items are select groups, limited quantities. Hurry while they last.
litwin's
Where clothes are for fun
830 Mass. B43-6155
STUDENTS Check out these Spring Break Specials
Now's a good time to be thinking about your trip for Spring Break.
Hurry! These prices won't last long! We can help design a fantastic Spring Break Package just for you!
SKI
Ski Break For The Slopes!
Steamboat $256
Includes:
6 days/5 nights condominium lodging with 4 full days lifts, 4 days ski rental. (March 13-18,
1988) plus much more!
Other Packages Available: Keystone, Winter Park
South Padre Island $208
Fort Walton Beach $136
Daytona Beach $139
Miami Beach $143
Mustang Island $166
Galveston Island $134
Includes:
7 nights hotel accommodada-
Break For The Beach
TORNADO
7 nights hotel accommodations and much more!
CARIBBEAN
COASTAL TRAVELS
Nassau $492
Freeport $543
Jamaica $618
St. Thomas $747
Includes: Roundtrip air from KANSAS CITY
7 nights hotel accommodations
(4 night packages available)
Other packages Available: Hawaii, Mexico
national person and heard
TRAVEL CENTER
Southern Hills Center
1601 West 23rd
M-F 9:5-30, Sat. 9:30-2 p.m.
prices are per person and based on maximum unit occupancy
Call for details!
TRAVEL CENTER
THE Palace Cards & Gifts
20-50% OFF Clearance SALE!
Large Selection of
T-Shirts
Games & Toys
Stuffed Animals
Animal Slippers
Lamps & Frames
Off-The-Wall Alarm
Teddy Bear Story
Mickey Mouse Items
Christmas Merchandise
Mon- Sat: 9:30 to 5:30 • Sun: 1-5 • Thursday until 8:30
843-1099 • in Downtown • 8th and
Mast
Dance Audition
University Dance Company
Monday, January 18, 1988
6:00 242 Robinson
no solo material required call 864-4264
Fantastic Buys on Darkroom Supplies
Item Other Camera Store Discount Store CameraAmerica
D-76 Developer 3.53/gal. 3.49 2.87
Dektol Developer 3.70/gal. 3.69 3.04
Fixer 3.28/gal. 3.69 2.67
Stop Bath 3.61 3.29 2.94
Photo Flo 2.69 2.29 2.21
8x10 Polycon F 100 41.77 39.99 35.22
25 12.00 11.99 10.13
8x10 Polyfiber F 100 53.04 44.99 44.76
25 15.27 12.99 12.87
TMax 100' Rolls 27.96 24.99 23.13
Developing Tanks 13.95 7.99 6.52
Steel Reels 6.95 2.99 2.99
Trays 11x14 (3) 12.95 ---- 9.95
Yashica NEC
“EVERYTHING TO MAKE YOUR PHOTOGRAPHY PICTURE PERFECT”
Canon Yashica NEC
Fuji Kodak Nikon
Minolta Sonu Tamro
CameraAmerica
One Hour Photo
1610 W.23rd
Tamron Lenses & Accessories
841-7205
- Quality One Hour Photo Finishing - Enlargements - VCR's - Complete Video Accessories - Prints from Slides
12
Wednesday, January 13, 1988/University Daily Kansan
Professor will observe elections during his visit to Haiti this week
By Brenda Finnell Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
When U.S. citizens go to the polls, they either cast their votes behind a curtain or place their ballots in a box. But private voting is not a privilege Haitian citizens will have when they vote this Sunday, said a KU professor who will observe the presidential election during a visit to Haiti.
Bryant Freeman, professor of French and Italian, said Monday that Haitians must vote by publicly declaring their choices in the election place. Voting is mandatory, and election officials can write down each citizen's vote. Election boycotts can be punished with a jail sentence.
Haiti is an island nation in the West Indies, about an hour and 40 minutes by air from Miami.
Freeman left for Haiti yesterday on a weeklong visit. He plans to finish working on two books, but he also will observe the election. He said he would not be an official observer.
One of Freeman's books, sponsored by the U.S. Agency for International Development, will standardize the written form of the Haitian language and will be used in Haitian medical books a book is a manual of medical phrases or English speaking medical personnel working in Haiti.
Freeman has taught for 10 years at KU, which is one of only two universities in the United States that has a Haitian language program. The other is Indiana University.
Freeman said Haitian creating procedures should create extraordinary electoral circumstances. "It's going to be an amazing election," he said.
Haiti's elections this month come after violence closed the polls during voting Nov. 29. That day, polls opened at 7:30 a.m. and closed at 9 a.m. after 34 people were killed in election violence, Freeman said.
Freeman said members of the Tonton Macoutes, an organization of former Haitian president Jean-Claude Duvalier's, were responsible for the army of the provisional government, also aided this organization, he said.
Duvalier left Haiti Feb. 7, 1986,
ending a 28-year Duvalier family
dictatorship. Gen. Henri Namphy
now leads the provisional government.
Although he does not expect similar violence this time, Freeman said he would not take needless risks during his week in Haiti.
The U.S. government supplied military equipment that the Haitian army used in the November election violence, Freeman said. Consequently, Haitian citizens and government officials feel Haiti's relationship with the United States is tense and unfriendly, he said.
"America is very unpopular," he said. "The Haitian provisional government sees the U.S. as trying to interfere with the affairs of a foreign country."
After the November incidents, the United States cut off all aid to Haiti except humanitarian assistance, Freeman said.
The U.S. government believed the trucks, guns and other supplies would help the Haitian army ensure a free and orderly election, Freeman said. U.S. officials believed the provisional government represented law and order and did not expect the supplies to cause bloodshed at the polls, he said.
Robert D. Tomasek, KU professor of political science, also said the United States was surprised by the November violence. He said the State Department assumed Namphy would organize a stable election, but did not assess his motives correctly.
Tomasek also said some critics of the U.S. military aid thought the United States should have cut off aid before the November election to encourage Haitians to have a peaceful election.
Freeman said the United Nations declared Haiti one of the three poorest nations in the world. He said he had noticed the country growing poorer during his visits to that country in the last 30 years.
Overpopulation and soil erosion are two serious problems Haiti faces, Freeman said. In 1985, there were more than 5.7 million people living in the country, which is about the size of Maryland.
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University Daily Kansan/Wednesday, January 13, 1988
Sports
13
Kansas drops one wins six over break but loses Marshall
By Elaine Sung
Kansan sports writer
Kansas made it through the winter break with only one loss, that to St John's, and now faces the toughest part of its schedule with the Big Eight Conference games. The Associated Press poll now ranks Kansas as No. 16, up two places from last month.
Coach Larry Brown and the Jayhawks must cope also with the loss of Archie Marshall, limited action from the squad. The team is grounding Maryin Brach's eligibility.
21
OURI
21
KANSAS
14
However, the Jayhawks have found some other players who have become important role players able to turn out good clutch performances and are finally finding a balance on their rosters. In order to do well the rest of the season.
Kansas forward Milt Newton (No. 21) has become a regular in the Javahawk starting lineup after the loss of Archie Marshall, Kansas
Kansas went 6-1 during break. The following is a wrap-up of those games.
Kansas blew out the Rider Rough-riders at Allen Field House in its last home game of December. Danny Manning led the Jayhawks with his second 30-point performance and grabbed 14 rebounds. Lincoln Minor, Kevin Pritchard and Mike Masucci all had double-digit performances as well.
Rider was led by a newcomer, freshman forward Jim Cleveland, who scored 22 points and recorded five rebounds. Senior forward Ron Simpson helped with 17 points and three rebounds in the game that pushed the Jayhawks' record to 6-2.
Kansas 74, North Carolina State 67
Jim Valvano complained that Kansas had a crowd advantage when North Carolina State lost to the shawks last year in Kemper Arena.
This time, Valvano had the home court advantage and national television coverage, and it looked like the Wolfpack might succeed in pulling off a victory.
Kansas played poorly in the first half and was unable to control the pace of the game. The Jayhawks committed too many turnovers as a result, and they trailed by as many as nine points.
Kansas came back in the second half, moving into a 2-3 zone to slow
the pace. It was not until the 4:06 mark in the second half, with key shots by Manning and Marshall, that Kansas got only its second lead of the game 66-65.
The Jayhawks slammed the door on the Wolfpack with layups by Piper, Manning and free throws by Scooter Barry.
North Carolina State was led by senior guard Vinny Del Negro (17 points, three rebounds), junior forward Chucky Brown (16 points, two rebounds) and junior center Charles Bord (10 points, nine rebounds).
Manning set his season-high with 32 points and six rebounds, while Marshall put in 12 points and grabbed seven rebounds.
Clint Normore, a junior free safety on the Kansas football team, made his first appearance as a Kansas basketball player. Normore played guard and scored two points in the game.
Kansas 64, Memphis State 62
Kansas was barely able to squeak by with a victory in this close game, playing the Memphis State Tigers to the wire.
"Let's say," Brown said, "that we were just fortunate to hang on."
Manning turned in a team-high 19 points and 16 rebounds, but also committed six turnovers. Kansas' free throw problems surfaced again in the first half, when it could manage just 10 for 22 from the line.
Despite the low percentages, Kansas led at halftime 32-27. But Memphis State used a pressure defense and was able to pull within three points with 38 seconds remaining.
But the Tigers' luck ran out when guard John McLaughlin missed a three-point shot with 20 seconds on the clock, and guard Dwight Boyd fouled Pritchard, who then made both his free throws.
Tiger guard Eliott Perry failed to land a three-pointer with eight secounds, but the 3-pointers
Marshall and Pritchard were the only two other Jayhawks able to finish with double-digit figures. The Tigers were led by Perry with 23 points.
St. John's 70. Kansas 56
St. John's was able to kick Kansas' seven-game winning streak and
avenge the Redmen's only loss of the season in the finals of the ECAC Holiday Festival.
Kansas beat St. John's earlier in the season at home 63-54, but the Redmen, who captured their fourth consecutive Festival championship, lost to Boston early in the beginning of the second half, which belined them clinch the victory.
St. John's did better statistically as well, shooting over 41 percent to Kansas' 33 percent, and the Jayhawks suffered from its old turnover
problem again, committing 20 in the game.
Marshall sat out last year after injuring the same knee against Duke in the Final Four in 1986. It was said that Marshall's return to the lineup was crucial to the Jayhawks if they wanted to reach the NCAA finals this
But perhaps far worse than just the game loss was the loss of Marshall, who strained his left knee with 11:34 to play in the first half and was unable to return to the game. It proved to be a career-end injury.
Manning was Kansas' only double-digit scoring player. In fact, the next best performance was center Marvin Branch's, with eight points and 12 rebounds.
year.
The Redmen were led by senior forward Shelton Jones (17 points and eight rebounds), junior forward Matt Brust (14 points and nine rebounds) and junior transfer guard Greg Harvey (13 points).
Seattle, falling behind by as many as 19 points in the first half. It was the Jayhawks' first outing without Marshall, and with the Huskies shooting 57 percent in the first half, it looked like Kansas would not last the night.
Kansas suffered a big scare in
But Kansas pulled back in the second half, using a man-to-man defense to stop the Huskies from landing any more three-point shots. Washington was eight for 13 in three pointers for the game.
See HOOPS, p. 16, col. 1
Jayhawks hope to break Iowa State's Hilton curse
By Elaine Sung
Kansan sports writer
It is known as a jinx, a curse that Kansas coach Larry Brown has not been able to shake off.
Brown is 0-4 in the Hilton Coliseum in Ames, Iowa, and when the 16th-anked Jayhawks meet the 14th-anked Iowa State Cyclones in that arena tonight, it will be one more chance to break the curse.
"It's been a tough place for us, but it's been tough for most teams." Brown said. "I know we'll have to play our best vet this year."
Game 15
And the Cyclones, with their best season start yet under Coach Johnny Orr, are just happy that the conference season has started.
"It ought to be one heck of a game," Orr said. "We're not planning anything different against (Daniel) Singing. We'll just play the way we play."
The biggest surprise for Orr and his team has been the emergence of senior forward Lafester Rhodes. He, along with teammate Jeff Grayer, are two of the top three scorers in the Big Eight.
Grayer, who last season had an average of 22 points and over seven rebounds a game, has been consistent this year, racking up about 25.5 points a game.
The Jayhawks, 11-3, are coming off a Big Eight season-opening victory against Missouri. Iowa State, 13-2, won the game Saturday, when heat Dayton H4-80.
ku
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COACH: Larry Brown
Record: 11-3
Iowa State
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Record: 13-2
PROBABLE STARTERS
F-25 Danny Manning 61°0" 22.5 PQD F-44 Jeff Grayer 65°" 22.5
F-21 Milton Newton 64°" 22.5 F-25 Elmer Robinson 65°" 11.0
C-54 Marvine Branch 61°0" 8.4 C-5 Lafester Rhodes 68°" 23.9
G-12 Olive Livingston 60°" 3.6 G-3 Gary Thompsonks 63°" 11.9
G-14 Kevin Pritchard 63°" 11.0 G-4 Terry Woods 99°" 6.3
COVERAGE: Wed., Jan. 13 -- Hilton Coliseum, Ames,
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But Rhodes, whose scoring high last season was nine points against Oklahoma in the Big Eight tournament, has averaged 23.9 points a game so far this season.
"It a terrific lift with the way he's played," Orr said. "He's never played much before, and he has done a heck of a job with it."
Rhodes' sudden scoring spree has become another thing that Kansas has to worry about.
back to the lineup, he may be forced to turn the offense into playing a little more defense, playing four guards instead of the current three.
And with all the injuries, Brown's job is no easier. While he does not want to bring red shirt Sean Alvardo
"We'll be in big trouble if we do that, but we may have to play more zone to protect Manning," Brown said.
Also looming in the near future is the question of Marvin Branch's eligibility. Nothing has been announced yet, but if Branch is not deemed eligible, he may be assumed that he has been declared ineligible, Brown said.
KU women's basketball team prospers during winter break
By Keith Stroker
Kansan sports writer
Christmas break was a rest period for most of the students at the University of Kansas. The KU women's basketball team, now 10-3, had other ideas.
Over the holidays, the women were 5-1, including victories over Minnesota, Texas &M, Oral Roberts University, Missouri-Kansas City, and Oklahoma City University. Over the course of the San Diego State tournament, in which they lost to the home team in the championship game.
On Dec. 20, the Jayhawks traveled to Minneapolis to face the Minnesota Golden Gophers. The Jayhawks won 78-72, and were led by Lisa Dougherty's 17 points, Jackie Martin's 10 rebounds, and Lisa Bradby's eight assists.
Coach Marian Washington said that this game was a big victory for the Jayhawks on the road, knowing that the Gophers had defeated Missouri earlier in the season.
Next, the Jayhawks traveled to San Diego State to play in a fourteam tournament Dec. 29-30. The Jayhawks faced the Texas &M
"It it wasn't until the road game with Minnesota that I started to see the level of intensity that we were needing at that point," said Washington. "It was a very good ballgame for us."
Aggies in the opening round and won 72-55.
The Jayhawks were led by Deborah Richardson's 17 points, Jackie Martin's 16 rebounds, and Braddy's six assists. Washington said this was a very difficult game for his team, but the Lynch Heyeky, the former Kansas State coach who knew the Jayhawks and their style of play well.
"This was a very strong game for the University of Kansas," said Washington. "Our press worked well. We were able to pressure the entire 94 feet better than we were able to prior to that time."
The Jayhawks advanced to the championship game against San Diego State the next night. The Jayhawks outplayed the Aztecs in the first half, but turnovers and fouls hurt them in the second half, causing the Jayhawks to settle for second place, losing 76-63.
The loss wasn't the only bad thing to happen to the Jayhawks. Senior forward Jackie Martin reinjured her left shoulder, on which she had surgery in March 1986. It was dislocated and she has been out since that time.
Washington said the loss was a good lesson for them and a positive thing for the team to build on.
In a losing effort, the Jayhawks were led by Braddy's 17 points and 6 assists, and Lisa Baker's nine rebounds.
On Jan. 4, the Jayhawks returned home to face the Oral Roberts Lady Titans. Washington said that the team was a step slow, probably due to jet lag, but that they had won their second with the Jayhawks winning 82-73.
Sandy Shaw led the Jayhaws with 17 points. Baker added 14 rebounds, and Braddy led the team with 10 assists.
On Jan. 6, the Jayhawks traveled to Kansas City, Mo., to face the UMKC Lady Kangaroos, a team in their first year of Division I competition. Washington knew it would be a tough game because UMKC defeated K-State earlier in the year, plus their fans had waited three years for the match-up.
The Jayhawks played a good ballgame, winning 95-71. The team was lead by Shaw with 26 points, including 5 for 7 shooting from the three-point line. Deborah Richard-Henderson and Braddy had eight assists.
On Jan. 9, the Jayhawks faced the Oklahoma City Lady Chiefs at Allen Field House. Senior forward Lisa Baker shot 92 percent from the field, hitting 12 of 13, tying a 108 school record set by Vickie Hall in 27 points, leading the Jayhawks to a 94-60 victory.
"I was very relaxed and felt confident about the game," Baker said.
Willie Stargell elected to baseball Hall of Fame
NEW YORK — Willie Stargell, who led the Pittsburgh Pirates to two World Series titles with his power and pride, last night became the 17th player to be elected to the baseball Hall of Fame in the first year of eligibility.
The Associated Press
Stargell was named on 352 of 427 ballots (82.4 percent) returned to the Baseball Writers' Association of America. In order to be elected, a player must be named on 75 percent of the ballots, which this year was 321.
"All that hard work and sacrifice, I never thought it would feel like this," Stargell said. "I never thought I would have a day like this. I'm overwhelmed."
It was another disappointing year, however, for pitcher Jim Bunning. After missing by 21 votes last year, Bunning fell four votes short with 317 (74.2 percent) in his 12th year of eligibility.
Tony Oliva was third with 202, followed by Orlando Cepeda 199 and the late Roger Maris with 184. It was Maris' 15th and last year of elegibili-
ty.
Induction ceremonies are scheduled for July 31 in Cooperstown, N.Y.
Reflecting the weak field, nine writers returned signed ballots without votes. Fourteen of the 45 eligible players failed to receive a vote, and their names won't be on next year's ballot.
Stargell hit 475 home runs with 1,540 batted in and a .282 batting average in 21 seasons with the Pittsburgh Pirates. He was equally regarded for his qualities as a leader
on the field and in the clubhouse.
He is the only batter to hit a ball out of Dodger Stadium — and he did it twice. He cleared the right-field roof for Forbes Field seven times in four hitters' upper deck in right field at Pittsburgh's Three Rivers Stadium.
When he learned of his induction, Stargell's eyes filled with tears.
"I don't know where I at, I've lost that big ol' composure," he said. "I had same room as Babe Hank and Ernie ... what a feeling. What an honor."
"That (1971) was Roberto Clemente's series." Stargell said of the
It was a strange repeat of history. In 1971, Stargell scored the winning run in the Pirates' seventh-game over the Orioles at Memorial Stadium.
In the seventh game at Baltimore,
Stargell hit a two-run homer, two
threes.
Stargell, affectionately known as "Pops" to his teammates, was 38 in 1979 when he led the Pirates back from a 3-1 deficit in the World Series against Baltimore.
Pirates' Hall of Fame outfielder. "He was the greatest. It was Roberto who started the Pirate spirit."
Clemente, who battled, 141 to dominate the 1971 World Series, died on Dec. 31, 1972, in the crash of a small plane on a mission of mercy to earthquake-shattered Nicaragua. It was Stargell who kept "The Family" together after Clemente's death.
Currently, Stargell is a coach with the Atlanta Braves and has expressed an interest in managing in the majors.
14
Wednesday, January 13, 1988/University Daily Kansan
Women's tennis coach working to improve players' pride in team
By Tom Stinson
Kansan sports writer
Instilling pride in the team's work is the most important aspect of the early season, said the University of Kansas' new women's tennis coach Eric Hayes.
Hayes, whose first practice with the women was Jan. 1, came to Kansas from Clemson University, where he worked with their program for a year and a half.
"These first two weeks are the most important part," said Hayes. "We're setting the tone for the rest of the season. I plan on breaking them up early and mentally and then rebuilding them to create their own identity."
Hayes said breaking them down consists of a series of "morning madness" training programs in addition to their regular workout schedule. The morning practices consist mostly of running.
"They have to take pride in all of this hard work," said Hayes, the sixth women's tennis coach in KU history. "I want this work to cause pain when the girl's lose a match. Irr
really impressed right now, but it's a long process."
The women, whom Hayes thinks are talented enough to win the Big Eight Conference Championship, compete against Southern Illinois University-Edwardville on Jan. 29 in Topeka.
Scott Perelman, men's tennis coach, said, "Hiring Eric is a huge stride in the right direction for the women's program. We needed to get him in here in order to win (Big Eight) championships on both sides."
Perelman, whose team's first matches are against Ball State and Minnesota the weekend of Jan. 22 and 23 in Lawrence, said the men did have some bright individual moments during the tournament.
Both the men's and women's squads kicked off the year with disappointing performances in the Milwaukee Tennis Classic, held January 6-10.
"I was pleased with the play of Jim Secrest," said Perelman. "To win the consolation round is a nice feather in his cap. Chris Walker also
showed a great deal of improvement over the break."
Secrest defeated teammate Craig Wildey in the finals of the consolation matches 4-6, 3-6, 3-3. The competitors in the consolation matches were the losers in the first round of the tournament.
Walker advanced the furthest for the rest of the Jayhawks, before losing in the fourth round.
In doubles competition, the teams of Walker/Willey and Falbo/Pascal each lost in the third round, and the team mass/Secrest lost in the second round.
"It was a disappointing tournament as a team," said Perelman. "We need to concentrate on consistently playing well. We're going to strive for that in the next two weeks."
For the Jayhawk women, senior Tracy Treps made it to the round of 16 and senior Marie Hibbard made it to the semifinals of the consolation round. Also competing for KU were freshmen Stacy Stotts and Michele Balsom and junior Susie Berglund.
Sports Briefs
MANNING TOP PLAYERDanny Manning was named Big Eight Conference player of the week for averaging 21 points and 8.7 rebounds in three Jayhawk victories last week.
The 6-foot-10 All-America forward scored 17 points in Kansas' 67-57 victory at Washington and had 18 points and 14 rebounds in a 90-69 victory over American University.
Manning is the Big Eight's second-leading all-time scorer with 2,334 points. He won the weekly award in a split vote over Oklahoma's Dave Sieger, who tied his own conference record by scoring eight 3-pointers in the Sooners' 108-80 victory over Oklahoma State.
Manning scored 28 points in Saturday's 78-74 triumph over Missouri in the conference opener for both teams, extending Kansas' home-court winning streak to 54 games. The game was the 117th consecutive exit by Manning, a conference record.
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15
University Daily KansanWednesday, January 13, 1988
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الأخضر
...Take Your Aches to the Healing Place!
Lawrence Massage Therapy
Featuring
sport massages
swedish
reflexology
steambath
rystals
shiatsu
regular hours
gift certificates
regular hours gift certificates
student rates
Call Bruce or Alice 24hrs
841-0662
ENTERTAINMENT
D.J. for hire (indoor parties only) Excellent
circuit and lighting systems. Very cheap rate.
Made in the UK.
GET THE GROOVE Metropolis Mobile
Superior sound and lighting. Professional
club and radio DJ. Hot spots. Maximum Party
Thrust. 841-7083
MASS ST. MUSIC
All the best known names in musical instruments and accessories; Alesis, JBL, Roland, Korg, Tascam, Kramer, Fender, Gibson, Martin, and many more!
Come by and see us!
1347 Mass. 843-3535
FOR RENT
3 bedroom luxury townhouse, 2 full baths,
whirpool, fireplace, hot tub, tennis and basket
ball courts. On K U bus route. Extra storage.
$60 per month, one year lease required. For in-
cubition only.
Found: Great apartment! 4 bdmr, fireplace,
micro. etc. Least. two roommates! Reward: lg
bdmrs$10-$135) plus 1/4 unit. Call 843-2936
Soon!
Apartment, two bdm, spacious, very clean, omn
equip, two baths, low util WT 25 4 W
2391 Call Amy, Call Amy
Completely Furnished Studios, 1-2-3 & 4 bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call 65285, or 749-1245. Mastercraft Management
Deluxe x 3 B/1 2 house. Fp. Ca. garage, basement. Couple or Sm. fam preferred. No pets, eq. on bus route. Possibly partly furnished. tent reduce first few months. Must to see app.
Furnished room for rent, most utilities paid, with
off street parking, two blocks from university,
quiet, statistic atmosphere, and no pets please.
841-5500
January rent free! Female roommate wanted to share 2 bdrm apts. Great location and extra-lowr upl. $155/m. 843-7096 or 843-0334. Keep trying.
Mature male roommate needed for two bedroom furnished spat, laundry, facilities, parking lot, washroom. paid behind. Watson Library 843-2688.
Villa26
- Microwave
- On KU Bus Route
- Excellent Location
Needed: non-smoking 500m² to share spacious
room with 842-6967 or
live message at 749-7893.
- Energy Efficient
Apartments-Townhomes BRAND NEW 1 Bedroom Apartments
1
- Washer Dryer Hook-ups
- Move In Today
divide local labor and pay utilities, weekly maid service, and you see why we are recognized as one of the best housing options at KU! For more info, call or come by Nassall Hall, 1803 Nassall Drive.
2201 W. 26th/Apt. E-102
—phones —
842-5227 • 842-6454
- Open Daily
Not satisfied with where you're living? Naimshim Hall has one female space available for immediate move in. Consider asking your employer "All-U-Can-Eat" meals, paid utilities, weekly maid services and other amenities.
842-5227 • 842-6454
841-6080
206 ENT HUSE Villa 26 apartments, 2201 West
18TH street. Brand new apartments. Immediate occupancy; free rental assistance. Saturday 10/15.
Cafe & Grill; call KWL 814-7983; call KWL Valley Management 814-6000.
Private, recently carpeted room, joint kitchen and living accommodations; handy to campus; offstreet parking. Reasonable rent. Call events 913 341-9542.
ROOMMATE WANTED! Walking distance to campus: 145 m/plus便利店; street: VC-148 m/plus便利店; 841-8138
SHANNON PLAZA CLUB APARTMENTS on KU b. bus route. Washer/dryer included, water, trash paid. Dishwasher, microwave, ceiling fittin, hot tub, tennis and basketball courts. 6 or 12
tower rescue
Try cooperative living. SUNFLOWER HOUSE.
For App, Don, or Tom.
Wanted: Non-smoking roommate Owner room-
mate $140/month Bus route, very nice
cafe. Burlington, 841-753-6280
Nowhere at KU will you find a residence hall with the advantages of Naismith Hall. Applications for fall/spring semester are now being accepted while space remains.
ADVANTAGES
NAISMITHHALL
EDDINGHAM PLACE
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
913-843-8559
OFFERING LUXURY
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
AT AN AHORDA
1-10 or 13 month
- 10 or 12 month contract
- Free Showtime
- Exercise Weightroom
- Laundry room
- Energy efficient
- On-Site Management
841-5444
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Wanted preferably two female roommates. Camp convenience. Two rooms available. $190 or HKD per month. No utilities. Call George at 842-357-6218.
name Student Assistant. Requires a 55-wpm typing, word processing and dictation experience. 20hrs/week. Through spring semester, increase to 30 hr/s week in May. $33/$450 per month for half-time position. For a complete job description contact the Office of Study Abroad, 231 Lippincott Hall
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Management, Inc
FOR SALE
71 VW Super Beetle, AT.AC, New Engine,
tiresinter, muffler, second owner, 5,000ml.
Excellent condition. $1200 OBO. 842-9200
evenings.
GOVERNMENT JOBS $16,940-$19,250/jr. Now
GOVERNMENT JOBS $10,950-07,950 exp. I-R9758 for
current Federal Listed.
For Sale: Western Co. 204-200 books
Half price
notes and tests. Call Cary 684-3920
truck.
***** MOTHIBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE
***** MOTHIBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE
p. Satuday 10 p.m.
p. Sunday 12 p.m.
Absolutely Awesome Array of Antiques, collectibles and neat stuff we wear: hardback and 1/2 price paperback books, full line of new comic books, limited edition art books in Indian and costume jewelry (giltter and good stuff), the right vintage clothes for any occasion, antique toys, fine art glass, doll house furniture, miniature models, antiquities or armatures in the area. Quantrillas Fare Market, 811 New Hampshire, Open Sal. & Sun.
1973 vw bus. Reconditioned engine less than 500 brand new radials on back. Very reliable
sine wave waterbed 160ft Book Call
Engineering Books
Golf Eq. Mechanical Engineering books
Call
Rock-n-roll-T-thousands of used and rare albums
Saturday and Sunday
Quantile Flea Market, Saturday
and Sunday
Drafting tools, beds lamps, chest of drawers,
Everything But Ice, 6.16 Vermont.
Needed student resource aid for spring 88, clerical and typing (90pm) skills. Data entry experience preferred but not mandatory. Must be available to work some morning hours. Apply
AUTO SALES
1888 Chevrolet Cavalier Z2 $495.97, Camaro Izor Z
$12.047, Monte Carlo as $13.358, 1886 Ford
Toronto as $16.995, 1886 Ford Turbo $14.791, 1888 Mercury Coupe XR1 $19.55,
1888 Pontiac Fiero Coupe $18.90, Firebird $9.822
Trans AM $12.501. FACTORY warrants
acceptable. You choose options
you want $83-849.49
Help Wanted: Artist for shirt designs. Apply with art pad, Jayhawk Spirit, 935 Mass.
Eye Size:
70 waft Sony receiver and one queen
watch waives. 841-1254 anytime.
HELP WANTED
Baby-sister needed for 5 yr old boy every Tuesday
weekday. Noan-keri @ 9:30/11:2 - $2.00
Noan-keri @ 9:30/11:2 - $2.00
78 Dodge Challenger (made in Japan) Good Condition, loaded, $1700 obo 864-7881
Overstock Sale. Papaison chair $7, limp 19,
sleeper 138; Basket Bedroom $399, Camel back
$400; Baby Bathroom $200; waterbed $138; Bencetcha center $299, Attrong-
Entertainment Center $191, Simmons bedding
60% off. Open to public 10-8 daily. Mark and
Mary are now 398 or Newark St. 398 or Newark
St. 398 or Newark St. 398.
Bakery clearance Wed through Sun 5:10 a.m.
Interviews 14.1 p.m. Interviews 14.1 p.m. Munchers Bakery
ply in person. Pizza Isla's Pizza, 2142 Yale Rd.
Pizza Delivery Drives Wanted. Must be 18 yr
or older, have own car and ins. $60 hr plus
comission and tip. Apply in person. Chezer's Piz
Office of Student Financial Aid is accepting applications for two positions beginning approximately salary of $41.67 monthly. DUTIES: assist with KU Endowment Loans by interviewing students who have demonstrated interest in performing to visitors; conduct special projects as assigned. REQUIRED QUALIFICATIONS: a bachelor's degree or equivalent, work under pressure; admission to graduate school. PREREFERRED QUALIFICATIONS: Knowledge of KU knowledge of financial aid programs. Letters of recommendation will be received first prior to initial screening followed by limited interviews. Interested applicants must have a bachelor's degree, name(s) with addresses and telephone numbers of at least three references) and an ordained member, Associate Director, Office of Student Financial Aid. Strong Hall. University of Kansas, Lawrence, 60045. The University of Kansas is an equal opportunity employer.
Bucky's Drive-In is now taking applications for part time employment. Flexible hours. Half price meals. Apply in person between 10 and 5 at Bucky's Drive-In 9th and 10th. Thank you!
Red Hot Bargain! Drug dealers' cars, boats,
Red Hol Bargain! 40 drug dealers' cars, buyers.
Burgers 687-600-600 s. a790
**Postal Jobs:** $0.001 Start! Prepare Now!
**Exam Workshop:** 91619484. Ext 135
***
Person to assist with my care or supper Mornings and/or evening, weekends. 794-4395.
price moe. Bucky's Drive it down and Iowa. Thata. 7.
Bucky's Drive it down and Iowa. Thata. 7.
Bucky's Drive it down and Iowa. Thata. 7.
back in by 11m. bn. Mon.-Fri. Must have own
transportation. Call 749-5771.
Be the best in Boston
Boston's leading nanny placement agency invites you to spend a challenging, rewarding, and profitable year with carefully screened professional families. Complete support network awaits your
Call 1-800-262-8771
or write American Au Par
P.O. Box 9.
New York Branch
Boston, Mass. 02258
Boston, Mass. 02258
**k- neurology department of Kansas Neurological Institute has openings for development end training specifie clients to be served an adult neurologic behavior therapy facility include behavioral assessment, staff training, program development and support . program development and support . program development and support the team psychologist. Applications must have completed a mental retardation or developmental facility for the mentally retarded and have two years experience in the treatment and care of fice. Kansas Neurological Institute requires exp ierience may be substituted for the training. To obtain an application contact the personnel of fice. Kansas Neurological Institute W. 21st st. Edinburgh KS 80019 EOF
Sales person wanted. If you can talk to people with honest enthusiasm and concern, you'll make 28% your first year. Apply in person at Mark and Quiet Furniture House, 728 New Hampshire.
Student work help study position. On-campus publisher sees help. Contact phone, answer phones, type, and assist in various duties. Must be eligible for work ability and able to work afterwards. $5.50/$7.78/hr
The University of Kansas has a position opening for a continuous half-time student assistant. The person in the position will work on university accounts and accounting transfers for the university's budgets. This person will gain a good exposure to fund management and have an opportunity to develop professional environment. The position requires senior or graduate degree in accounting, and good written and oral communication skills. Desirable applicant will be planning to pursue a graduate degree. $40-$50 per month for half-time employment. Closing date is January 30. Start date is February 1. Applicants must be a Postinger, Budget Office #64-3136. Applications available in 318 Strong Hail between 1-4:30pm.
Tutors needed in all subjects. Requirements: 3.8 GPA, 15 hrs in subject, good communication skills. Apply at Supportive Educational Services. 863-3971
DOWNTOWN BARBERSHOP 824 MASS. $5 HAIRCUTS
We feature
discounts on:
- Sebastian
- Redken
- Paul Mitchell
- Nexus
No Appointment Necessary!
Amyx Barber Shop 8421/2 Mass.
Reg. Haircuts
$5.50
842-9425
4 Barbers
for Your Convenience
Mon. thru Fri. 8-5:30
Sat. 8-12
Welcome Students
843-8000
National Edition
For the best in world and national news, complete business section, and extensive coverage of sports, movies, books, etc.
New York Times
only 25e per copy Mon.-Fri.
by subscription.
Jan.18-May 12: $20.90
Jan. 25-May 12: $19.59
end to: N.Y. Times
P.O. Box 1721
Lawrence KS 66044
for Sunday Service
or more info call
841-5073
HARPER
1101 Mass Suite 201
LAWYER
Jon Amyx
749-0123
SERVICES OFFERED
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
REALLY LISTEN
Call or call by Headquarters.
We're here because we care.
847-250-3169.
We're always open.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest
years, driver's license issued, transportation
years, driver's license issued, transportation
HELP: Frustrated by red tape? Needling a movie or game time? Just don't know where to turn? Call the UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER at 864-3066, 24hrs a day.
We're always open.
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ektachrome processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W services. PASSPORT $6.00. Art & Design Building, Room 206. 864-4767
MAMI 2010 - 304/hr.
MATIH TURIN since 1976, M.A..$/hr, 845.9032
MATHY TURIN since 1976, M.A..$/hr, 845.9032
BUS. PERSONAL
Math Tutor Since 1976, M.A., $8/hr, 843.9032
(p.m.)
PRIVATE OFFICE Obj-Gyn and Abortion Services. Overland Park ... (913) 419-4878
WEBB'S PARTY SUPPLY
(formerly Green's) 810 West 23rd
Jan. 13 - Jan. 19
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-8621. Confidential help/free pregnancy counseling.
$50 Value when presented toward new patient care. $75 Value when presented toward new patient care. $125 Value when presented toward new patient care. Dr Johnson, Chiroprator.
Miller Lite 12 pk. $5.59
Bud 12 pk. $5.59
Busch 12 pk. $4.49
Old Style 12 pk. $3.69
Weidemann 12 pk. $3.19
$5/person Hot tub Rental $15/month weight room facilities
GET NOTICED.
9 Tans for $20
Since 1980
EUROPEAN
TANKING HEALTH & BEAUTY SALON
25 & IOWA • 841-6232
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.
The college of Liberal Arts and Sciences offers tutoring in math, english, business, and economics on a reasonable charge. The college Supportive Educational Services, apply at SES BUILD 604-9971.
TYPING
1,100 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing. Judy. 842-7945 or Liss. 841-3915.
A. Mollman Publishing
A1. Reliable Typing Service. Term papers,
books and articles related to IBM
Ethernet Typewriter. 842-3246
plus typing, letters, resumes, themed law, tax
typing, job interviews, Terry 842-3671, evening and weekdays
842-3671, evening and weekdays
THE FAR SIDE
Accurate, affordable typing in termed experience
correcting the corrections correcting Selectric, spelling corrected. 843-9044
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS
DISSEPTATIONAL SERVICES for service available
837-383 before 5 p.m. p.m. (Monday through Sunday)
Accurate Affordable typing experienced in paper typesetting, correcting and correcting Slecitalic,
corrected. 843-8544
Quality typing. Includes excellent spelling, grammar, punctuation, fast. Easily reliable service.
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term papers, maps, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter
quality printing, spelling corrected 842-2747.
Typing at a reasonable rate Call Holly at HallU
FAST. ACCURATE. DEPENDABLE. Letter
FAST. ACCURATE. DEPENDABLE. Letter
TOP-MTP SERVICES 835-2021 502 check.
TOP-MTP SERVICES 835-2021 502 check.
TYPING FLUS assistance with composition,
marking, text analysis, dissertation, paper submission applications,
etc.
WANTED
Fernande roommate to share huge room in
rm. apt., Purnished, pool, 1/2 baths,
68 sq ft, $199,000 (49/32 SF)
FIRE SERVICE TRAINING EXTENSION COURSE INSTRUCTOR The University of Kansas Division of Continuing Education is seeking a fifth position for Fire Service Training Instructor. Major responsibilities are to develop training materials and classes and to provide training on firefighting techniques in the fire service community in Kansas. Topics to be covered will include firefighting techniques, providing instruction in fire extinguishers, developing knowledge of the fire service community, N F A standards. Provided consultant service for apparatus and other fire department equipment, provide
FIRE SERVICE TRAINING DIRECTOR
The University of Kansas, Division of Continuing Education wishes to fill an unanticipated, 12 month position. This is a senior managerial and instructional position. The director will be directly responsible to the university's training department for the day to day operations of the Fire Service Training Unit. Duties include the hiring and training of all staff; administration of the in-service training units; and developing curriculum of the highest quality that meets the long term needs of firefighters in the service organizations and firefighters. There is some travel associated with this position in that each location has a firefighter who is relevant to firefighting; a minimum of five of increasingly responsible full-time experience as a firefighter in mid- to upper-level management; a demonstrated ability as an instructor in the firefighting area; a high degree of communication skills; a demonstrated record of good leadership in work and/or community service activities; and a demonstrated ability to operate a computer. August 1988 if position remains未续.
Interested individuals should send letters of application, a copy of their curriculum vitae, and a copy of their resume to the following address:
P. Wolf, Fire Service Training, University of Kansas, Division of Continuing Education. Continue Learning, Lawrence KS 64053-6283 EO/A employer
Part time student drafts person HVAC wanted to work at Architectural Services. Duties include architectural and mechanical detailing on campus remodeling project teams; design of mechanical or mechanical drafting skills and proficient understanding of construction assemblies, materials, and building codes. Six months or more drafting experience with an architect or pre-construction office. Call for an interview at 843-4341.
Wanted. Bass guitarist for successful established K.C. based group. Band direction influenced by each. Motown and Blues combined modern rock. XIX XXIV. vocal ability priority. Call (913) 292-3555
wanted to work at Architectural Services. Duties include blueprint machine operation, drawing specification and product brochure file clerk and preparation of inked roof plans. Must be acceptable organization for state work skill program. Call for an interview at 863-3413.
By GARY LARSON
CONGRATULATIONS
BOB
TORTURER
OF THE MONTH
16
Wednesday, January 13, 1988/University Daily Kansan
Hoops
Continued from p. 13
Kansas finished with fewer turnovers than Washington (14 to 20), but shot 48 percent to Washington's 51 percent.
Washington was led by three play-
ners with points 10, 9 and 7.
forward forwards and Troy Merrill.
The Jayhawks sav Minor turn in 15 points and 7 rebounds, and junior forward Milt Newton made an impact with 12 points and 6 rebounds. Kansas 90. American 69
It was No. 53 for The Streak as Kansas successfully kept its home winning tradition alive against American.
American could never catch up to Kansas, trailing the entire game. The closest it got was 6-5 in the first three games, and the team jumped to a halftime lead of 44-23.
Barry started for Pritchard, marking the first time since Feb. 19 last year that Pritchard did not start a game.
Pritchard came back later, howev-
to score 15 points and graze three rebe-
llows.
Branch turned in a season-high performance with 20 points and 10 rebounds, going 12 for 16 from the free throw line.
Kansas 78, Missouri 74
With the beginning of the confer-
once season, last season's Big Eight champion, Missouri, was expected to be the first real contender to break The Streak.
Even Brown thought something might go wrong. But Saturday night's game saw two unexpected heroes come through, one with a career-high score and the other shimmering in the door on the Tigers with two free throws.
Newton's sudden arrival in the form of 21 points and five rebounds was needed in order to push the home winning streak to 54, and put away the doubts of those who thought Kansas would choke in the Big Eight season opener.
His arrival was all the more welcome as Piper was still suffering from a pulled groin muscle, and Marshall out for the season with a strained left knee. Marshall was in the hospital recovering from surgery, and he was stuck in their minds as they went into the game.
To make up for his loss, the Jayhawks knew they had to pull out their best performances to overcome Missouri.
"I was happy that I got my confidence up and that kind of helped," Newton said.
Newton was also a big factor in holding down Missouri's Derrick Chievous, who did not start the game, and who scored only two points in his 6 minutes of first half play.
Lady Jayhawks open Big 8 play tonight
Shoe SALE
30% to 50%
OFF
Save Now on Fall & Winter Footwear
Bv Keith Stroker
The Kansas Jayhawks women's basketball team is using enthusiasm to prepare for the Big Eight Conference season, which begins at 7 tonight at Allen Field House against the Missouri Tigers.
Kansan sports writer
Women's Boots
20% to 30%
OFF
Rocky & Red
Wing
Insulated Boots
Reg. to $156
Nicole • Dingo Naturalizer
Gordon's BOOT CENTER
Coach Marian Washington said Missouri, 8-5, would be a worthy opponent, even with the loss of center Renee Kelly to graduation. Last season, Kelly finished her career with the Tigers, leading the Big Eight in scoring with 24.6 points a game and finishing second in field goal percentage and rebounding.
"Missouri is a team we cannot afford to underestimate," Washington said. "They have an outstanding perimeter game to go along with decent size underneath. The Big
Reg. to $75
Shop now and SAVE.
All sales final. No refunds,
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G
Mall Shopping Center
23rd & Louisiana
M-F 9-6 T-9 8 Sat 9-5
Washington says enthusiasm will help team; transfer player to be in first game for KU
Assistant coach Kevin Cook said that Martin was the inspirational leader on the team and that she has played injured before.
"I'm anxious and very excited to have to play," Jackson said. "I have some butterflies, but I'll be ready."
"I'm really looking forward to playing," Martin said. "They will have to wrap up my shoulder tightly so it won't slip out of place again, but I'll be ready to play."
"There are three or four teams that could win the title this year," said Washington, referring to Kansas, Colorado, Oklahoma State and Nebraska. "Colorado especially looks strong. They went down to play in the country, the number two team in the country, and lost by only five points."
After sitting out a year and a half because of academic problems, Cheryl Jackson will be a welcome addition to the team. The senior guard/forward will make her debut in a Jayhawks uniform tonight after transferring from Kansas State University.
Washington said that Jackson
"Jackie played with a stress fracture in her lower left leg for the last nine games of last season," Cook said. "She's tough. She'll play."
would add quickness on defense, that she was a good shooter, and that she would give the team a lift with her enthusiasm.
The Jayhawks also will benefit when senior forward Jackie Martin returns tonight after injuring her left shoulder against San Diego State.
PROBABLE STARTERS
competition in the Big Eight.
Washington said the team, 10-3,
was playing much stronger basketball
than it was at this time last year,
when it had a record of 7-6. She said
this was necessary because of better
KANSAN graphic
Eight has become very physical."
Kansas 10-3
F-22 Sharon Bax 5'10"4.9ppg
F-23 Monique Lucas 5'10"13.6
C-44 Tracy Ellis 6'1"17.6
G-24 Sandie Prophette 5'8"14.9
G-14 Tanya Jorgenson 5'8" 9.2
Coach: Joann Rutherford
Missouri 8-5
F-32 Lisa Baker 5'11" *4.9pp*
D-32 Lisa Debrahir 6'10" *10.6p*
D-52 Derek Richardson 6'4a" *10.6p*
G-12 Lisa Bradley 5'7" *9.8*
G-33 Lisa Dougherty 5'8" *13.5*
Call 864-4810
Story Idea?
IDEA FOR KANSAN MAGAZINE STORY
UNLEASH THE POWER OF YOUR IMAGINATION
DUNGEONS &
DRAGONS™
PRESENTING THE NEW DUNGEONS & DRAGONS CLUB WITH THE FULL CLUB CAMPAIGN
One world written to be played in by many groups.
1st meeting: Wednesday the 13th,6:30 pm in the Pioneer Room,Burge Union
HMS BENOATH
WELCOME TO ADVENTURE
Celebrate Yourself with ETHNIC FASHIONS
Back to School Sales 25-75% Off
featuring unique dresses, jewelry musical instruments, fine leathers and quality folk arts from around the world: Africa Asia, etc.
733½ New Hampshire
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1801 MASSACHUSETTS MONDAY-FRIDAY 11.A.M-10.P.M SATURDAY & SUNDAY 10.A.M-10.P.M
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OFFER EXPIRES 1/31/88
See the LADY J A Y H A W K S and have a BALL KU vs. MU ...the rivalry continues Tonight at 7 p.m. Allen Field House
ayiawia
15
---
CHECKERS PIZZA
BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIAL
1
2 12" 2 topping pizzas
$7.50 plus tax
2 16" 2 topping pizzas $11.99 plus tax Offer good through Feb.28,1988 (No coupon necessary)
Dine-in*Carry out*Free Delivery
CHECKERS
2214 Yale 841-8010
Second Section
Rebuilding is out, enthusiasm is in for football coach
By Craig Anderson Assistant sports editor
You won't hear the word "rebuilding" when new Kansas football coach Glen Mason talks about the direction his program is taking.
Glen Mason, the new football coach for the University of Kansas.
"i refuse to use the word," said Mason, who was hired Dec. 30 to replace fired Jayhawk coach Bob Valesente. "That sounds great to a freshman or sophomore, but what do the seniors think when they hear it? That doesn't help their attitudes any."
When the fans and media evaluate the Jayhawks, Mason said, they should look for a well-coached team and a team that plays with as much enthusiasm and hard work as it can. Victories will come with other factors, said the 36-year-old Ohio native.
Mason signed a five-year contract with a base salary of $78,000 a year. With other incentives such as a television contract, housing allowance and insurance annuity, his contract is believed to be worth about $200,000 a year. Mason would not comment on his contract.
Mason became the 34th coach in Kansas football history and the fourth coach in six years. He took over for Valesence, who posted a 4-17-1 record in his two seasons at the University of Kansas.
Included in Valente's record was a 31-17 loss to Mason's Kent State team early last season. Mason said he had good memories of his first trip to Lawrence last fall.
Jayl
"I remember walking up on campus the day before our game and thinking how beautiful it was," Mason said. "I also went to Anschutz (Sports Pavilion) and was really impressed with the facility. Little did I know then that I would be returning so soon."
Impressions of the Big Eight Conference already exist in Mason's mind. He served as an assistant coach at Iowa state under Earle Bruce in 1975 and 1976. Bruce, who
was fired last year as football coach at Ohio State, was a leading candidate for the job as coach at KU.
"There are two teams that are out in front, and everyone is chasing them," Mason said of Oklahoma and Nebraska. "Initially, you have to worry about the battle for third place."
Between them, Oklahoma and Nebraska have won or shared 40 of the last 42 Big Eight titles. Kansas hasn't won a Big Eight crown since 1968, when it shared the title with Oklahoma.
Mason is no stranger to having to overcome forecasts of doom for his teams. His 1986 Kent State team was predicted to finish in last place in the Mid-American Conference but finished second. Mason was selected 1986 MAC coach of the year for his efforts. He was 12-10 in two years as the Golden Flashes' coach.
Kansas Athletic Director Bob Frederick, who agonized about finding a head coach for the Jayhawks, said he was confident that he had the right man for the job.
("Mason") is described in football traxternites as the best young coach in the country.
Mason takes over a program that has had its share of difficulties in the past few years. Because of academic ineligibilities and defections, Kansas will only have about 75 players on scholarship next season. Mason also will be hampered by a late start in recruiting.
With the national letter-of-intent signing day about a month away, Mason said he hoped Kansas could still sign some high-quality athletes. Mason is concentrating his recruiting efforts this week in the Kansas City area and the state of Kansas.
"I'm sure we're a little bit binhid, but that just means we will have to knock on a few more doors," he said. "In my experience recruiting, it seems to me to be two common denominators. Kids want to play for
a winner, and they want an opportunity to play early in their careers.
"You don't give them any guarantees. You sell yourself, your ideas and your commitment. You've got to sell him on a dream."
Besides recruiting in the Kansas City area and in the state of Kansas, Mason hopes to branch out to the football-rich Ohio prep ranks. Mason recruited heavily in Ohio when he was at Kent State. He was also an assistant coach at Ball State and Ohio State.
recruiting there," he said. "I don't need a road map to find those towns. I'm on a first-name basis with just about every coach in northern Ohio
"I spent the better part of ten years
As for being about 20 players short of the scholarship limit, Mason said he couldn't worry about that now. What he can do is build for the future.
Mason said he would recruit junior college players sparingly. He wants to build his foundation on high school recruits, with the hope of being able to redshirt as many of them as possible.
control." he said of the shortage in numbers. "When I was at Kent State, I was never once at the 95 level."
Coming from the Mid-American Conference to the Big Eight Conference will be a definite step up for Mason.
"It's a tough conference. When I was at Kent State, we recruited the athletes that weren't recruited by the Big Ten (Conference)." he said. "Recruiting in the Big Eight means we have the ability to land the top-notch players from the entire country."
"I can't worry about things I can't
Besides success in the recruiting wars and on the playing field, Mason said he would emphasize the academic tradition that Kansas has built. Under Valesente, the team had been able to raise its overall grade point average from 2.04 to 2.57. Mason promised more of the same.
"The number-one ingredient in the success of a football program is its academics," he said. "The academic well-being of the student comes first. This University represents the philosophies I stand for."
Profs predict a shortage of professionals in U.S.
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of graduate students in
are foreign. At KU, 40
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March 1955 issue of U.S. oblem has gotten so outing their foreign enrollments. For instance, Technology, where 25 enrollment is foreign, only 29 percent foreign
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[Signature]
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See KENDALL, p. 6B, col.1
Department head works to educate others,self about Latin American area
Special to the Kansan
By Ben Johnston
The summer after Charles Stansifer graduated from Garden Plain High School in 1949, he went to work doing odd jobs for the Santa Fe railroad.
Looking back on that summer, Stansifer, now director of Latin American Studies at the University of Kansas, believes the experience changed the course of his life.
There, for the first time, he met people who spoke a foreign language. His co-workers were Mexican-Americans who spoke Spanish.
"When I went to work for the railroad, I knew I wanted to go to college, but I didn't know what I wanted to do." Stansifer said. "I had an idea of studying a language, but I didn't know which one. I while I worked for the railroad, I gained an appreciation for their culture and way of life and a curiosity about what it was like where they came
Since that summer, the main pursuit in Stansifer's life has been learning about and educating people about Latin America. He has taught at several universities, including two in Latin America. He talks regularly to a U.S. senator, a U.S. representative, university gatherings and church groups about his views on policies that affect Latin America.
"The principal purpose of any Latin American educator," Stansifer said, "is to knock down negative stereotypes about Latin America.
He said recently that the biggest problem he faced in educating people about Latin America was that few Americans understood the region and its people.
"Americans are constantly bombarded by the problems of Latin America. They are persuaded that Latin Americans are more violent, lazier and less skillful in government than Americans. But if you study Latin America as I have, you find that the level of intellectual investment is comparable to that of our own and is admirable."
"After I got to Wichita State, I really began to enjoy school and learning about Latin America," he said. "I found it so enjoyable that I never wanted to leave."
Stansifer said that since the time he first arrived at Wichita State University in 1951 after spending a year at Southwestern College in Winfield, he knew teaching was what he wanted to do.
Stansifer said he was encouraged by his parents to go to college. He said that even though his family was poor, his parents did what they could to help pay for his education.
"I was inspired by my parents, who believed the way out of our poverty was through education," Stansifer said.
Stamiser's wife, Mary Ellen, said that to pay for his education, Stamiser worked at several jobs while he was a graduate.
After he got his master's degree, Stansifer went to Tulane University in New Orleans so he could learn from William J. Griffith, a professor of Latin American history who Stansifer said was one of the leading Latin American scholars in the United States.
"He has taught more Latin American historians than anyone in the United States, and he seemed to believe I could be a good historian." Stansifer said.
Griffith left Tulane to become director of Latin American Studies at KU in 1970 and stayed until he retired in 1974. After Griffith retired, Stansifer became director of Latin American studies at KU.
See STANSIFER, p. 5B, col. I
Second Section
Rebuilding is out enthusiasm is in for football coach
By Craig Anderson
Assistant sports editor
Assistant sports editor
Glen Mason, the new football coach for the University of Kansas.
You won't hear the word "rebuilding" when new Kansas football coach Glen Mason talks about the direction his program is taking.
Jayh
"I refuse to use the word," said Mason, who was hired Dec. 30 to replace fired Jayhawk coach Bob Valesente. "That sounds great to a freshman or sophomore, but what do the seniors think when they hear it? That doesn't help their attitudes any."
When the fans and media evaluate the Jayhawks, Mason said, they should look for a well-coached team and a team that plays with as much enthusiasm and hard work as it can. Victories will come with other factors, said the 36-year-old Ohio native.
Mason signed a five-year contract with a base salary of $78,000 a year. With other incentives such as a television contract, housing allowance and insurance annuity, his contract is believed to be worth about $200,000 a year. Mason would not comment on his contract.
Included in Valesente's record was a 31-17 loss to Mason's Kent State team early last season. Mason said he had good memories of his first trip to Lawrence last fall.
"I remember walking up on campus the day before our game and thinking how beautiful it was," Mason said. "I also went to Anschutz (Sports Pavilion) and was really impressed with the facility. Little did I know then that I would be returning so soon."
Mason became the 34th coach in Kansas football history and the fourth coach in six years. He took over for Valesette, who posted a 4-17-1 record in his two seasons at the University of Kansas.
Impressions of the Big Eight Conference already exist in Mason's mind. He served as an assistant coach at Iowa state under Earle Bruce in 1975 and 1976. Bruce, who
was fired last year as football coach at Ohio State, was a leading candidate for the job as coach at KU.
"There are two teams that are out in front, and everyone is chasing them," Mason said of Oklahoma and Nebraska. "Initially, you have to worry about the battle for third place."
Between them, Oklahoma and Nebraska have won or shared 40 of the last 42 Big Eight titles. Kansas hasn't won a Big Eight crown since 1968, when it shared the title with Oklahoma.
Mason is no stranger to having to overcome forecasts of doom for his teams. His 1986 Kent State team was predicted to finish in last place in the Mid-American Conference but finished second. Mason was selected 1986 MAC coach of the year for his efforts. He was 12-10 in two years as the Golden Flashes' coach.
Kansas Athletic Director Bob Frederick, who agonized about finding a head coach for the Jayhawks, said he felt that the job had the right man for the job.
("Mason) is described in football fraternities as the best young coach in America," he said.
Mason takes over a program that has had its share of difficulties in the past few years. Because of academic inelegibilities and defences, Kansas will only have about 75 players on scholarship next season. Mason also will be hampered by a late start in recruiting.
With the national letter-of-intent signing day about a month away, Mason said he hoped Kansas could still sign some high-quality athletes. Mason is concentrating his recruiting efforts to improve Kansas City area and the state of Kansas.
"I'm sure we're a little bit behind, but that just means we will have to knock on a few more doors," he said. "In my experience recruiting, it seems to me to be two common denominators. Kids want to play for
a winner, and they want an opportunity to play early in their careers.
"You don't give them any guarantees. You sell yourself, your ideas and your commitment. You've got to sell him on a dream."
Besides recruiting in the Kansas City area and in the state of Kansas, Mason hopes to branch out to the football-rich Ohio prep ranks. Mason recruited heavily in Ohio when he was at Kent State. He was also an assistant coach at Ball State and Ohio State.
recruiting there,” he said. “I don't need a road map to find those towns. I'm on a first-name basis with just about every coach in northern Ohio
'I spent the better part of ten years
Mason said he would recruit junior college players sparingly. He wants to build his foundation on high school recruits, with the hope of being able to redshirt as many of them as possible.
As for being about 20 players short of the scholarship limit, Mason said he couldn't worry about that now. What he can do is build for the future.
control, he said of the shortage in numbers. When I was at Kent State when I was at Oxford.
Coming from the Mid-American Conference to the Big Eight Conference will be a definite step up for Mason.
"It's a tough conference. When I was at Kent State, we recruited the athletes that weren't recruited by the Big Ten (Conference)." he said. "Recruiting in the Big Eight means we have the ability to land the top-notch players from the entire country."
"I can't worry about things I can't
Besides success in the recruiting wars and on the playing field, Mason said he would emphasize the academic tradition that Kansas has built. Under Valeshe, the team had been able to raise its overall grade point average from 2.04 to 2.57. Mason promised more of the same.
"The number-one ingredient in the success of a football program is its academics," he said. "The academic well-being of the student comes first. This University represents the philosophies I stand for."
Profs predict a shortage of professionals in U.S.
Kansan staff writer
Rv Inel 7eff
Joseph Liu, a graduate student from Taiwan, came to the University of Kansas in 1986 seeking a higher degree in engineering.
Through a friend who attended KU, Liu discovered the research facilities and opportunities that were available to foreign students. He also discovered the price.
"The education in my country doesn't compare to America. It's better. It's cheaper. When I complete my graduate work, I will then return to my country." Liu said
"In the 1990s, there will be a shortage," said Paul Goldhammer, chairman of the graduate admissions
Liu is just one example of the recent increase of foreign students in the graduate programs at KU and around the country. This increase, coupled with a decline in U.S. graduate students around the country, has left KU professors predicting a shortage of professionals in education and industry in the 1990s. The increase also leaves graduate programs vulnerable to shifting politics at home and abroad.
committee in KU's department of physics. "Everyone will get real scared; Congress will get scared and start dumping money into education. Then, we will overproduce. It's a cycle. In 2005, there will be a surplus of highly trained people begging for jobs."
According to KU's office of institutional research and planning, the number of U.S. students in graduate programs at KU has declined from 4,982 in 1980 to 4,461 in 1987. During the same period, the number of foreign students has risen from 763 to 826. That amounts to 15 to 19 percent of total graduate school enrollment.
"Down the road, we might have half the faculty foreign-born," said Clark Coan, director of foreign student services. "This is a serious problem because the taxpayer in western Kansas starts to question why we need a certain department if the majority of the department is foreign faculty and foreign students. They want to know why we need the department if it's there just for foreigners."
John Bunce, director of graduate studies in mathematics, said the problem of foreign student growth in the graduate programs wasn't confined just to KU.
Bunce said. "Sixty percent of graduate students in mathematics across the country are foreign. At KU, 40 percent in the math department are foreign. And most go back to their own country.
"I graduate programs with a concern with the mathematics community."
Declining U.S. enrollment, intertwined with increasing foreign enrollment, has become a problem in math and in science departments at KU and around the country. Bunce said.
According to a report in the March 1985 issue of U.S. News and World Report, the problem has gotten so out of hand that schools are limiting their foreign enrollment in some graduate programs. For instance, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where 25 percent of graduate school enrollment is foreign, allows each graduate program only 29 percent foreign enrollment.
At KU, the problem has not reached that level, according to George Woodyard, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs. KU has no limitations or quota systems regulating foreign graduate enrollment at KU, he said.
See FOREIGN, d. 4B, col. 1
MARIE CHEUNG
Criticism of first work did not dampen storyteller's ambition
By Michael Horak
Assistant campus editor
With dreams of literary fame and an empty Ohio summer to fill, 9-year-old Carol Kendall wrote one of the greatest novels of her time. Or so she thought.
"I if were anyone who was born to be a writer, it was me," the Lawrence storyteller said recently. "I knew I could write the definitive novel that summer and lost no time getting started."
A stolen Dickens theme, a heroine in the slums of Chicago and 18 pages of manuscript became the first two chapters of "The Girl Pickpocket Who Wouldn't Pick Pockets."
"I was so excited that I simply had to share my novel's beginning with somebody," Kendall said. "And who more understanding than my smiling, new schoolteacher."
She didn't expect the reaction she got.
Carol Kendall, author of the "The Gammage Cup." poses with characters from the CBS adaptation of her children's book.
Kendall is the creator of a series of fantasy books in which a peaceful race of small people struggle to defend themselves against fearsome enemies. Her other books include another fantasy, "The Firelings," two volumes of Chinese folktales and two novels written for adults.
Recounting the first time she had ever seen curled lips outside of the movie theater, Kendall calls her teacher's advice of 60 years ago as clearly as if she heard it yesterday: "Carol, don't be silly."
Fourth-grade teachers today regard her as one of the most talented children's writers in the country. In fact, for many students, her fantasy tales, such as "The Gammage Cup," "The Whisper of Glcken" and "The Minnips," are required reading.
"The Gammage Cup" was recently adapted into a Saturday morning cartoon special. It was aired on CBS Tuesday night.
Kendall can laugh about the searing criticism now.
Kendall, affectionately called "Siggy" by her friends, looks more like a woman who would read stories to her grandchildren than one who would write them.
She has a warm smile and the kind of laugh that puts the people she meets immediately at ease. Her friends say her zest for life and enthusiasm for everything she does makes her fun to be with and never dull.
She is modest about her work and does not talk much
about her past successes.
Others, though, find it easy to praise her work.
"She is one of the best children's fantasy writers I know of," said Darcy Sarch, a Lawrence elementary school librarian who has read Kendall's books for the past 25
years. "She manages to make each character seem so different and distinct, yet so human-like. You can't help but to like them."
See KENDALL, p. 6B, col. 1
Department head works to educate others,self about Latin American area
Bv Ben Johnston
Special to the Kansan
The summer after Charles Stansifer graduated from Garden Plain High School in 1949, he went to work doing odd jobs for the Santa Fe railroad.
There, for the first time, he met people who spoke a foreign language. His co-workers were Mexican-Americans who spoke Spanish.
Looking back on that summer. Stansifer, now director of Latin American Studies at the University of Kansas, believes the experience changed the course of his life.
"When I went to work for the railroad, I knew I wanted to go to college, but I didn't know what I wanted to do." Stansifer said. "I had an idea of studying a language, but I didn't know which one. While I worked for the railroad, I gained an appreciation for their culture and way of life and a curiosity about what it was like where they came from."
"Americans are constantly bombarded by the problems of Latin America. They are persuaded that Latin Americans are more violent, lazier and less skillful in government than Americans. But if you study Latin America, find that the level of intellectual and cultural accomplishment is comparable to that of our own and is admirable."
Since that summer, the main pursuit in Stansifer's life has been learning about and educating people about Latin America. He has taught at several universities, including two in Latin America. He talks regularly to a representative, university gatherings and church groups about his views on policies that affect Latin America.
Stansifer said that since the time he first arrived at Wichita State University in 1951 after spending a year at Southwestern College in Winfield, he knew teaching was what he wanted to do.
"After I got to Wichita State, I really began to enjoy school and learning about Latin America," he said. "I found it so inviolable that I never wanted to leave."
He said recently that the biggest problem he faced in educating people about Latin America was that few Americans understood the region and its people.
"The principal purpose of any Latin American educator," Stansifer said, "is to knock down negative stereotypes about Latin America.
Stansifer said he was encouraged by his parents to go to college. He sai'd that even though his family was poor, his parents did what they could to help pay for his education.
"I was inspired by my parents, who believed the way out of our poverty was through education." Stansifer said. "That idea was deeply ingrained in me."
Stanisfer's wife, Mary Ellen, said that to pay for his education, Stanisfer worked at several jobs while he was at Wichita State, where he earned his master's degree.
After he got his master's degree, Stansifer went to Tulane University in New Orleans so he could learn from William J. Griffith, a professor of Latin American history at the University of the leading Latin American scholars in the United States.
"He has taught more Latin American historians than anyone in the United States, and he seemed to believe I could be a good historian." Stansifer said.
Griffith left Tulane to become director of Latin American Studies at KU in 1970 and stayed until he retired in 1974. After Griffith retired, Stansifer became director of Latin American studies at KU.
See STANSIFER, p. 5B, col. 1
2B
Wednesday, January 13, 1988/University Daily Kansan
KU women's leader quiet about achievements
By Noel Gerdes
Assistant campus editor
Actions speak louder than words, says Barbara Ballard, director of KU's Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center and associate dean of student life.
"When I decide there are some things I want to do, I do them," she says.
All the same, Ballard doesn't like to talk about her accomplishments.
She doesn't like to talk about how she was elected to the Lawrence school board in 1985 or about becoming the first black woman president of the board last July.
She doesn't like to talk about her induction into the KU Women's Hall of Fame in April 1985, being voted an
monorary member of KU's class or 1986, or being KU's Outstanding Woman Staff Member in 1984. The rest of a list of accomplishments fill a four-page resume.
"She has achieved a status that women can look up to," said Alice Fowler, vice president of the Lawrence school board. "Not only young women, but young men also
Pamela R. Walker
Lisa Jones/KANSAN
Ballard won't call herself a role model, but she said she was flattered when others said they looked up to her.
Barbara Ballard, director of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center. Ballard also is president of the Lawrence school board.
Kansan Fact: 7,900 KU Students Spend Over $300 A Month!
would do well to use her example of going to your highest potential."
"If people think that I am a role model, then I'm very pleased about that, although I did not set out to be a role model," she said. "What I did instead was that I accomplished some of the things that I have always wanted to do with my life."
Missy Kleinholz, Topeka senior and president of the KU commission on the status of women, said Ballard was a role model because of her success in higher education, her position as associate dean, and her ability to bring out the best in a person.
"She says 'jump,' and people do jump," Kleinholz said.
Ballard is the adviser to the com mission on the status of women.
But she added that although Ballard commanded loyalty, she wasn't domineering.
"I've never seen her be short with anyone," Kleinholz said. "She has such a good grip on human relationships."
Outside of her involvement in education, Ballard also works with the Leadership Lawrence program, the Lawrence Arts Center, the Ballard Community Center (no relation), the Hilpit Child Development Center and Kansas Women's Sports, Inc.
"I'm proud of them, and I certainly enjoy the things that I do. I wouldn't do anything I didn't really enjoy." Ballard said. "I'm extremely proud of being elected to the school board, and I'm extremely proud I was elected president this summer, but I really don't talk about it much."
Ballard may not like to talk about her accomplishments, but she does like to talk about her family.
Her son, Greg, is a 16-year-old junior at Lawrence High School.
"He plays football, basketball, baseball, track, soccer and golf," she said. "He's very athletic and very academic. The two A's are very important in our house."
"And I don't ever forget my husband," Ballard said. She has been married to her husband, Albert, an ROTC instructor at Paseo High School in Kansas City, Mo., for 19 years.
"Probably our main emphasis is our son," she said. "I think in many
ways, we share common interests because he's very interested in students and in working with students in different ways, something real and setting some goals."
Ballard also likes to talk about students.
"My job, or the job that I want it to be, is to really be available to students," she said.
"I see so many students," she said. "I'm in and out of scholarship halls, residence halls, sororities and fraternities. I speak to about four groups a week, and these groups can be anywhere from eight to 125."
Ballard gives workshops on topics that range from date rape to leadership skills. She also teaches a course on counseling to staff members at KU residence halls each semester.
Ballard earned a doctorate in counseling and student personnel services from Kansas State University in 1980. She earned a master's degree in counseling and guidance from K-State in 1976. She taught fifth and sixth grades in a California elementary school from 1972 to 1974.
Her bachelor's degree, from Webster College in St. Louis in 1967, is in music education and vocal arts. Ballard said that she enjoyed music and still sang regularly in her church choir. But she said she had no desire to sing professionally.
"I started out thinking that music might be fun, but as time went by, I realized that I'm really more of a counselor," she said. "I like being able to help people make changes.
"I like to challenge and push people to do more than they think they can."
Her husband, Albert, said that although Ballard stayed busy with a schedule that often ran from 8 a.m. to 11 p.m., her high standards and goals were worth the effort.
"She strives to have everyone do his best," he said.
Barbara Ballard said the secret to her successes was that she took risks.
"Learn all you can about yourself," she said. "People learn more about themselves by taking risks. If you take the safe way, then you do only what you know you can do.
"But I think you have to remember that to take a risk does not always mean that you're going to be successful ... you have to be prepared to take the consequences.
"But if I have something in my mind that I want to do, I pursue."
Official says fear of lead in fountains unfounded
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — A federal report released last month that warned of lead contamination in refrigerated drinking fountains was unfounded, a federal official said.
Lawrence J. Jensen, an assistant administrator for water at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, said the authors of the report based their research on an experiment at two Navy bases and that they hoped to conclusions" about water fountains nationwide.
A 555-page draft of the U.S. Public Health Service report caused California state schools Superintendent Hill Honig to advise schools to shut off fountains until the "potential lead hazard" was known.
Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., made the draft public as chairman of a House subcommittee on health and environment. He said it showed that "electric drinking water coolers across the country may be poisoning the water they distribute."
The Los Angeles Times reported Sunday that an official in the Public Health Service said revisions will be made before the final report is presented to Congress, probably in the next several weeks.
Jensen said the report. "The Nature and Extent of Le Poisoning in Children in the United States," also incorrectly attributes the Navy data to 1987 EPA studies on water fountains in schools. Those studies were never made.
Lead in drinking water is a serious health hazard, but singling out fountains in schools and causing panic was unnecessary, Jensen said.
Jensen said lead contamination occurred somewhere between water treatment plants and homes and businesses.
A spokesman for the water cooler industry, Arnold Braswell, has called on federal health officials to disavow the report.
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It's time to pay a special tribute to coach Larry Brown and seniors Danny Manning, Chris Piper and Archie Marshall for giving the administration and student body four years of entertaining, winning basketball.
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A drawing for members will be held in mid February for prizes and spring break trips.
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FOR DETAILS CALL NOW: Forey Milledge 913-841-2881 (Lawrence, KS)
Jeff Johnson 913-841-5973 (Lawrence, KS)
University Daily Kansan/Wednesday, January 13, 1988
3B
Team gives radar Antarctic test
By Michael Carolan
Kansan staff writer
They battled the Antarctic summer with parkas, wool sweaters and insulated boots, said Curt Davis, Prairie Village senior.
Davis was one of four members of a university of Kansas engineering team that traveled across the globe in mid-November to test experimental radar equipment.
Davis, Edward Zeller, professor of geology, physics and astronomy; Dale Rummer, professor of electrical and computer engineering; and Garudachar Raju, Bangalore, India, graduate student, spent almost a year at the university as part of a project financed by the National Science Foundation.
They lived on top of a glacier in
Antarctica for 18 days, while locating hidden crevasses on the flat surface of the glacier and surveying layers in the ice and the rock surface beneath it.
"I like the isolation, the cold and the living conditions," said Zelier, who has traveled to Antarctica the past 13 years. "I feel extremely comfortable in Antarctica," he said.
Davis said, "I enjoyed living far out there in the middle of nowhere. It's a weird feeling though. You have to spend a lot of time using the sun shines 24 hours a day."
The team flew Nov. 14 to New Zealand, where they bought their arctic gear, and then to McMurdo base, which was set up by the National Science Foundation. There, they tested the radar equipment's ability
to find crevasses on glacier surfaces.
A crevase, which is a crack where two glaciers meet, is sometimes covered by a thin sheet of snow or ice that makes it difficult to spot.
"An airplane has fallen in, and every few years people fall in and have died." Zeller said. "It's just one of those facts of life down there."
The radar equipment tested by KU's team bounces signals beneath the layer of ice to determine the depth of the crevasse.
After conducting radar surveys from the air, the team traveled to a remote station 200 miles from the South Pole. There, they lived in tents with about 15 other people from different scientific teams.
"We had an excellent crew," Zeller said. "Everyone got along well. We
The temperature ranged from 25 to 30 degrees Fahrenheit, but the wind reached speeds of 50 mph, Zeller said.
got a lot of work done."
The wind would snap the sides of the hill, sounding like pistols shots "he said.
The team used Navy aircraft to test an ice-probing radar and dragged huts full of radar equipment across the glaciers with a tractor. The team also located various layers in the ice and located ences in rock elevations beneath it.
"Satellites measure the top of the ice, and we're providing the tool to measure the bottom." Rummer said. "Overall, we demonstrated that the system is working and that the design is satisfactory."
Weapons system may launch NASA probes
The Associated Press
PASADENA, Calif. — Dozens of tiny coffee can-sized spacecraft could be launched inexpensively from a "Star Wars" anti-missle weapon to explore planets, comets and asteroids, a NASA engineer said.
"It would be a good thing if resources being spent on the Strategic Defense Initiative could also be used for civilian purposes, especially for space exploration," said Ross M. Jones, a spacecraft systems engineer at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
Jones, who normally works on the Mars Observer space probe planned for 1992, presented his proposal Monday during the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics aerospace sciences conference in Reno, Nev.
The micro spacecraft envisioned by Jones, would each weigh two or three pounds and would be about the size of a coffee can, a NASA news release said. They would be launched from an electromagnetic launcher, commonly called a railgun, and placed in orbit around Earth.
The Defense Department is developing the railguns, which would launch projectiles to shoot down enemy missiles, as part of President Reagan's proposed Strategic Defense Initiative, nicknamed "Star Wars."
"The capability of launching smaller probes more often is very appealing because they can address a number of specific science objectives," said Ed Stone, project scientist for NASA's twin Voyager spacecraft explorations.
"I don't know the details, but it is in the direction we need to be thinking as a way to diversify our program," said Stone, who also is chairman of physics, mathematics and astronomy at the California Institute of Technology.
While the tiny probes couldn't carry many instruments, they might be outfitted with tiny cameras, radio equipment and power supplies, Jones said.
Stone said the probes also might carry gamma-ray detectors, and perhaps seismometers to measure quake activity on moons of the outer planets, if a way could be devised for them to survive a landing.
year," Jones said, estimating that the micro spacecraft would cost a fraction of the $300 million to $800 million price for major space probes
James Graf, who is Jones' supervisor and head of the laboratory's inner planets spacecraft systems design group, called the proposal "an opportunity for the civilian sector to utilize hardware that's being developed in the military arena to accomplish beneficial scientific missions."
Residents thrive in Bowersock Mill
Using micro spacecraft would reduce the cost of interplanetary missions and the need to make spacecraft totally reliable, since the failure of one or more tiny probes wouldn't be as drastic as the failure of a major spacecraft. Graf said.
"It's a very novel approach." Graf said. "It shows promise and needs to be investigated more."
By Jadey Anfinson
Special to the Kansan
Sunlight barely streams through the dusty windows at noon. Shadows are cast over rusting bolts, century-old fixtures and rotting wood piled on the third floor. Snakes slither through the rubble in the grey brick building.
But despite its run-down condition, the Bowersock Mill is used by the KU Crew team, artists, a candymaker and others in search of solitude.
The old mill building, Sixth and New York streets, is connected to the power plant behind City Hall. The huge, clammy rooms, which smell like wet wool sweaters, are sectioned off and rented for a variety of uses.
The KU Crew holds practices and stores its equipment at the mill. As the sun sets, the members pull their boats out of the water and store them on eight-foot racks. For an hour, the crew rests in a boat, then rush the rush of the Kaw River is the only sound left as the last member pulls out of the parking lot.
Other tenants' work in solitude after the crew is gone. Some stay late into the night working in the spaces of a friend together in the musy building.
Bob Gent, a glass blower, started renting space for a studio at the mill
"We put in a floor over a 12-foot deep pit, replaced 36 panes of glass and hosed the place down two or three times." Gent said.
Despite the problems with dirt and a freak fire that damaged his roof recently, Gent said he enjoyed working at the mill.
"The darkness and snakes don't bother me," Gent said. "The only thing that's spooky is the fishermen
who show up at night and get drunk."
who show up at night and get on tukk.
However, Dale Jarrrett, the night watchman, said the mill had its ghost stories.
Jarrett said as he waved his cigar around a basketball court-sized room, "A guy in a white shirt follows me when I make my rounds in the dark. He disappears when I turn around."
Jarrett said he had seen other phantom men who disappeared into vapor but he said he didn't worry about it.
"I have always felt comfortable here," he said. "I feel like a hermit." Bosco, the guard dog, is his companion during the long night watches.
The mill was built at the turn of the century by the Hill family. Stephen Hill, a Lawrence stockbroker, owns the mill now. He said he was waiting for a developer to buy the building.
He said that except for the small fire and a rowdy high school-aged band, he had no problems with tenants.
Phillips Confections, a Lawrence candy firm, spent $7,000 to renovate its space in the mill. Marcus Phillips, the founder and owner of chocolates nationwide from the mill.
Toni Kalousek, a textiles printer,
said she rented her space because
she could watch a nest of eagles
outside her window and because it
was cheap. She said she had to
replace her floor to make the room
functional, however.
Hill said he rented space for almost any legal purpose.
"They can do what they want with it," he said. "I know some of the places need work, but things have worked out."
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Wednesday, January 13, 1988/University Dally Kansan
Foreign
Continued from p. 1B
Thomas Mullinazzi, associate dean of engineering, said that 43 percent of the students in KU's graduate program in engineering were foreign. He said that U.S. students were not continuing into graduate school in engineering because startling salaries were high for undergraduates.
"When you offer $20,000 to $30,000 to an undergraduate, it's hard to keep them. Pure economics. On the other hand, higher degrees to the foreign student are more important, whether they stay in this country or go back home," Mullinazzi said.
Richard Givens, chairman of the chemistry graduate admissions committee, said that 30 percent of the chemistry graduate program was foreign. However, he said, the number of foreign students in the program seemed larger because of a decline in U.S. students.
"In general, from 1970 to now, there's been a downswing of domestic students going into the graduate programs. Currently, there's a shortage of good, qualified graduates in chemistry." Givens said.
Goldhammer, of the physics graduate admissions committee, said that U.S. students often don't continue on to graduate work in physics because of problems in education. Students out of high school in the United States, he often not trained for college work. This inexperience dissuades them from pursuing higher studies in their fields.
"Because of this, there will be a crunch in the job market in sciences and other fields in the 1990s," he said. "Foreign students go back to their own country. Things are going to be bad across the board. There will be great shortages of scientists and professors."
Currently, 40 percent of the graduate program in physics is foreign, he said.
The predicted shortage in the 1990s will affect the math departments in the United States the most, according to a 1985 article in Science magazine.
Bunce said that the reasons for the large numbers of foreign students differed from nation to nation. European students come to the United States because they find not enough space at their universities, and students from the rest of Europe study from the unrest in their own country. However, most foreign students study here for the quality of education, he said.
Coan said that through his work with foreign student services, he had found that many foreign students come to KU because friends from the same country have attended the University.
Another attraction is the price. The tuition at KU is low compared with other U.S. universities, he said. Unlike some U.S. universities, KU does not recruit overseas.
William Sy, a graduate student in engineering from the Philippines, said that the research facilities at U.S. universities attracted him and his friends to colleges in the United States.
"Research facilities at home are not as extensive as they are here," Sy said. "University in the Philippines doesn't do as much research as they do here.
Givens, of the chemistry graduate admissions committee, said, "The demand by industry is still high. Students out of graduate school can expect between $36,000 and $40,000 (in industry). If the student teaches at KU, he will get about $28,000. The foreign students go back to their own country; there's a shortage here."
Barbara Turington, assistant to the president of international education of the American Council on Education, said that in some programs around the country, foreign students were keeping graduate schools alive. This, she said, secures the future of the graduate programs for U.S. students.
Bunce said that it would be very difficult for KU's math department to survive if 40 percent of the graduate school were taken away. None of the graduate courses, he said, would have enough enrollment to justify teaching the courses.
KU professors and administrators currently are searching for solutions to that problem.
Woodyard said that the office of academic affairs organized a program Nov. 18 for people interested in continuing on to graduate school. The program, intended for seniors, involved a presentation and a discussion of the opportunities in graduate programs and in teaching at the college level. he said.
Other departments have started offering inducements, such as scholarships, to domestic students, Goldhammer said.
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University Daily Kansan/Wednesday. January 13, 1988
5B
H. C.
Charles Stansifer, director of the Center for Latin American Studies.
Stansifer Continued from p. 1B
Griffith, who now lives in Lawrence, said few students had the drive and determination that Stansifer had.
"He was very industrious and dependable, and he got his work in on time," Griffith said. "He was a model student.
"I didn't even have to lay a pencil on his dissertation. He was the sort of student that made a professor feel like he was in the right business."
1,
I don't like the word 'workaholic,' but I guess I am one. I think work can be beneficial and therapeutic. I don't feel even close to being burned out.'
- Charles Stansifer director of Latin American studies
After he graduated from Tulane with his doctorate, Stansifer taught Latin American history at the University of Southwestern Louisiana in Lafayette from 1959 to 1963.
He came to KU in 1963; and today, he devotes most of his time to improving the Latin American Studies program.
To do so, he works to improve exchange programs between KU and Latin American universities and attends conferences where information about programs at other universities is discussed. He said he traveled to three or four conferences a year in Latin American countries.
Part of his job, Stansifer said, is to get Latin American leaders to speak at KU. He said he was fortunate to get Sergio Ramirez, vice president of Nicaragua, to speak at KU in October 1986.
Stansifer said he had known Ramirez since they met in Costa Rica in the 1960s. They both enjoyed talk about Latin American history and a friendship developed, Stansifer said. When Stansifer called Ramirez, he was willing to come to KU and speak.
"I think that dealing with the most prominent leaders, such as Mr. Ramirez, stimulates interest in studying the region," Stansier said. "And we learn about the region through its leaders. We don't really learn what is going on in Latin American countries — we don't learn directly — until we get high-level skokemen on campus."
Staniser does not talk only to Latin American politicians. Three or four times a year he consults with Rep. Jim Slattery and Sen. Nancy Kasse-
baum to discuss how he believes Costa Rica and Nicaragua will react to certain U.S. policies. For Stansifer, the purpose of those discussions is to try to influence U.S. policy decisions on Central America and to provide advice on the region.
And any talk about U.S. policy in Central America usually centers on aid to the Nicaraguan contras, Stansfer said. He said he had told Slattery and Kassebaum that he opposed aid to the contrasts.
"I think diplomatic efforts are much more likely to produce lasting results that are beneficial to the United States." Stansfer said.
Stansifer said he also made two or three speeches each month at colleges and churches in places such as Emporia, Topeka and Kansas City. He said he usually told the groups why he believed President Reagan's Central American policies had been bad for the region.
"Our policy since Reagan has been so destructive, in my opinion, that it is essential that someone in my position make it clear what has happened," Stanford said. "The worst thing President Reagan has done is to use the military instead of trying to find diplomatic solutions. In the process, he has shattered the morale of the state department and violated international law."
Stansifer has interests besides his job. He said he relaxed when he worked in his garden at his country house and he said he ran 20 to 25 miles a week.
But there is no doubt that Stansifer's favorite activity is his work.
"I don't like the word 'workaholic,' but I guess I am one," Stansifer said. "I think work can be beneficial and therapeutic. I don't feel even close to being burned out. I am just as enthusiastic and energetic, maybe more so, than when I began this job."
Visit to celebrate 30th year of KU-Costa Rica program
Interuniversity exchange has served more than 900
By Brenda Finnell
Kansan staff writer
The events of 1958 may be beyond the memory of most KU students. Dwight D. Eisenhower was president then, and U.S. citizens that year celebrated the launch of the first U.S. satellite to go into orbit
The year 1958 also was an important time in the history of the University of Kansas study abroad program. That was the year then Chancellor Franklin Murphy signed an agreement with Rodrigo Facio, rector of the University of Costa Rica, to establish an exchange program between the two universities.
Next month, from Feb. 5 to March 1, more than 75 KU officials and program alumni will travel to Costa Rica to celebrate the program's 30th anniversary.
During the past three decades, more than 600 KU students have studied at the University of Costa Rica, located in San Jose, the country's capital. In addition, approx. 100 KU students have studied at KU since the program began.
Mary Elizabeth Gwin, director of study abroad, said the program was the oldest interuniversity exchange plan in the Western Hemisphere.
Thirty-nine KU students now are studying in Costa Rica, and about 30 Costa Ricans are studying here. Gwin said the program was generally one year long and began in February each year. Participants are required to have two years of college-level Spanish or the equivalent.
Gwin said that many exchange students were political science or Latin American studies majors but did not have discipline took part in the program.
For example, botany majors often are interested in studying the tropical rain forest environments in Costa Rica or in analyzing its more than 2,000 varieties of orchids, Gwin said.
T.
The successes are the students. They come away with a much deeper understanding of the two cultures.'
Robert Lineberry dean of liberal arts and sciences
Gwin said program organizers attempted to make participation in the program a personal experience.
"When our students get there, people go out of their way to do things for them, to open doors for them and to open classes for them," she said.
Charles Stansifer, director of Latin American studies, served as program director in Costa Rica in 1966 and 1974. The program has benefited not only students who have studied, but also faculty members who have served as visiting professors at the university, he said.
The time in Costa Rica allows students to "perfect their Spanish abilities and gain a Latin American perspective from the inside," said Stansifer, who will travel to Costa Rica for the celebration.
Chancellor Gene A. Budig also will be there, and Gov. Mike Hayden, Sen. Nancy Kassebaum and Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole have been invited, Gwin said. It is not certain whether they will be able to attend, she said.
Budig will re-sign the exchange pact with University of Costa Rica rector Fernando Duran in a Feb. 29 ceremony. Gwin said the agreement had been renewed about every five years since the original signing.
Other events during the five-day celebration include a reception, a tour of the San Jose area and a one-day Pacific coast cruise. A picnic at a mountain agricultural experiment
station also is planned. In addition, Gwin hopes a meeting can be arranged with Costa Rican President Oscar Arias Sanchez, who won the Nobel Peace Prize last year for his work on a Central American peace plan.
Seminars on Central American politics, press, current literary criticism trends and the transfer of technology also are planned.
Stansifer said he hoped during next month's visit to help organize an alumni association of Costa Ricans who have graduated from KU, a step he believes will strengthen the exchange program. He said he also wanted to plan future conferences in both Lawrence and San Jose.
The relationship between the two universities has flourished because of both luck and the hard work of officials at each university, Stansifer said. He said KU was fortunate to become associated with a stable Latin American university that had grown stronger through the years
Robert Lineberry, dean of liberal arts and sciences, who will be in Costa Rica for the celebration, said the reunion should honor participants from both Costa Rica and KU. He said he also expected the event to make ties between the two universities to even stronger during the next decade.
When measuring the accomplishments of the program, Lineberry points to the program's participants. "The successes are the students," he said. "They come away with a much deeper understanding of the two cultures."
Gwin said the anniversary events celebrated the solid relationship between the two universities. The exchange program is "one small way of fostering world peace — people to people," she said.
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Wednesday, January 13, 1988/University Daily Kansan
Kendall
Continued from p. 1B
It took Kendall many years to find her niche as a children's writer. As a young woman just married to her college English professor, she wrote all kinds of stories. Some were romances; some were mysteries. None, she said, were very successful.
That changed one day when she decided to write several short stories for her two daughters based on bedtime tales her family told about a little elf called Curly Green. One of the stories she wrote caught the attention of the editors of Jack and Jill, a children's magazine, who bought the story.
"It never occurred to me before that I should write for anyone other than adults," she said.
In 1959, Kendall received national attention as a children's author with her fantasy novel, "The Gammy Cup." The book, the winner of the Ohioa Award and runner-up for the prestigious Newberry Medal, became the first of the three-book Minipinip series. It dealt with society's pressures to conform.
The main characters became outcasts of their tiny village because they wanted to be themselves, instead of behaving like the respected citizens in their community. Their perceived weakness became a heroic strength when their kingdom was threatened with evil invaders that only the outcasts could repel.
Children's literature experts who study Kendall's books say indictments of conformity, prejudice and injustice are common themes in her books. Her style isn't preachy, but she incorporates these themes subtly in her stories and allows children to decipher the message on their own, critics say.
"She (Kendall) is a very righteous person and cares a great deal about people," said Yao-Wen Li, a Lawrence writer who collaborated with Kendall on two books of Chinese folktales. "When she sees things that strike her as not right, she will do anything she can to change it. You can see that in her books."
Kendall often muses that her development was halted at the age of 12, and as a result, it's easy for her to write those ideas into stories for children.
Fearful of lifting story ideas from others' works, she doesn't watch much television or read other children's books.
Kendall keeps a list of story ideas and jots down things that affect her life. She said questions that children have, such as why countries try to take over other countries, often become the basis of her books.
"I know from the beginning what the ending of each book is going to be," she said. "But I don't plot the actions more than halfway through because the characters tend to take over. Things happen, and I want to see it open so I can reach the conclusion in whichever way those characters choose."
Kendall said she didn't write down to children but often found herself simplifying complicated verbiage. She fights with her editors over words they think are too long
I know from the beginning what the ending of each book is going to be. But I don't plot the actions more than halfway through because the characters tend to take over. Things happen, and I want to see it open so I can reach the conclusion in whichever way those characters choose.'
— Carol Kendall author of children's literature
for children because she believes children should be challenged.
Kendall said that one of the most rewarding aspects of writing was hearing from young readers who said her books had an effect on their lives.
I received a letter a couple years ago from a lady who read "The Gamage Cup" at a time in her life when she was physically abused," Kendall said. "Many years had passed since she read the book, but she recognized it in the bookstore and wrote me to tell me how much it meant at such a terrible time of her life."
Recently, Kendall supplemented her writing with translating ancient Chinese folk tales. Working with Lawrence writer Yao-Wen Li, she has written "Sweet and Sour: Tales from China." "Cinnamon Moon: Tales from China" and now has nearly completed a third book. The two writers find ancient Chinese folk tales, research their original meanings and translate them into English.
"Chinese folk tales fit very well into fantasy," Kendall said. "Things in China are so very different from here. In other countries, people look at things differently, and that is what fantasy is — looking at things differently. It keeps my mind fresh and churning."
Kendall, who turned 70 in September, said she wasn't ready to sit back and talk about her successes. She spends much of her time travelling to places like Easter Island, China and Africa. When she is home, she can usually be found writing.
"In all these years, it's still hard to sit down and get things on paper," she said. "I set a timer and tell myself that any idiot can sit down in front of a word processor and write for 15 minutes. When the timer goes off, I look at the screen and see that I've written a couple of good lines and think any idiot can sit for 15 more.
"Once I get started, I wonder why it's so hard to get started. This is what I love."
Past KU profs and football coach die in December, early January
Fritz Heite, 91, a KU professor emeritus of psychology, died Jan. 2 in a Topeka nursing home. He retired from KU in 1966.
After he earned his doctorate from an Austrian university in 1920, Mr. Heider taught in Germany and was the head of the psychological research department at the Clarke School for the Deaf in Northampton Mass.
He came to KU in 1947, and in 1958, his book "The Psychology of Interpersonal Relations" was published.
After he retired from KU he wrote "The Life of a Psychologist'
— An Autobiography," which was released in 1983 by the University Press of Kansas.
He received American Psychological Association awards in 1965 and 1987.
He is survived by his professor, Grace Moore, a KU professor emerita of psychology; four sons, Karl G. of Columbia, S.C., John, Lawrence and Stephan of Buffalo, N.Y.; and five grandchildren.
Karyn Z. Davis, both of Lawrence, andyn Z. Malele A. Zareley of Austin, Tex.; two sons, Richard M., and Alan E., both of Lawrence; a sister, Chloris Butler of California; and two brothers, Clifford Zarley of California and Kernit Zarley of Washington.
Former KU coach killed in car crash
George W. Bernhardt, 68, died in a two-car collision Dec. 6. Mr. Bernhardt was an assistant football coach at the University of Kansas from 1958 to 1966 and from 1971 to 1974.
He was born June 15, 1919, in Berwin, Ill.
Mr. Bernhardt is survived by two sons, Mark Bernhardt of St. Louis and Tom Bernhardt of Honolulu; a daughter, Judy K. Kish of Kaiserslautern, West Germany; and three grandchildren.
Former instructor in economics dies
Mr. Zarley was an associate professor in economics at the University of Kansas from 1964 to 1977
Arvid M. Zarley, 58, died of a heart attack Dec. 16 at Stormtown-Vail Regional Medical Center in Topeka.
He was born Feb. 23, 1909, in Indianola, Iowa. He was an Air Force veteran of the Korean War, and he received a doctorate from Purdue University in 1965.
He was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery in Lawrence on Dec. 10.
He is survived by his wife, Shelley Patterson Zarley; three daughters, Debra K. Zarley and daughters,
G. Norman Loofburrow, 75 died Dec. 10 at an Overland Park nursing home. He taught physiology at the University of Kansas from 1948 to 1961. From 1961 to 1977, he was an associate professor of physiology at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
Former professor of physiology dies
Mr. Loobfurbw was born Dec. 26, 1911, in Westmoreland, and earned his bachelor's degree from Park College, Parkville, Mo., in 1934. He earned master's and doctorate degrees at the University of Michigan.
He is survived by his wife, Gladys MacDonald of Prairie Village; a daughter, Jan Richardson of Yutan, Neb.; a sister, Margaret Iso of Boyton Beach, Fla.; and four grandchildren.
Former professor of languages dies
Agnes M. Brady, 92, died Dec. 4 at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. She was a professor of Spanish and Portuguese at the University of Kansas for 28 years until her retirement in 1965.
She earned bachelor's and master's degrees at KU and lived in Lawrence most of her life.
Former conductor of music camps dies
Claude T. Smith, 55, died Dec. 13 at Parkland Medical Center in Raytown, Mo. He had been a regular conductor at KU music camps and was an active member of the University of Kansas Alumni Association.
He received a bachelor's degree in education from KU in 1958.
He is survived by his wife,
Mauren, a daughter, Pam Smith
of Olathe; and his mother, Harriet
Smith of Carrollton, Mo.
Kansan reporter Ric Brack compiled the information for this story.
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Combination Plates $2.75 Combination Plates $4.95 Highly Recommended by both the Kansas City Star and Wichita Eagle Beacon, the Royal Peking Restaurant stands out as Lawrence's premiere Chinese restaurant, featuring outstanding authentic Oriental cuisine served with flair and elegance Now serving premium oriental wines, Chinese and domestic beers.
711 W.23rd
Open:
Tues.-Sat. 11/3/4-30/10
Sun. Noon-9/30
Closed Mondays
Open:
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STRICK'S RESTAURANT only $3.50 DAILY SPECIALS
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Thursday...Smothered Steak
Friday...Chopped Steak
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Tuesday...Fried Chicken
Wednesday...Hamburger Steak
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OPEN Mon.-Thurs. 6:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m.
Fri. and Sat. 6:00 a.m.-11:30 p.m.
Breakfast served Anytime
723 North 2nd
$3\frac{1}{2}$ blocks north of the bridge
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University Daily Kansan/Wednesday. January 13, 1988
7B
AIDS task force suggests condom machines on campus
By Dayana Yochim
Kansan staff writer
The installation of condom vending machines in men's and women's rest rooms in campus buildings is one of 16 recommendations included in a recent report by the Lawrence campus AIDS task force.
The report was submitted Dec. 16 to Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor of the University of Kansas. Ramaley, who organized the task force, said Monday she would respond in detail to each recommendation later this month.
Ramaley said she was reviewing the recommendations. If they are found to be appropriate, Ramaley will decide how the recommendations will be put into effect, she said.
In the report, the task force emphasized the University's role in educating students and the community by ensuring immune deficiency syndrome.
The task force was divided about whether the University should have distributed the safer-seek kits that provided student fee payment this week, Davis said.
reducing the risk of AIDS.
He said that installing condom machines was not advocating sex; rather, it allowed students to have easier access to condoms.
Davis said he hoped the educational approaches the task force recommended would help prevent the spread of AIDS and other sexually
Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare and member of the task force, said education alone would not reduce the risk of AIDS on campus.
transmitted diseases.
Dailey said that with the installation of the machines, protection become more available and students can feel more comfortable with using condoms.
In addition to the educational recommendations, the task force discussed rights of those who carry the AIDS virus and those who are at a
high risk for contracting the disease.
"I think it was our intent to make recommendations that will enhance and augment the experience," he said. "We wanted to make sure that confidentiality was preserved."
Other recommendations the task force made were
The task force said the existing state and University policies were sufficient for dealing with AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases. Other recommendations the task
Other recommendations force made were
■ To expand educational efforts among organized living groups and
- To consider expanding human sexuality education and the training of students who would be in positions to educate others as part of their careers;
- To emphasize referrals to support services;
- To review the sanctions and protections guaranteeing confidentiality of University records and to ensure that information about AIDS not become part of any University record except medical records.
Hart and Bush find Iowa campaign trail rough Rivals want answers to Rice and Irangate questions as Iowa caucuses approach
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — What do Donna Rice and the Ayatollah have in common?
Don't ask.
Don't ask.
Gary Hart and George Bush, embarked on a perilous journey through the wintry reaches of Iowa and New Hampshire, have been ducking some key questions about the crises that have embroiled their presidential candidacies.
Vice President Bush's first campaign swing of 1988 was overwhelmed last week by confusion over his role in the administration's arms sales to Iran, and he is being taunted by his Republican rivals to answer all questions.
On the Democratic side, Hart remained adamant, ducking all Donna Rice queries with one variation or two. With the phrase, "It's nobody's business."
But his resolve, like Bush's, appeared to be weakening under the New Year's intense political spotlight.
"IIf I am elected, I won't be the first adulter in the White House," he told the Des Moines Register in a sometimes-emotional interview Sunday. But he still did not discuss the matter directly.
In declining to discuss his judg-
ment in seeing Rice (Hart never uses
News Analysis
her name; he refers to his "mistake." Hart said the Monkey Business episode paled in comparison to Bush's problem with the Ayatollah and more mundane matters such as the federal debt.
"I would love to run in a race against Vice President Bush on just that issue — whether my personal and human mistake is on the same scale as the mistakes of the last seven years." Hart said.
And he added: "I won't be the first adulter in the White House."
For months now, Bush — citing the confidential nature of his relationship with President Reagan — has declined to discuss his advice to the president regarding the arms of arms to Iran. His silence fueled speculation that despite his gold-plated experience in national security posts, Bush contributed nothing to the most crucial debate of the Reagan years.
His GOP opponents predictably pressed Bush over the weekend.
"He's not going to violate national security if he tells us" his advice to Reagan, said Rep. Jack Kemp of New York. Sen. Bob Dole of Kansas called for Bush to release "all the data" involving his role in Iran-contra deliberations.
Just last month, Bush declared point-blank, "If the price for my winning the election is that I have to go out and violate that confidence, I'm not going to pay the price." Despite the bravado, Bush may be changing his tune.
On Thursday he said, "I will answer any question put to me by the special prosecutor," but beyond that, "I can't talk about it." On Saturday he said he'd be glad to release his notes and documents on Iran-contra and added, "I'm perfectly willing to answer any questions."
With the Feb. 8 Iowa caucuses looming, Bush needs to clear the air so voters will pay attention to his campaign themes. For now, he is being pressed about the arms sales every day.
"I have no regrets about erring on the side of human life," he said. "I think the American people identify with that."
Whether voters will see selling arms to Iran as "erring on the side of human life" is another matter, and the explanation contradicts the president's most recent rationale that the arms sales were not an effort to buy the release of American hostages in Lebanon but rather an effort to win friends among the possible successors to Avatollah Khomeini.
Hart also would like to focus on
look to the-future campaign themes,
but the former Colorado senator also
must fend off the inevitable. A viewer
called the Larry King talk show last
week and essentially asked Hart,
how could you do a thing like that to
your wonderful wife?
Hart did not rise to the bait
"If my wife thinks I've been lying to her, she can take it up with me." Hart said. "She's actively campaigning for me and believes strongly in this candidacy, so I don't think this caller has the right to interpose himself in my wife's defense."
Perhaps his most imaginative response came when Hart was asked about the Donna Rite contremets on the McNeil-Lehrer report. "It's no one else's business," he said, "It hasn't been the business of the American public for 200 years and it isn't today."
Lehrer: "You don't speak to the question of judgment."
Hart: "Well Jim — if I may call you Jim?"
Lebrer: "You may."
Hart: "Let's reverse the logic. Does it suggest because Ronald Reagan used poor judgment on Irangate, that therefore he's unfaithful to his wife?"
News Data
The year has just begun.
1987 Car sales
Cars Percent of cars sold in U.S. in 1987
Other 9.7%
VW*** 2.3%
Mazda 2.0%
Honda** 7.2%
Nissan 5.2%
Toyota 6.2%
Chrysler Motors* 10.7%
General Motors 36.5%
Ford 20.2%
*Includes full-year results of American Motors Corp., acquired August 1987
**Includes Acura division
***Includes Audi division
trucks Percent of trucks sold in U.S. in 1987
Other 10.2%
Nissan 4.4%
Toyota 6.2%
Chrysler Motors*
18.5%
General Motors 31.3%
Ford 29.4%
*Includes Jeeps
"GE; Auto companies
Knight-Ridder Graphic
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Harmar/Kardon TD102 Cassette Deck features Ultrawideband frequency response, discrete circuit playback amplifiers and low negative feedback. The TD102s solenoid logic controlled two-motor transport ensures smooth operation. The hand-selected hard permalley load ensures consistent, accurate high frecuency signals with a 7 segment LED peak metering system aids in setting phase recording levels. Other features include Dalby B noise reduction, independent input level controls, and record mutex button.
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Wednesday, January 13. 1988/University Daily Kansan
'Hot Lips' visits real Korea for movie on forgotten war
The Associated Press
SEOUL, South Korea — Loretta Swit said it seemed like coming home when she finally visited Korea to make a film on the country and the war that was the setting for the popular TV series "M*A*S*H."
Swit, who starred as Maj. Margaret "Hot Lips" Hoolihan in the show, shook her head as she stared at some North Korean border posts.
Despite the fact that "M*A*S*H" was filmed in Southern California, she said the surroundings seemed familiar.
"It's deja vu because I spent 10 years of my life pretending to be in Korea," said Swit, who arrived in the country last week.
Filmmaker Arnold Shapiro turned to Swit when he came up with the idea of making a film about the Korean War and the United States' role in it.
"It really is the forgotten war," Shaniro said.
"M*A*S*H," the story of a U.S. army medical station handling battle casualties, is about the only association most Americans have with Korea, Shapiro said. But his film "Korean War Stories" will show more of the reality of the war, he said.
1.
Loretta Swit
"This isn't light entertainment. This is dramatic, powerful and in some cases, shocking." the filmmak
It's deja vu because I spent 10 years of my life pretending to be in Korea.^
er said.
The war erupted in 1950 when communist North Korea invaded South Korea. The United States and other nations sent hundreds of thousands of troops to aid the south in what became a three-year war of attrition.
The blank spot in America's memory about the war puzzled Shapiro and he said he hoped the film would help people to remember. About 55,000 Americans died in Korea, almost as many as in the much-longer U.S. involvement in Vietnam.
Carol Fleisher, the show's writer,
said it was time America recognized
the men and women who fought in
Korea.
"It's terrible to live knowing that what you did has been forgotten," she said.
The film, which will open in May, is timed to take advantage of the 35th anniversary of the end of the war and the coming of the Seoul Olympics in September.
Shapiro and Fleisher said few Americans realized the United States was still involved, with U.S. troops guarding the border with the north under a defense pact with South Korea.
It is a difficult and dangerous assignment, and dozens of U.S. soldiers have been killed or wounded over the years. The sealed border between north and south is defended by hundreds of thousands of troops on constant alert.
For the film, Shapiro interviewed veterans and some of the 40,000 U.S. troops on the border. Swit and the film crew toured U.S. army border positions, meeting servicemen, and they also rubbed shoulders with North Korean soldiers at the Panmunjom truce site.
Interviews with U.S. soldiers relaxed as Swit asked them about their work and living conditions. They talked shyly about missing family and friends.
"I had never been so close to danger, to impending violence," Swit said after an encounter with a North Korean officer.
The wail of North Korean propaganda songs blaring from loudspeakers across the border provided a steady backdrop for the interviews. The soldiers, who couldn't understand the broadcasts in Korean, shrugged when asked if it bothered them.
PARKING
Sandra Watts/KANSAN
Rachel Roth, Dallas freshman, moves back into Lewis Hall in preparation for a new semester. Roth moved in Monday.
Movin' in
Complex new tax laws cause many to look for assistance
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Income tax forms have drifted into millions of U.S. mailboxes, and with the days ticking away toward April 15 many people are considering seeking help in dealing with the new tax laws.
Internal Revenue Service officials say people who have done their own taxes in the past should be able to cope with the new regulations and the forms, so the job looks simple to them.
For the rest of us, the choice is between learning a new system and getting help.
requested a copy
The IRS itself already has offered to assist people, sending out postcards in August to everyone who filed a tax form last year. Those cards offered a free booklet explaining the new tax law, and about 9 million people
That's only about 10 percent of taxpayers, though. The other 90 percent can still get copies of "Publication 920: Explanation of the Tax Reform Act of 1986 for Individuals," by writing to the address listed in the back of their tax packets.
For those who have needed help in the past, or who don't want to learn a new form, the answer probably is to seek help again this year.
The national Better Business Bureaus have put together a booklet explaining the various types of preparer and what they do.
"Tips on Tax Preparers," is available by sending $1 and a stamped, self-addressed long envelope to Council of Better Business Bureau, 1515 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington,
Va. 22209.
The booklet discusses the qualifications of such preparers as lawyers, accountants, enrolled agents and national and local tax firms, including the educational requirements for each group and noting that some cost considerably more than others. Generally, of course, the more complex your return, the more detailed and skilled assistance you will need.
When considering hiring someone to help with your taxes, there are several questions that need to be answered. Here are things the Better Business Bureau says to ask:
■ What tax preparation training and experience does the prepener have?
■ Will you be interviewed by the same person who will prepare your tax form? The interview is important in recognizing deductions and tax credits. You need more interaction than just having a clerk fill in the lines on the form.
ence does the preparer nave.
How does the preparer keep up to date on
How many tax forms does the preparer complete in a year? This answer will help you decide whether the individual has enough time to devote to your personal situation.
People in specialized areas, such as small business operators, child-care workers and self-employed people, may want to ask if the career has any special experience in that area.
■ Is the return audited for accuracy only by the preparer or is it double-checked by someone else too? Is it checked manually or
by computer? Is it checked only for math errors, or for possible errors in interpretation of tax rules?
■ Can the preparer be reached after tax season is over? In the event that the return is audited, you will need to contact him or her. ■ Can the preparer represent you at an audit, and is he willing to if necessary? Under the law, only enrolled agents, CPAs and lawyers are authorized to represent you before the IRS.
- What is the fee and how is it determined?
Most services have a set schedule of charges according to the number of forms that are used. Professionals often charge by the hour. But costs can vary widely, so be certain you have a clear understanding of the cost and what it includes.
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University Daily Kansan/Wednesday, January 13, 1988
9B
Program would boost beef consumption, industry says
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — For the third time in little more than a decade, the beef industry is gearing up to persuade cattle producers to pay for a permanent national promotion and research program.
Per capita beef consumption has dropped to a quarter-century low, millions of consumers are concerned about the role of red meat in their diets, and competing supplies of poultry and pork are giving cattle producers a run for the consumer dollar.
So advocates of the self-help program said a massive shot in the sirloin was needed to help stimulate beef consumption and calm consumer worries.
Other attempts failed in 1977 and 1980. This time Congress gave proponents a head start by authorizing the fees on a temporary basis until producers could vote on whether to keep the program.
Cattle producers began paying the $1 fee on each head marketed on Oct. 1, 1986, to finance a variety of promotion activities, including television commercials by celebrities like Cybill Shepherd and James Garner.
But the Food Security Act of 1985 also said a national referendum must be held within 22 months. A majority of those voting is required for approval before the checkoff program can be made permanent.
The Agriculture Department acts as overseer, although the operation of the program rests with a 113-member committee consisting of cattle producers and importers.
Jo Ann Smith of Micanopy, Fla., a former president of the National Cattlemen's Association, is chairman of the board and is heading up an information campaign.
"It's very important that all beef producers who are eligible to vote make an effort to become informed about the demand-building program the beef checkoff is funding," she said.
P
Per capita beef consumption has dropped to a quarter-century low. Millions of consumers are concerned about the role of red meat in their diets.
In the program's first year, state and national collections totaled more than $73 million. Under terms of the program, 41 states with beef councils were allowed to keep half for their own operations, with the other half forwarded to the board.
Importers were assessed more than $5.2 million, all of which went to the board for national projects. Assessments for the nine states without their own councils totaled $390,498 and went directly to the national board.
All told, the national board said it got $42.3 million the first year to finance national promotion and marketing of its $6 million waiver was reserved for refunds.
Industry leaders said beef had been getting a bum rap from some "extreme" health advocates who recommended cutting out red meat altogether or at least curbing the American appetite for hamburgers and juicy steaks.
While acknowledging that too much fat can be a health problem, the beef people said they had taken steps to emphasize and produce leaner product to satisfy modern wants. Also, they had seen per capita consumption weaken in recent years, reflecting lower production and demand.
Records kept by the DSA show that Americans enjoyed a beef-eating binge for many years, as growing affluence put more steaks and roasts on family tables, and as fast-food dishes made triggered hamburger munching.
consumption grew in most years,
rising from an average of 64.2
pounds, retail weight, to 82 pounds by
the end of the decade.
In 1976, Americans consumed a per capita average of 94.4 pounds of beef, the high-tide mark. Last year, according to the USDA, per capita beef consumption was 76.4 pounds. The projected 1988 average for U.S. beef consumption is 73.1 pounds.
Through the 1960s, per capita beef
Pork consumption, meanwhile,
showed much less change, averaging
60.3 pounds per capita in 1960 and
projected at 63.7 pounds in 1988.
But poultry has been the most impressive gainer, rising from a per capita average consumption of about 34 pounds in 1960 to more than 70 pounds in 1985. Last year, total poultry consumption averaged about 78 pounds per person, and in 1988 it may be nearly 83 pounds.
The board has recommended to the USDA that the nationwide referendum be held on May 10, 1988. The department is studying the proposal but has not announced a decision.
Some guidelines have been established, which the board said will be reflected in the USDA's official rules:
- Voting and registration for the referendum will take place on the same day and will be held at county extension offices. Absentee ballots will be available from state extension offices and must be returned to county offices.
Anyone who has owned a bovine animal during a specified period of time will be eligible to vote. Family ownership, corporations and partnerships will be entitled to one vote. Also, 4-H and FFA members who have beef projects (beef, dairy or veal) will be entitled to one vote.
The national checkoff to finance beef promotion and research has failed in the past to gain the required approval of cattle producers.
MILLIS, Mass. — This town is for the birds, especially this time of year, but that's just fine with the folks hosting the nation's largest bird watch.
Town becomes roost for birders
The Associated Press
Some 260 people aimed binoculars and cameras at their feathered friends for the 1987 Millis Christmas Bird Count, spotting 72 species, according to Brian Cassie, leader of the count for seven years.
Among the more unusual species noted were a mute swan and a black skerder, which is a black seabird or a red-knobbed bill, Cassie said.
Though there are 1,800 Christmas bird counts across the United States and Canada every year, more people count birds in Millis, about 20 miles southwest of Boston, every Christmas than anywhere else in the United
Bird counts were started around 1900 to keep track of bird migrations, and bird watchers claim the Christmas counts constitute the largest amount of fieldwork in science.
States, Cassie said.
During this year's count at the Broadmoor wildlife sanctuary near Millis, bird watchers also spotted a sharp-shinned hawk and a fish crow, which is smaller than an American crow and has a distinctive caw.
The bird watchers' information is compiled in one annual issue of American Birds magazine, Cassie said. Biologists and other researchers examine the data gathered from bird counts to learn more about migration patterns and other bird behavior.
Some changes in bird behavior over the years are obvious even to
the amateur, Cassie said. One change has been the result of an increase in dumps, shopping malls and fast-food restaurants, he said.
"When these counts started, gulls had a hard time making it through the winter," he says. "But now, they roost for the night on the coast, get up in the morning and fly to the dump for breakfast."
Cassie's favorite type of birding is owl-watching. During the Christmas bird count, he and other bird watchers went on an owl-walk at Stoneybrook Wildlife Sanctuary in Norfolk at 3 a.m. Dec. 19. Among other sights, they saw a screechowl with a shrew in its talons.
Christmas bird counts are a great way to get others interested in birding, said Cassie, 34, of Foxboro.
Upwardly mobile housewares on display during Chicago international exposition
The Associated Press
Sponsors of the show said this year's products target consumers who value quality of life and style — and can afford to pay for it.
CHICAGO — A pocketbook-size device that can translate spoken English into four languages and a "yuppie yardstick" that measures distance by ultrasound were among thousands of gadgets talked about Sunday at an international housewares show.
"People with disposable income want good design and style," said William Ripley, chairman of the board of the National Housewares Manufacturers Association, which sponsored the 87th International Housewares Exposition at the McCormick Place exhibition center.
The exposition features the latest in household items, ranging from a $1,000 cappuccino machine to an oscillating fan that resembles a futuristic robot.
The smart manufacturers brought merchandise with better design and more emphasis on style and quality to the show this year. Ripley said.
German, Italian or Spanish when spoken to in English.
The cordless microcomputer, the size of a pocketbook, will retail for about $1,500 and has a 2,000-phrase memory, said Steve Rondel, president of Advanced Products & Technologies Inc. in New York.
One of the more unusual items being touted is Voice, a voice-activated language translator that speaks French.
Sumitomo Electric Industries Ltd. of Japan displayed a machine that mixes, kneads, and bakes a leaf of homemade bread in three hours. It even has a self-timer so users can add ingredients at bedtime and have hot bread in the morning.
"It's the ultimate yuppie gift." Konderla said about the auto baker, which is being introduced to American distributors. It will sell for $350.
Another item aimed at the upwardly mobile is the Digitape, a handheld device that measures distance by ultrasound. It's dubbed the yuppie yardstick by its makers, International Consumer Brands Inc. of Trumbull, Conn.
The device, the size of a pack of cigarettes, lets the consumer determine distance at the speed of sound by pushing a button.
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THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS OFFICE OF STUDY ABROAD ANNOUNCEMENTS
CLIP AND SAVE
DON'T MISS AN OPPORTUNITY TO EARN KU CREDIT WHILE STUDYING ABROAD EVEN IN YOUR SENIOR YEAR!!! Scholarships are available to qualified students. KU scholarships and financial aid can be applied to the program fee.
PLACES ARE STILL AVAILABLE ON ALL SUMMER '88 AND ACADEMIC YEAR 1988/89 PROGRAMS. DEADLINES ARE:
FALL AND ACADEMIC YEAR:
- ISEP (various countries) January, 25
- January 25
- PEOPLES REPUBLIC OF CHINA
Inventor 37
- BRITAIN, FRANCE, SPAIN, ISRAEL
February 15
- GERMANY, DENMARK, ITALY March 4
- COSTA RICA March 12
ALL SUMMER PROGRAMS: March 1
COME TO THE OFFICE OF STUDY ABROAD FOR MORE INFORMATION OR ATTEND THE FOLLOWING INFORMATIONAL MEETINGS:
GROUP ADVISING SESSIONS FOR ALL PROGRAMS: applications will be available
- THURSDAY, JANUARY 14: WESCOE, ROOM 4049
* 10 AM - 5 PM, ACADEMY CITY, PETTINGTON
- 12:30 Spain, Costa Rica, Denmark, Great Britain
- 12:00 Spain, Costa Rica
* 1:00 France, Italy, Asia
- 1:30 ISEP, Germany, Israel
- FRIDAY, JANUARY 15: WESCOE, ROOM 4046
- 1:30 Spain, Costa Rica, Great Britain, Denmark
* 2:00 France, Italy, Asia
3987
- 2:30 ISEP, Germany, Israel
STUDY ART AND DESIGN AT BRIGHTON POLYTECHNIC IN ENGLAND. Slides of student work will be shown.
A discussion of the program with David Chapman of the Brighton faculty will follow.
- TUESDAY, FEBUARY 2. 315 Art and Design Building, 2:00-5:00
The Office of Study Abroad is located in 203 Lippincott Hall.
10B
Wednesday, January 13. 1988/University Daily Kansan
Kansas won't get supercollider
By Kevin Dilmore
Kansan staff writer
Kansas was eliminated in late December from a list of 25 prospective sites for the federal governments $4.4 billion supercolider project.
The national academies of science and engineering narrowed the list of prospective sites to eight states: Arizona, Colorado, Illinois, Michigan, New York, North Carolina, Tennessee and Texas. The states were found to be geographically economically and geologically qualified for the project.
The Kansas Legislature spent $300,000 on a proposal that placed the supercollider on a 16,000-acre site near the Pomona Reservoir, about 26 miles southwest of Lawrence.
The supercollision would be the world's largest subatomic particle accelerator. Officials estimated that the project would create about 4,500 jobs during its construction and that 2,500 jobs would remain after it went into operation.
Also last month:
- Nebraska was selected over Kansas and three other states last month to host a dump for low-level radioactive waste.
At least four possible sites for the duathlon race, two of the Kangas,Nerbaska,border.
The Central Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compact Commission voted 4-1 to place the dump in Nebraska. It will store waste from Arkansas, Kansas, Louisiana, Nebraska and Oklahoma.
The five states were under a federal mandate to select a site for the dump by Jan.1.
- Lawrence residents made national
during ABC TV's
coverage of Summer
Crews from "World News Tonight" were in Lawrence Dec. 7 tapping interviews with some of the people involved in the making of the 1983 TV movie "The Day After." The report focused on whether the movie made people here more aware of nuclear issues.
Among those interviewed were David Longhurst, former mayor of Lawrence and peace activist; Ellen Anthony, Lawrence High School sophomore, and a sixth-grade class at Hill Elementary School, 901 Schwarz Road.
The report combined the interviews with footage of a 1986 Lawrence delegation to Moscow and Soviet athletes competing in the Kansas Relaws.
Charges filed against the leader of a one-man ministry who was ticketed near Lawrence in November for salvaging two deer killed on Kansas and Missouri highways were dropped in December in Douglas County District Court.
Jesse Ray Tucker, the leader and sole member of Good Samaritan Ministries in Redlands, Calif. received two tickets from Kansas Wildlife and Parks Officials for possession of deer without a tag.
Tucker told the officers that he picked up one dead deer on Interstate 70 between Kansas City and St. Louis
and another on Highway 24-40 between Lawrence and Tonganoxie. He said he took the deer with the intention of distributing the meat to needy families in Lawrence.
Tucker distributed some of the meat to friends. At the time, he said he had a lot of stuff to eat.
"I thought it would be appropriate to serve this service as a warning and drop it off."
Douglas County District Attorney Jim Flory, said that when he talked to the conservation officer who gave Tucker the tickets, the officer indicted him. Tucker did not realize that what he had done was a violation of fish and game statutes.
Motorists who hit deer on Kansas highways may be allowed to keep them only after the accident has been reported and the deer has been inspected and tagged by law enforcement officials.
Illegal possession of game without a permit carries a maximum fine of $1,000 and a maximum sentence of six months in the county jail.
Real-life journalists applaud 'Broadcast News'
NEW YORK — They have a few complaints about accuracy, but most real-life "Broadcast News" people are delighted by the movie, especially its portrayal of the passionately dedicated producer who is the unheralded heart of network news.
The Associated Press
Writer-director James L. Brooks' romantic triangle set in the Washington news bureau of a major network has become the critics' darling and a box-office smash. Holly Hunter stars as the all-consumed producer who is torn between hardworking reporter Aaron Altman (Albert Brooks) and a handsome, budding attorney (William Hurt) who has risen to the top by virtue of his looks.
Jane Pauley, co-anchor of NBC's "Today" show, is concerned that the movie might give the impression that on-air people are dummies, but she had only praise for Hunter's role as producer Jane Craig.
"I was surprised that a popular movie could be made about that character, because it would've been more predictable to do a story about the anchorman or anchorwoman," said Pauley. "So I loved it that it turned that glamorous image of our business on its head and demystified it a little. I think that's important."
Tom Bettag, executive producer of the "CBS Evening News said, "In catching the frenzy and compulsiveness that comes with the business, I will just all sit and say, 'God, they got it just right.'
Brooks says the Holly Hunter character is a composite of many hard-working female producers. All the networks know a Jane Craig.
"It's very difficult for us at CBS to watch it, because Holly Hunter is so much Susan Zirinsky, it's like watching home movies," said Bettag.
Zirinsky, a senior producer in the CBS Washing ton bureau, was a technical aid on the movie
Brooks, who worked briefly years ago for CBS in New York, made a local TV station the setting for his "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" and later moved "Lou Grant" to a big city newspaper.
Though no network is specifically mentioned in "Broadcast News," at one point the president of the news division comes from New York to deliver the bad news that some staffers are to be laid off, a move CBS made last year when about 200 employees from the news division were let go.
But what makes those in the business cringe about the movie is the idea that a dim-witted, good-looking guy without any journalistic ethics or know-how could rise to the top in their profession.
Jeff Klein WANGAN
"It's everybody's worst nightmare of having a William Hurt emerge," said Bettag. "Fortunately, we haven't had to face that problem yet. I think people understand that the three network anchormen are real treasures, because they're not just actors."
Allen Fieldhouse
BeWilders
Chievous
Fan mania
Jayhawk fans show their support for Kansas basketball and their distaste for rival Missouri. The Jayhawks defeated the Tigers 78-74 at Allen Field House on Saturday.
Texas university trying to control cackling birds by making slippery roosts
The Associated Press
AUSTIN, Texas — Whistling rockets didn't work, so University of Texas officials have tried more subtle methods to try to get rid of the tens of thousands of grackles on campus.
Officials are pruning trees to eliminate roosting space of the shriking and squawking great-tailed birds. Cold water also might be sprayed into the trees to make roosting a slippery business.
"The noise was never really effective," said Charles Franklin, university vice president for business affairs. "It just moved the birds around."
“But we have a huge campus with over 400 acres that have trees on them. So it will take a lot of effort and time to get there, but I am about how long it’ll take,” he said.
Many other institutions around the country with similar problems have found the pruning-and-watering treatment to be worthwhile, Franklin
said.
Unless they are causing economic depredation, grackles and other blackbirds are protected by federal migratory-bird regulations.
A grackle consultant estimated several winters ago the campus harbored.
Keith Arnold, a professor of wildlife and fisheries sciences at Texas A&M University, is familiar with the problem.
Arnold has been studying grackles for 18 years and has watched the birds move northward from their original homes in Mexico and South Texas.
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University Daily Kansan/Wednesdav. Januarv 13, 1988
11B
Marijuana use is No.1 job-killer
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Suspicion of marijuana use is the single biggest disqualifier of otherwise qualified job applicants, according to a survey of top personnel directors among Fortune 500 companies.
More than two-thirds of the surveyed personnel directors said they believed smoking marijuana after work decreased an employee's on-the-job productivity.
And 47 percent said they were unlikely to hire an otherwise qualified job applicant who they believe used marijuana off the job. Another 22 percent said they were somewhat unlikely to hire such a person.
Only 2 percent said they would be very unlikely to hire an otherwise qualified candidate who drank after
work. And despite the attention devoted to alcohol abuse in the past decade, only 5 percent said they asked apoliticians if they drank.
Nearly half of the 252 Fortune 500 companies responding to the survey said they tested prospective employees for use of marijuana or other drugs. Another 20 percent said they were considering plans to start such testing.
The survey was commissioned by the Washington-based Interface Group, one of the nation's 50 largest executive search firms — commonly known as headhunters — with several Fortune 500 clients.
While the results of the survey reflect recent attention the government and private industry have given to drug abuse and testing, they
conflict with the focus of many self-belg guides on how to win a job.
For example, 94 percent of the personnel executives listed relevant experience, knowledge or competence as the most important attributes of a job candidate.
Characteristics such as physical appearance and fitness, weight, whether an applicant smokes and the college he attended were listed as important attributes by less than 10 percent of the companies polled.
"The people out there giving advice seem to be way off base as far as their perceptions of what employers want," said William Marumoto, Interface's president and a White House specialist in the Nixon administration.
Marumoto said he was surprised
by several other responses in the survey.
When asked to volunteer what they considered important attributes of managerial candidates, only 21 percent listed ability to manage and only 11 percent mentioned ability to work with others.
Positive attitude, integrity and honesty were mentioned as important attributes of management candidates by only 3 percent of the personnel directors. Intelligence was mentioned by 6 percent, enthusiasm by 8 percent and communication skills by 12 percent.
The personnel directors estimated that they considered an average of 5.5 applicants for each managerial opening and interviewed four of them.
Town hears voices in appliances, radiators
HULL, Mass. — Anne Scully picks up her telephone and hears Diana Ross singing "Stop! In the name of love." News and talk shows resound from her bedroom radiator.
The Associated Press
It's all courtesy of a pair of high
All over this seaside town, 25 miles south of Boston, residents are hearing voices from the radiators, from the plumbing, from ovens and toasters and aluminum siding.
powered radio transmitting towers down the street.
"It's a pain in the neck to listen to voices that are not of your choosing. I call it an invasion of privacy," 69-year-old Mrs. Scully said Saturday at least have all night long. I'd like to at least have some say in what I listen to.
"It's obnoxious to have to lie in bed and listen to those stupid women who can't sleep nights calling in to the
talk shows," she added.
Frances Gentiliucci, 31, a neighbor of Mrs. Scully, said, "It comes through my pipes downstairs when I'm washing clothes." Her 8-year-old daughter, Jennifer, plugged in an empty tape recorder and out came the voice of a disc jockey reminiscing about golden oldies.
WBZ in Boston have stood in Hull for years, interfering with phone calls and scrambling television reception. Mrs. Scully more or less lived with the unwanted talkback from her radiator when she moved into her house four years ago.
The pair of 520-foot transmitting towers for 50,000-watt radio station
But a fire at the base of one of the antennas in early November seemed to worsen the problem and spread it over more of the town.
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For the best in world and national news, complete business section, and extensive coverage of sports, movies, books, music, etc.
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for Jan. 18-May 12 send $20.90
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12B
Wednesday, January 13, 1988/University Daily Kansan
Egg war fought in India
The Associated Press
NEW DELHI, India — What is fun, tasty, resembles Pope John Paul II's balding pat and won't cause boils no matter what the legend says? An egg, say those who want India's millions of vegetarians to eat more of them.
"You can call it a crusade, a sort of holy war against the vegetarian Indian tradition of not eating eggs," said Surinder Singh Rekhi, local chairman of the National Egg Coordination Committee.
The committee presents puppet shows in remote villages, depicting tales from Hindu mythology while a singer engels the virtues of eggs.
"Eggs! Eggs for taste! Eggs for fun! Eggs are good for everyone!" g goes a merry jingle heard by millions of Indians over the radio every day.
In a recent issue of the committee's journal was a photograph of John Paul II, showing him without his skullcap during his 1986 visit to India. "Pope's pate is a good egg," the caption said.
At the root of much Indian resistance to eating eggs is a belief among traditional Hindus that an egg is a living being.
Among other common beliefs: eatings eggs causes pimples, boils and jaundice, and increases the sex drive in dangerous level, especially in hot weather.
Hoping to change the image, mem
bers of the committee have chased after marathon runners with baskets of hard-boiled eggs, and carried them as gifts to such varied sites as swimming pools, remote villages, schools and vegetarian homes.
"Some places we get the carrot,
some places we get the stick," said
You can call it a crusade, a sort of holy war against the vegetarian Indian tradition of not eating eggs.'
- Surinder Singh Rekhi of India's National Egg Coordination Committee
Rekhi, a former engineer with an American oil company who now is a full-time oil farmer.
A group of vegetarians sued the committee for claiming eggs were vegetarian. The committee argued that eating eggs does not violate Hindu religious beliefs and the case was thrown out of court.
The committee, to which 15,000 poultry farmers belong, spends about $140,000 a year advertising its product.
India is the world's fifth-largest producer of eggs, outranked only by China, the Soviet Union, United States and Japan. The committee and government say the poultry
industry, which provides 1 million jobs, has great potential if more of India's 780 million people can be persuaded to eat eggs.
Prices are low because demand seldom exceeds the supply of 15.9 billion eggs produced in this country every year. A dozen eggs sell for about 46 cents in New Delhi, less than half the price in New York.
"It is a hard battle, but worth fighting. One day when more and more Indians turn to eggs, the egg producers can make solid profit," Mr. Kang, managing editor of Poultry Reporter, New Delhi's only egg magazine.
Rekhi is a Sikh, and members of the sect generally eat eggs
To counter the arguments that eggs live, and that they play fast and loose with the libido, "we are telling people that nowadays 99 percent of the eggs are non-fertile," he said. "They are what we call mechanical eggs. I have 80,000 birds, but not a single male bird."
Resistance from vegetarians also is tough to crack.
"All this talk about egg being vegetarian is just a trick. I am not going to fall into it," said Rita Mohan, a New Delhi housewife.
Customers boycotted a Bombay grocer who stocked eggs, in the belief that other food in the store was being contaminated, the egg committee reported.
The Associated Press
TAMPA, Fla. — A self-propagating computer program is spreading like an electronic "virus," threatening to damage systems ranging from that at IBM's regional headquarters to a computer club's floppy disks.
Disks zapped by program 'virus'
"It kind of creeps up on you," said Jeff White, president of the Tampa Amiga User's Group, whose membership was infiltrated by the small rogue program.
A similar virus affected the vast network of computers at International Business Machines Corp.'s regional headquarters in Tampa last month.
Virus is computer jargon for a self-propagating set of orders devised by a saboteur and automatically copied from one computer disk to another, gradually taking up more memory space.
A virus programmed to wipe out thousands of files in May, on Friday
the 13th, was inserted into Hebrew University computers in Jerusalem, said Yisrael Radai, a senior programmer at the university's computer center.
"It is the most devastating thing we've ever come across," Radai said.
The Tampa Tribune reported Sunday that experts did not yet know what, if any, damage the virus can cause to previously stored programs or stored information. But it quoted one expert as saying a version of the virus was similar to the one found in Israel
White said the program was copied onto more than 20 of his floppy disks before he discovered it. And by then, the program had spread to the disks of many of the club's members via regular disk-of-the-month distribution.
In Israel, university computer experts devised two programs, called "immune" and "unvirus."
which tell users whether their disks have been infected and apply an antivirus program.
At IBM, the virus took the form of an electronic chain letter that grew so large it slowed the company's computerized message system. A holiday message promised to draw a Christmas tree on the screen if someone would type the word "Christmas tree." The program kept repeating itself and spreading to other computers in the network.
The IBM problem was stopped before it spread to customers' computers, according to spokesman Frank Gobes.
"We haven't determined where it came from," he said.
IBM's Information Network in Tampa serves as a hub for a large electronic system that is linked to machines from San Diego to Boston and from Miami to Seattle.
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Thursday January 14,1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 75 (USPS 650-640)
Smokestacks to be extended
By Jeff Moberg
Kansan staff writer
University of Kansas facilities operations officials expect to receive plans from the state architect's office this month that will add almost 40 feet to two smokestacks at the KU power plant.
The smokestacks need to be raised because they do not meet the Environmental Protection Agency's standards. The additions will cost about $100 per unit that will make the stocks about 108 feet tall from the power plant's floor.
The smokestacks are behind Staufer Hall in the southeast corner of campground.
The University's problems with EPA standards began last summer, when it tore out a 25-foot-tall white smokestack, which was 65 years old. In its place, two shorter stacks were built.
While the stacks were under construction, the Kansas Department of Health and Environment informed the University that the stacks would not be high enough. Computer tests conducted by Dennis Lane, professor of civil engineering, showed that the stacks needed to be raised to diffuse enough of the sulfur dioxide emanating from the boilers below.
The power plant's two primary boilers burn both fuel oil and natural gas. The fuel oil releases sulfur dioxide, which is formed when oil containing sulfur is burned.
On Nov. 24, the office of facilities planning sent a letter to the state architect's office, asking it to design the additions so the stacks could comply with the EPA's guidelines.
Anderson said he was pleased with preliminary drawings of the addi-
"T
Dennis Lane
The lower the stack is when you release something, it's going to be closer to the people from an emissions standpoint.'
professor of civil engineering
tions when he visited the state architect's office last week.
Lane, who was asked by KU officials to see what action they would have to take to get the stacks under compliance, said that part of the problem with the current height of the stacks was that the power plant is at the bottom of a hill.
"The lower the stack is when you release something, it's going to be closer to the people from an emissions standpoint." Lane said. "In order to get dispersion of the gases you need to get the stack in the hill."
Area residents complained last summer about bad odors and smoke released from the plant as a result of burning a low-grade, high-sulfur concentrate oil.
Anderson said the smell was caused by new equipment placed on two of the boilers and not the height of the water. That problem was corrected last fall.
Book work
These students found things a bit crowded as they shipped for books in elbow-to-elbow traffic yesterday at the KU Bookstore.
New program helps foreign students
By James Buckman
Kansan staff writer
College could be considered a big adjustment for anyone.
Add to that the shock of a new country, culture and language, and one gets a feel for the predicament many foreign students are in.
But the office of student affairs has established a new program this semester to ease those tough adjustments. The program uses KU students as advisers to incoming foreign students.
Dan Copeland, graduate student in the office of foreign student services and administrator of the program, said, "The idea is to match students who are arriving here on campus with someone who is familiar both with KU and American culture.
"We want to help them understand what education at KU is going to be like, because it is probably very different from the system they came out of in their country, wherever that may be," he said.
The program selected eight students to advise 18 new foreign students who had requested help. Of the
We want to help them understand what education at KU is going to be like, because it is probably very different from the system they came out of in their country, wherever that may be.'
eight advisers, four are U.S. citizens and four are foreign students. Most have traveled extensively and have worked with international students on campus.
M9
Dan Copeland program administrator
Copeland said cultural clubs on campus provided foreign students with support but lacked certain elements.
"One of the things they don't do is
provide students with contacts beyond their own national groups," he said. "For their adjustment to be really successful here, they need to make friends beyond their own circle of people, and especially beyond their own language.
"We match them up with people who aren't going to speak their own language, but yet who are sensitive to difficulties they face, such as new social patterns. There are so many things that are totally different," he said.
The office previously had used volunteers to meet foreign students during the first few days of class. Copeland said the new program would provide support throughout the semester.
"We're going to try to follow through with the students so we don't just see them once, but stay in touch with them," he said.
Budiman Kok, Jakarta, Indonesia, senior and one of the student advisers, said most foreign students were
ready to learn at KU but needed help in some areas.
"Most of the foreign students come here really wanting to stay and achieve their goals," he said. "Their only problem is that when they first come here they have a problem with English."
Karen Komp, Lawrence sophomore and a student adviser, said some foreign students needed someone to help them get acquainted with the University.
"I thought I had enough knowledge of the campus to help them get around," she said. "We want them to understand that they have someone to talk to whenever they need to talk. I want to make them comfortable with me and show them I can help them with anything at anytime."
Copeland said the program was available to approximately 110 foreign students this spring. He said he hoped the program would become able to accommodate 300 to 400 students next fall.
KU's Branch now ineligible
By Elaine Sung
Kansan sports writer
Kansas basketball center Marvin Branch was declared academically ineligible yesterday morning and will be unable to practice or play with the team for the remainder of the season.
Branch is a junior transfer from Barton County Community College. He started all 14 games this season, earning 8.4 points and 6.1 rebounds.
His best performance for the Jayhawks was against American last week, when he scored 20 points and grabbed 10 rebounds.
14
Branch could not be reached for comment, and KU coach Larry Brown was in Armes Iowa, where the Cyclones to the Iowa State Cyclomes last night.
"A lot of other schools have special programs to give them a chance to be successful, and they often use Mouse" programs, either. "He said."
"I think it's obvious that we have to make some changes," he said. "We don't have the curriculum set up for some of our students that don't have the normal background other students do.
In an earlier press conference, however, Brown said he was not happy with the academic system at KU.
Olga Evelyn, academic adviser for the KU basketball team, would not comment on the details of
Marvin Branch
Branch's ineligibility. She said only that Branch did not make the National Collegiate Athletic Association's eligibility requirements.
"We wait until the very last minute to make the announcement because every student has the right to question his grade and review it with his professor and see what the average came out to be," she said.
Evelyn also said that she received reports throughout the semester on all the players.
"You can warn them, you can help them and be as supportive as possible, but the ultimate responsibility is with the individual" she said.
By Elaine Woodford
Regents to discuss new admissions plan
Kansan staff writer
Members of the Kansas Board of Education and the Regents discussed the merits of the proposal yesterday afternoon at a joint meeting of the boards in Topeka.
TOPEKA — Questions and concerns continue to abound about the feasibility of the Board of Regents qualified admissions proposal and its effect on Kansas high schools.
■ See related story p. 5
Bill Musik, a member of the State Board of Education, questioned the need for two years of foreign language in high school, which would become a requirement if the proposal passes the Legislature. He also was concerned about the ability of smaller schools to provide instruction.
The boards discussed the effect of the curriculum requirements on smaller high schools in the state. The proposal would require four years of English, three years of math, social studies and natural science, and two years of foreign language.
"Smaller schools with limited resources would be affected if these requirements go through. It might increase the number of high school dropouts. If schools must adopt a curriculum designed just for college education, that would decrease the number of vocational classes." Musik said.
"I see this proposal forcing high school students to decide too early if they want to attend college or not," said Richard Reinhardt, a Regent from Erie. "What if a student finally decides to attend college his senior year? If he hasn't taken these classes, will he not be allowed to enroll?"
"We think there are too many windows, too many ways to get in, while legislators and others may think that there shouldn't be any obstacles to admission," said Richard Doddridge, a Regent from Kansas City. "Students should aim higher than just the minimum and realize that the ultimate goal of the proposal is good."
The Regents said yesterday that they planned to appoint a task force to determine specific course content for high school classes.
The proposal does provide for a "window" of 15 percent of the freshman class, who could be exempted from the minimum admission requirements.
"We want to look more at what children know rather than the fact that they passed the course," said Lee Droegemueller, state commissioner of education. "We know children need to learn about what level? We want to move education ahead and reduce the amount of remediation at the college level."
The Regents were concerned that high schools would create courses in name only, which would not prepare students in the core subjects.
Museum anniversary features lasers, films
By Donna Stokes
Kansan staff writer
Students can see a laser light show, the newest innovations in animated films and computer graphics demonstrations at the 10th anniversary of the Spencer Museum of Art on Saturday.
The celebration will be from 1 to 5 p.m. and from 9 to midnight.
Activities in the afternoon will be geared toward families. The museum will resume the laser light shows and animated films at 9 p.m. The Homestead Greys will play during a free dance that will begin at 9:30 p.m. The evening's activities are specifically for KU students.
Popcorn and soft drinks will be served.
The laser show "Son of a Well-Tempered Laser," which is set to classical music, will begin at 1:30 and 9:45 p.m. "Laser Sphere II," set to heavy metal music, will begin at 2:45 and 11 p.m. Pink Floyd's "Dark Side of the Moon" will be shown once at 4 p.m.
All the laser shows will be in the museum auditorium.
"I believe the laser shows will be the highlight of the event," said Ann El-Omiam, curator of education at the art museum. "I really hope a lot of students will take advantage of this opportunity."
1
The animated films will begin at 1:30 p.m. with "The Coyote and the Lizard." a computer-animated version of a Navajo folktale. Eleven different films will be shown throughout the event. The films will be shown in 211 Spencer.
"These films are really state-of the-art innovations," said Carol Shankel, art museum managing editor.
"Make and Take Art" will be featured during the afternoon. Children and adults will be able to experiment with graphics on computers set up by ComputerLand, Computerark and EZ Comp. The computers will be set up in the 20th century gallery.
2
Thursday, January 14, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Weather Forecast AWRENCE
REGIONAL
North Platte 35/18
Partly cloudy
Omaha 31/19
Partly cloudy
Goodland 42/26
Sunny
Hove 41/24
Sunny
Salina 40/23
Sunny
Topeka 38/20
Sunny
Kansas City 38/21
Sunny
Columbia 35/21
Sunny
St Louis 33/22
Sunny
Dodge City 48/26
Sunny
Wichita 41/24
Sunny
Chanute 39/22
Sunny
Springfield 42/26
Sunny
Forecast by Kevin Darmofal and
Jamie Zahara. Temperatures are
today's high and tonight's low.
Rain T-Storms Snow Flurries Ice
Warming Trend
Today expect sunny skies to continue as the mercury climbs into the upper 30's. Tonight fair skies with the low approaching 20.
KEY
Rain T-Storms Snow Flurries Ice
REGIONAL
North Ratte 39/18 Partly cloudy Omaha 31/19 Partly cloudy
Goodland 42/26 Sunny Haya 41/24 Sunny Selina 40/23 Sunny Topeka 38/20 Sunny Kansas City 38/21 Sunny Columbia 35/21 Sunny St Louis 33/22 Sunny
Dodge City 48/26 Sunny Wichita 41/24 Sunny Chanute 38/22 Sunny Springfield 42/26 Sunny
Forecast by Kevin Darmotel and Jamie Zahars. Temperatures are today's high and tonight's low.
5-DAY
FRI Mostly sunny 43/23 HIGH LOW
SAT Mostly sunny 46/30
SUN Partly cloudy 49/33
MON Showers 38/22
TUE Clearing 29/16
FRI
Mostly sunny
43/23
HIGH
LOW
SAT
Mostly sunny
46/30
SUN
Partly cloudy
49/33
MON
Showers
38/22
TUE
Clearing
29/16
■ Latin American Solidarity is sponsoring Bill Moyer's program "The Secret Government" at 6:30 tonight and will be in the mini-studios, 1204 Grace Ave.
On Campus
The geography department is featuring Walter M. Kollmorgen's speech "The Degenerate Americans" at 3:30 today in 317 Lindley Hall.
Today is the first day to drop classes at the enrollment center in Strong Hail.
- Today is the first day of late enrollment at the enrollment center in Strong. See the timetable for more information.
Campus Crusade for Christ will meet at 7 tonight in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, January 14, 1988
3
Campus/Area
JIM MAYERS
Ralph N. Adams, professor of chemistry, and Arvin Oke, assistant scientist for the chemistry department, are using imported brains for their research on the disorder schizophrenia.
Scientists study schizophrenia
By Julie Adam
Kansan staff writer
Although two KU scientists have not found the cure for schizophrenia, their research could be a big step toward that goal.
The two scientists, Ralph Adams, professor of chemistry, and Arvin Oke, assistant scientist for the chemistry department, have found strong evidence that high concentrations of the chemical dopamine in a brain the brain dealing with sensory functions may be related to schizophrenia.
That part of the brain, the thalamus, is an area neglected by most researchers because there is normal brainamine found there. Adams said.
In eight of nine schizophrenic brains Adams and Oke analyzed, they found 50 to 200 percent greater concentrations of dopamine in the thalami than normal brains. Adams said that in 18 normal thalami he studied, low levels of dopamine were found.
Schizophrenic patients don't see, hear or feel the outside world as normal people do, Oke said. Schizophrenics talk and act as if they receive different sensory information than normal people do. Since all children with schizophrenia have thalamus, Adams and Oke began researching that area.
The KU scientists began their research about six years ago.
"It was really quite a surprise because we'd been looking at the thalamus in normal brains and saw interesting patterns in other systems. We were dealing with this area of the brain in other areas of interest," Oke said.
An article of their research is printed in the current issue of Schizophrenia Bulletin, published by the National Institute of Mental Health. They said they waited to publish their research until they had obtained enough data to support their findings.
"If what we find continues to be found and it is correct, then it is wrong."
Adams said.
Adams said he wouldn't call their findings a major breakthrough because they would like to analyze more brains to solidify their hypothesis.
Adams said they received the brain banks around the world.
"It is much easier to get brains in Europe because they have higher autosv privileges," he said.
Many of the schizophrenic brains they have received came from Sweden. The brains are frozen immediately after they are taken from the body and kept at -70 degrees Celsius until they can be analyzed.
Adams and Oke said they slice the brains into 3-millimeter thick sections on a mechanical slicer in order to determine patterns of different kinds of chemical concentrations.
"We picked an area that isn't supposed to have high levels of dopamine and, lo and behold, we found it. We were interested in the thalamus from that viewpoint," Adams said.
Adams and Oke said they were excited about their findings but wanted to do more detailed research on the subject. Adams said that although some research had shown that high levels of dopamine in the brain might be linked to schizophrenia, none of the research in this area was conclusive.
It also has not been determined whether the dopamine levels are linked to the disorder or if it is due to other factors, such as the medications that are used to treat this disorder, Oke said.
Class shuffle confuses all but students still victorious
By a Kansan reporter
Roulette 101
When Paul Northam, a graduate teaching assistant, walked into 118 Fraser Hall at 2:30 p.m. yesterday, he thought he would be teaching a business writing section of English 360
But his students told him differently.
Most of the 24 students in the class had enrolled in critical writing, said Barbara Paris, an administrative officer in the English department.
The mix-up started last semester
when the course's original instructor,
Allen Valk, was called away to teach
another English class. Valk is filling
in for another instructor who is not
teaching at the University of Kansas
this semester.
Paris said that Northam was then asked to teach the section. He agreed to teach it only if the class was turned into a business writing section. By doing this, he could already have been printed showing the section as a critical writing class.
So, Paris said, English department officials decided to wait until yesterday to find out if any students in the class objected to the change.
Paris said many students objected because the critical writing course was required for some education majors.
Paris also said that Northam would teach the class as critical writing, and added, "I think it's going to work out."
Scorer gets a test
Bv Kathleen Faddis
Kansan staff writer
Poring over essay exams into the wee hours may become a thing of the past for history instructors.
"From an instructor's standpoint, it will do in about five minutes what would normally take about two hours," said Mark Connolly, assistant instructor in history.
Scan-tron, an automated test-scoring machine being considered for use by the history department, might make it easier for professors to give their students objective tests instead of essay tests.
Connolly introduced the device to the department. He said the device had been used for years in schools where he taught previously.
Freshmen and sophomores
The machine can tabulate responses on multiple choice exams, total the correct points, and help determine bad questions by showing how many students missed each question. It is similar to a test scoring service already available in Strong Hall.
would benefit from objective tests because they have less experience and can't compete as well with the older students on essay tests, Connally said. It also would save time for instructors teaching survey courses with more than 300 students, he said.
Norman Saul, chairman of the history department, said the department had not yet decided whether to use the machine. He said if it was used, it probably would be on a voluntary basis.
Automated testing might best be used to handle the volume of large-scale testing at the end of introductory courses, Saul said.
But the initial reaction from the department has been less than enthusiastic. Connolly said he thought there was a fear of technology, and the reaction had been "thoroughly negative."
Rita Napier, associate professor of history, said, "I think it would be a disaster.
"The essence of history is the critical and analytical approach and it is not possible to test that with simply objective tests."
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Thursday, January 14, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Regents should close lid on open admissions rule
Although some regard "qualified," formerly selective, admissions as an elitist view toward education, the problems with the state's open admissions policy are actually painful realities.
Students can graduate from Kansas high schools without a good background in literature, science, geography, history, math, the arts and the English language.
And the University of Kansas is overflowing with students not prepared for college. As a result, KU is forced to divert its scarce resources from college instruction and research to teaching students what they should have learned in high school. That is a painful expense when KU already has crowded classrooms, underpaid faculty and insufficient research support.
The reality is that, in these tight economic and highly competitive times, KU simply cannot be both high school and college. It cannot afford to be a flagship research school, attracting research funds and the best faculty and students, and be a center for remedial English classes.
The unprepared students suffer also. They don't receive the education and attention they need, simply because a university is not equipped or organized to teach the three Rs. There is a better way.
The first step is to eliminate the open admissions policy that says that any Kansas high school graduate is automatically eligible to attend any of the Regents schools. The Board of Regents bravely has taken that first step by proposing a qualified admissions policy. Under the plan, which would take effect for the Fall 1992 semester, Kansas high school graduates would have to meet one of three criteria:
Rank in the top third of their graduating class;
Score a 23 or higher on the ACT;
- Complete the Regents recommended curriculum with a minimum 2.0 grade point average. The curriculum would require high school students to take four English classes, three math classes, three science classes, three social science classes and two foreign language classes.
The plan also allows up to 15 percent of incoming freshmen to be exempt from the new standards.
The Regents are to be commended for their courage. The proposal is a necessary step. However, the proposal is a lot like swiss cheese: it looks good but has a lot of holes.
The core curriculum and GPA requirement would solve much of the problem if they were the sole requirements. But by giving students three criteria, high schools still can send students to college and not offer a solid curriculum to all students. In other words, "unqualified" students are admitted to college, and the college still will be forced to have remedial classes.
The Regents and the state legislature should consider:
■ Dropping the "ranking" requirement. It's a loophole.
■ Incorporating the state's 19 junior colleges. The argument that some students with poor high school grades may just be late bloomers is legitimate. Therefore, these students should attend a junior college, where they would get closer attention and could prove their abilities. A good academic record would be a ticket of admittance to a Regents institution in their sophomore year.
neally, the state should encourage all high schools to adopt the Regents recommended standards as graduation requirements for all students. That way all students would have a complete education and be qualified to attend KU. In essence, it would be the return of open admissions.
1odd Cohen for the editorial board.
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
Other Voices
Yes, it's UF's fault that campus buildings don't meet all of the state's fire codes. And yes, UF officials have known for years that they are violating those fire codes. But they aren't criminals, and they haven't done it on purpose.
It's much easier to obey the laws about jawwalking and littering than it is to obey the laws about fire safety.
"We will never catch up on all our fire code violations," said Charlie Reed, chancellor of the State University System. Because many of the buildings on Florida's public university campuses are so old (and preserved as historic landmarks), they have become fire hazards. Buildings in 1910 didn't come with sprinkler systems and fire walls — less of a hassle that way.
It's also much cheaper.
The Independent Florida Alligator University of Florida
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Richard Stewart...Graphics editor
Tom Eben...General manager, news adviser
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Brad Lenhart...Campus sales manager
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Free condoms more than silliness
When I heard that Student Senate was planning to hand out free condoms with instructions for use at registration, I mean handed out at registration, not used at registration . . . (Their eyes met across the crowded ballroom, he pushed through the line at Credit Cards, and they embraced beneath Checks. "Your condom or mine?" he asked). . . my first reaction was to scoff. I complained that paying fees was enough of a royal pain without having to dodge water balloons while standing in line.
Surely, I thought, there were better uses for $4,000, perhaps a special bonus for anyone working in Strong Hall actually seen smiling at a student. Or the money could be used to fund a much more complete and long-lived information center for those who want or need more help, or less, trendy recommendations.
It's not as if AIDS is a big secret. Acquired immune deficiency syndrome made the cover of Time magazine. There have been numerous television programs and newspaper articles. Watkins Hospital sent out fliers on the subject last semester, and posters on campus advertised informational meetings.
It seems to me that a certain awareness of the world around one is a basic survival trait. If a
A. S. KAMALYAN
Jay A.
Cohen
Staff Columnist
college student is too imbecilic or passive to take advantage of the information already available, then a free condom and pamphlet probably won't save him. And he doesn't belong in the first place, taking up space in crowded classrooms
And it's not as if condoms are hard to come by,
not like the bad old days when a red-faced freshman, stoked full of absurd optimism, eased his way to the back of a drugstore that he planned never to enter again, and whispered his heart's desire to some middle-aged sadist in a white coat who promptly bellowed:
"Got a big date tonight, huh? Who's the lucky girl? How many do you want? One?"
Eh... one box.
"Two dozen or dozen? What kind? What color?
Lubed or not lubed? Ribbed or not ribbed?
LARGE OR SMALL?"
Now you can find them at grocery check-out counters, which is where they should be.
Maybe handing out condoms at registration isn't such a bad idea after all.
The pea-brained Puritans of this country, who somehow seem to think that if everyone is very quiet their sons and daughters won't discover their genitals until they're married and it's too late, have succeeded in making sex education in the school controversial.
But even without AIDS, the tragically high rate of teen-age pregnancy, not to mention miscellaneous venereal diseases, mandates sex education as a simple necessity. Until such time as parents demonstrate their ability and willingness to provide this education, the school system must do so.
Some may say that handing out condoms at registration is a silly idea, or that it's ten years late or that it tends to trivialize a serious problem. But condoms at KU registration may be the first step toward getting condoms and "Safer Sex" pamphlets into high schools, grade schools and grocery stores, where they are really needed.
If so, the money will have been we...,
Johnson is an Alta Vista senior majoring in
journalism.
K A N S A N
MAILBOX
Budig should lead more
The president of Ohio State University announced the hiring of the school's new football coach. The chancellor of the University of Kansas wasn't even at the press conference for KU's new football coach.
The president of Oklahoma University was on the sidelines at the Orange Bowl. KU's chancellor has never been on the sidelines during a game.
Chancellor Gene A. Budig was not involved in the search for a new KU football coach. Budig himself was quoted by the Kansas City Times (12/24):
Bob Frederick will decide who will be the football coach. The search committee determines the final list of who will be interviewed. Obviously, he (Frederick) will consult with me once he has made his decision. He was hired to be athletic director.
Shouldn't the chancellor be involved in the searching for and hiring decision of an experienced employee who would require a compensation package of $150,000 to $300,000, as Earle Bruce would have? Yet, Budig didn't care to be involved in the search or the decision.
Football is just the tip of the iceberg. The faculty recently voted on whether to become only the second unionized faculty in the state. More than a thousand students petitioned recently regarding inadequate class availabilities that sometimes prevent their graduation. The conclusion is that KU is a leaderless university.
Like a middle manager cannot be successful without the support of the company president,
the football coach (no matter how capable) can't be successful without the cooperation of the CEO of the university and without the university support he can generate.
An alarming number of informed sources indicate the capable coaches and athletic directors that have left KU in the past three years did so because of the inadequate support and cooperation of the chancellor. It only makes sense. Yet Budig remains.
Best wishes for success to Coach Mason, but we've been through this before. It's time supporters of KU football realize that their embarrassment is not the fault of the players or coaches. The responsibility lies at the top — in the office of the chancellor.
KU's long-suffering football fans, faculty supporters and student advocates have every right to demand a chancellor who is capable of leading and makes it a public priority to correct inferior programs.
J. David Holt Parkville, Mo., resident
Beerbower Hall
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, January 14, 1988
5
Regents to meet consider budget
W11x7 W2W 15
By Rebecca J. Cisek
Kansan staff writer
Gov. Mike Hayden's 1989 budget proposal for financing the Regents schools will top the agenda when the Board of Regents meets today at 9 a.m. in Topeka.
The Regents will review the governor's budget recommendations for financing the University of Kansas, Kansas State University, Wichita State University, Hays State University, Hays State University, Pittsburg State University and the Kansas Technical Institute in Salina.
On Tuesday, Hayden said in his State of the State address that he would support a Regents budget of $383.2 million for fiscal year 1989. He also said he supported finance- Excellence program for one year.
Margin of Excellence is
designed to bring financing for Regents schools to 95 percent of their peer institutions over three years. KU's peer schools are similar to KU in size, scope and mission
During the meeting, the Regents will.
Margin of Excellence calls for an additional $47 million for the Regents schools for a three-year period. The Regents also will review methods of computing the costs of the program.
- consider a report on the assessment of undergraduate education and consider an annual report on scholarship and tuition programs.
- review campus policies on service of alcohol.
consider plans for a Kansas Law Enforcement Training Center at KU.
NO MATTER WHAT YOU'RE PACKIN'—GO EASTPAK
Wide Color Selection
Red, Brown, Plum, Black, Silver
Royal Blue, Raspberry
Navy & Tweed
Choice of Styles
Day Packer, Sportsman, Cross Country
Packers, Ex Lg Book Bag, Jayhawk
Backpack, Tear Drop &
Book Bag
Country
Dayhawk
Drop &
m
Budget Priced from $12.95 to $34.95
Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd. • At the Top of Naismith Hill
S
---
$500 OFF
M
$25 min. total purchase Valid thru January 31, 1988
ayhawk Bookstore
S
1420 Crescent Rd. *At the Top of Naismith Hill*
January
SALE
Sale Starts
Saturday!
UP TO 1/2 OFF
FALL & WINTER
MERCHANDISE
*Not All Items Available in All Stores
919 Mass.
HOURS: Mon., Tues., Wed., Fri. 10-6
Thurs. 10-8:30, Sun. 1-5
SCOT'S LTD.
GET STARTED RIGHT THIS SEMESTER!
ACADEMIC SKILL ENHANCEMENT WORKSHOP
Attend the
2017
Covering:
Time Management
Study Reading
Listening and Notetaking
Tuesday, January 19
6:30 to 9:00 p.m.
300 Strong Hall
(No Charge)
Presented by the Student Assistance Center
STRONG SAIL
SAC
2014
Ski with SUA...
1204 Oread
ECM Center Events
1204 Oread ECM Student Christian Center
+
Lift tickets extra
Doggone Fun!
Winter Park, Spring Break '88 Travel, Lodging, and Rental $304
Jan. 15: Friday Free Movie "Roxanne"
7:30 p.m.
$75 will reserve your space Stop by SUA Office, 4th floor Union Sign up deadline — Tuesday, January 26
Sponsored by
ECOMMERICA MIDDLE EAST MINISTRIES,
The United Methodist Church
The Presbyterian Church (USA)
The Church of the Holy Trinity
The Church of the Brethren
Jan.17: Sunday Evening Worship and Supper 5:30 p.m.
Jan. 20: University Forum
11:40 a.m.
Speaker
Noon: lunch
HIGH
AM HIGH I DO AFTER GRADUATION? Many students are asking this question. But where can you use your degree in the best way? One answer is to become an Air Force officer through Air Force ROTC. You'll have an unequaled opportunity to lead, manage and be successful. Aim High with Air Force ROTC.
Capt Kevin Brownley 913-864-4676
AIR FORCE
ROTC
Leadership Excellence Starts Here
JUST WHEN YOU THOUGHT IT WAS SAFE TO BE DEAD.
RETURN OF THE LIVING DEAD
PART II
LORIMAR MOTION PICTURES PRESENT GREENFOX PRODUCTION "RETURN OF THE LIVING DEAD PART II"
JAMES KAREN THOM MATHEWS DANA ASBROOK MARSIA DIETLEEN PHILIP BRUNS MICHAEL KENWORTHY MUSIC BY J. PETER ROBINSON
SPECIAL MAKEUP CREATED BY KENNY MYERS EXECUTIVE PRODUcer EUGENE C. CASHMAN CO-PRODUCER WILLIAM S. GILMORE PRODUCED BY TOM FOX WRITTEN AND DIRECTED BY KEN WIEDERHORN
LORIMAR™
MOTION PICTURES COMPANY
ULTRASTERED
SOUNDTRACK ALUMNI AVAILABLE ON ISLAND RECORDS, STABS AND COMPACT DISCS.
COPYRIGHT © 1987 LORIMAR DISTRIBUTION INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
R RESTRICTED
R INVESTIGATING
PART OF ADULT GEAR
STARTS JANUARY 15TH.
1
6
Thursday, January 14, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Phone rates decrease A.T.T. daytime rates cut 6.4 percent on Jan.1
By Ric Brack
Kansan staff writer
The average long-distance caller will save about 21 cents a month under reduced American Telephone and Telegraph long-distance rates that went into effect Jan. 1.
But according to a spokesman for the Kansas Corporation Commission, the reduced long-distance rates may be misleading.
Bion Ostrander, chief communications analyst for the commission, said students probably wouldn't save as much money as businesses under the AT&T cuts.
Daytime long-distance rates were reduced 6.4 percent, evening rates were reduced 1.9 percent and morning rates were reduced 8.0 percent and rates were reduced 0.6 percent.
Because students make most of their calls during the evening and on the weekends, they won't save
as much money as businesses that use long-distance lines during the day. Ostrander said.
"The consumer is losing his late-night discount." he said.
However, students living in University housing may have cheaper long distance in the future, Jan Weller, assistant director of telecommunications for KU, said yesterday.
Because the University of Kansas is on the Kansas Agency Network, or KANS-A-N, the University's long-distance service is already cheaper than that available from AT&T. University housing residents may be able to tap into the KANS-A-N system by fall, Weller said.
Since last summer, when the University installed its new phone system, students in University housing have been hooked into a central phone system that allows
them to make only credit card or collect long-distance calls.
The students must choose their long-distance service just like a residential customer, but they don't have the option to dial "oneplus," which means they cannot make direct dial long-distance phone calls.
Ken Stoner, KU director of student housing, said that University housing residents who would have an access code to use whenever making a long-distance call from a phone within the University's system. Then they would be billed by the University for the service.
Long-distance service is cheaper with the KANS-A-N system because the state leases "bundles" of phone lines at a fixed rate from various long-distance carriers. The lines are interconnected to a hub in Tupela through a system leased from AT&T.
Celebrate Yourself with ETHNIC FASHIONS
Back to School Sales 25-75% Off
CONDOMS BY MAIL!
choice of the latest Japanese brands (thin-
mous, maximum satisfaction, summer condoms
for a snuger fit) plus TROJANS,
more Our original Package samples let
our More Our original Package samples let
brands at special savings. Our Super 100
sampler has 100 assorted in cup form
and different brand styles in a
different brand! Plain package assures
privacy. Save $25. Money back
featuring unique dresses, jewelry musical instruments, fine leathers and quality folk arts from around the world: Africa, Asia, etc.
733 $ \frac{1}{2} $ New Hampshire
Adam a Eve P.O. Box 900, Dept. CH-
Camborne, N.C. 27510 Please send in plain package under your
WE'LL KEEP YOU OUT OF THE GUTTER
.
SIGN UP FOR SPRING LEAGUES TODAY!
Monday Mixer: 7:00 p.m. Tuesday Mixer: 7:00 p.m. Wednesday Mixer: 7:00 p.m Thursday Guys & Dolls: 7:00 p.m. Friday T.G.I.F: 4:00 p.m.
864-3545 THE KANSAS UNION JAYBOWL LEVEL ONE
KU on WHEELS SPRING SERVICES Passes Now on Sale
in the Kansas Union (4th level) at the options table and the Burge Union (3rd level) at the candy counter and the SUA Office
K
Advertising works. Kansan Advertising works wonders.
OPPORTUNITIES FOR ENGINEERS -
Join BP America at the start of a new era.
Exciting opportunities for career growth are developing at BP America. We are seeking well qualified Engineers for major divisions of the company: Refining, Transportation Marketing, and Chemicals.
BP AMERICA was formed recently by the combination of two famous and complementary firms... Standard Oil and BP North America.
Standard Oil, founded by John D. Rockefeller in 1870, is recognized as an outstanding refiner and marketer as well as a major holder of petroleum reserves. British Petroleum, one of the most active oil producing companies in the North Sea, the Middle East and Alaska, is known as a great explorer and producer. Now, building on more than 100 years of experience, BP America is preparing for a new era of growth.
We start from a sound base - $24 billion in assets. 43,000 people worldwide,and sales volume that ranks us 13th among American industrial companies. We are expanding activities in both oil and diversified businesses - chemicals coal, minerals and precious metals, computer software structural ceramics, carbon fibers, and more.
We encourage students who are receiving a Bachelor's degree in CHEMICAL, MECHANICAL, CIVIL, or ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING to discuss opportunities with us. We will be interviewing on campus soon - schedule an interview NOW with your placement office. If you are unable to meet with us on campus, send your resume to: University Relations; BP America; P.O. Box 94694; Cleveland, OH 44101-4694.
BP AMERICA
An Equal Opportunity Employer
a wholly owned subsidiary of British Petroleum Company p. | .|
BP
7
The Original.
The Absolute Official
KU Sportswear Source.
Quality Fabrics
Innovative Designs
Complimentary Colors
Excellent Values
$5.00 off any hooded sweatshirt in stock with Lawrence Book Coupon.
Kansas Union Extended Hours
Open 8:30-6 thru January 15th
Burge Union
Open 8:30-7
Mon - Thur
8:30-5 Fri
SPORTS WEAR
KUBookstores
KANSAS UNION BURGE UNION
7
BASKETBALL
res
GE UNION.
SPORTS WEAR
KU Bookstores
KANSAS UNION BURGE UNION-
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Nation World
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, Januarv 14. 1988
7
Nationalist China leader dead at 77 successor to push for liberalization
The Associated Press
TAIPEI, Taiwan — President Chiang Ching-kuo, the son of nationalist Chinese leader Chiang Kai-shek, died of a heart attack yesterday and was succeeded by a native Taiwanese, expected to continue his push for liberalization.
Chiang's death at age 77, ended the six-decade dynasty that led the Nationalist Party to victory and defeat in China and prosperity in Taiwan, an island nation of 19.5 million people off China's coast.
Vice President Lee Teng-hui was sworn in to succeed Chiang, in accordance with the constitution, after an emergency meeting of the party's Central Standing Committee.
Lee, a 64-year-old Christian and the first native Taiwanese to become president, is expected to continue easing the nationalists' authoritarian grip on the island they have governed since 1949.
But the reforms pushed by the charismatic Chiang may slow because Taiwan is likely to move toward a more consultative leadership.
"We have lost a capable leader," Premier Yu Kuo-hwa said, fighting back tears, as he announced Chiang's death on national television Wednesday evening. "Everyone of us felt a deep sorrow. This was an irredeemable loss."
Court upholds principal's right of censorship
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Wednesday gave public school officials broad, new authority to censor student newspapers and other forms of student expression.
The court, by a 5-3 vote, ruled that a Hazelwood, Mo., high school principal did not violate students' free-speech rights by ordering two pages deleted from an issue of a student-produced, school-sponsored newspaper.
"A school need not tolerate student speech that is inconsistent with its basic educational mission even though the government could not
censor similar speech outside the school," Justice Byron R. White wrote for the court.
The controversy arose in spring 1983 when Robert Reynolds, principal of Hazelwood East High School, refused to permit publication of two articles from the school-sponsored newspaper produced by students in a journalism class.
White noted that the court was not saying whether the same degree of judicial deference to educators' censorship decisions "is appropriate with respect to school-sponsored expressive activities at the college and university level."
News Roundup
AMERICAN'S TRIAL BEGINS:
U.S. citizen James Denby went on trial for anti-government activities in Managua, Nicaragua, yesterday. Sandinista troops shot down Denby's Cessna airplane Dec. 6 on an isolated Caribbean beach across the border from Costa Rica, where Denby has a farm.
TRADGE DISCUSSIONS: Reagan and Japanese Prime Minister Noboru Takeshita vowed yesterday to continue to work toward easing trade friction. The leaders made no agreement on Americans working on Japanese construction projects. Takeshita said Japan was trying reduce its trade surplus by $10 billion this year.
NUCLEAR SMUGGLING: The State Department has found that the Pakistan government was likely involved in a plot to smuggle materials for nuclear devices out of the U.S. It recommended that aid not be severed.
ISRAELI EXPULSIONS: Israel expelled four Palestinian activists yesterday in defiance of international protests, and two Arabs were killed in new violence in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. Washington deplored the expulsions, saying "that's an action we deeply regret."
SMOKING ABDOLITION PLAN: Pat Robertson defended his pat, which called for phasing out the tobacco industry in seven to 10 years, in South Carolina yesterday. He said there was no question that smoking causes cancer, birth defects and heart disease.
DOLE AIDED CONTRIBUTOR:
The Washington office of Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole contacted a top official at Fort Leavenworth last year about a controversial housing contract that was eventually extended for a Dole campaign contributor. Aides said the office did nothing improper.
BISHOP RE-ENTERS NICARAGUA; Monsignor Bismark Carballo, a bishop who speaks for the Roman Catholic church in Nicaragua, returned to the country after being forced into exile in June 1986. His return signifies the recent improvement in church-state relations.
DRUG USE DOWN: Cocaine use by high school seniors fell 20 percent last year, the first time in more than a decade there has been a significant decrease, officials said yesterday. Marjuna smoking and other illicit drug use also declined.
RABAIN JOBS PARLIAMENT: Britain's chief rabbi is joining 26 Anglican bishops in the House of Lords, but there still are no Catholic prelates in the august body four centuries after Henry VIII broke with the Church of Rome. Roman Catholic leaders say Pope John Paul II disapproves of priests becoming politicians.
Kansan Classified (913) 864-4358
DUELING TRIAL SET: Elmor Roy Southern faces trial under a 19th century California law that prohibits dueling, a band stemming from the gunfights once familiar to the Wild West. Southern allegedly killed a man in a shootout last April at a popular urban nightclub. Published Press.
From The Associated P
GRINGOS'
3520 W. 6th
Sunday Buffet
All You Can Eat - $4.50
With $2 - 16 oz. JUMBO Margaritas
50¢ Draws
Every Sunday 4 - 9 p.m.
K.U.
Kempo Karate
and
Self-Defense Club
Traditional Instruction in Hawaiian Kempo
Basic Drills Self-Defense Kata (forms)
Kumite (light contact sparring)
men, women, and children
when: Mondays & Wednesdays
5:30-6:30 p.m. Beginning
6:30-8:30 p.m. Advanced
where: Rm 130
Robinson Gym
instructor: SENSEI Caren Wallace,
First Degree Black
Contact: Betsy Boyce 842-0389
Mark Overton 843-8034
K.U.
Kempo Karate
and
14 kt. Chain
Repair
Kizer
Cummings
jewelers
800 Mass. 749-4333
ESQUIRE BARBER SERVICE
TRACEY GARCIA
Haircuts ... $6.50
For appointments call 842-3699
2323 Ridge Court
JODA & FRIENDS
Hair Cutting • Perms • Highlighting
Facials • Manicures • Pedicures
Waxing • Ear Piercing • Tanning
3009 w. 6 841-0337
Open 7 days a week
1804 W. 6th
749-1919
"Money to Loan"
Enjoy smooth, creamy
Frozen Yogurt
I Can't Believe it's
YOGURT!
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--Free Samples--
Louisiana Purchase Shopping Center
OPEN: 11 a.m. 11 p.m. Daily
Noon: 11 p.m. Sundays
Commonwealth
Bargain Maintains & Senior Citizens $2.50
Granada
1003 Market Court
415-1588
NUTS
Proceeds and the Importer
(R) 7:20, 9:45
Varsity
1015 Market Court
415-1595
RAW
(R) 7:30, 9:20
Hillcrest
Mint & A Glass
Royal Brewery
(R) 4:30, 7:10, 9:30
WALLSTREET
Overboard (PG)
(R) 4:40, 7:30, 9:40
DANCERS
(R) 5:00, 7:25, 9:20
BROADCAST NEWS
(R) 4:40, 7:15, 9:45
THROW MAMMA
FROM THE TRAIN (PG-13)
(R) 4:50, 7:35, 9:35
Cinema Twirl
1015 Market Court
Royal Brewery
BATTERIES NOT INCLUDED (PG) 7:10, 9:10
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Cranada 1039 Market Street
GO 7-20; 9-45
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Prosperidge and the Portman
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Varsity 1039 Market Street
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RAW GO 7-30; 9-20
Hillcrest 600 & 800
Commonwealth
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Cranada
100 Massachusetts Ave.
902 Broadway
(8) 7-20, 9-45
(9) 7-20
NUTS
Produce and the Grocer
100 Massachusetts Ave.
899 Broadway
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100 Massachusetts Ave.
899 Broadway
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RAW
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OVERBOARD (PG) 4-30, 7-10, 9-30
DANCERS (8) 5-00, 7-25, 9-20
BROADCAST NEWS (8) 4-35, 7-15, 9-45
THROW MAMMA
FROM THE TRAIN (PG) 13-45, 7-35, 9-35
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BATTERIES NOT INCLUDED (PG) 7-10, 9-10
JAYHAWK
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THREE MEN & A BABY (PG) 7:25, 9:35
Looking for ON CAMPUS?
Please see page 2
FEDERAL RESERVE NOTE
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
FEDERAL RESERVE NOTE
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
*In fact, it expresses on January 15, 1984 to denounce侵犯 © 1987 Apple Computer Inc. Apple and the Apple logo are registered trademarks of and Maximilian Imaging and The power to bear host an trademarks of Apple Computer Inc.
FEDERAL RESERVE NOTE
THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
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THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
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THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
THIS NOTE IS LEGAL TENDER
FOR ALL DEBTS, PUBLIC AND PRIVATE
J29403511A
WASHINGTON.D.C.
10
G1
J29403511A
10
Katherine Saveler Ostega
Treasurer of the United States
NAMILTON
SERIES
1985
James A. Robinson
Secretary of the Treasury
TEN DOLLARS
10
10
FEDERAL RESERVE NOTE
THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
THIS NOTE IS LEGAL TENDER
FOR ALL DEBTS, PUBLIC AND PRIVATE
J29403511A
WASHINGTON,D.C.
G1
J29403511A
10
Katherine Davies Osborne
Fraternity of the United States.
HAMILTON
SERIES
1985
James A. Baker III
Sacramento of the Treasury
TEN DOLLARS
10
10
AMERICA 10
J29403511 A
WASHINGTON.D.C. 10
G 165
SERIES
1985
Secretary of the Treasury
Buy a printer with your Macintosh and conserve paper.
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COMPUTER SCIENCE
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Adam Goldman, New York, NY
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of paper you'll save will have a lovely green glow.
You'll save a bundle of cash when you purchase an ImageWriter II printer along with your choice of a Macintosh Plus or a Macintosh SE. Either way you'll be able to turn out beautifully written and beautifully printed papers.
And we'll even try to help you pay for
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We feel compelled to tell you, though, that a deal like this can't last forever*. So it's a good idea to see your campus microcomputer center today. And join the conservation movement.
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8
Thursday, January 14, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Iowa post unfilled Horowitz awaits news on job
By Regan Brown
Kansan staff writer
Frances Horowitz, KU vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service, is still a candidate for the presidency of the University of Iowa.
However, a decision in December by the Iowa Board of Regents to ask the presidential search committee to find more candidates for the job will postpone the selection of a new president until later this year, said Tom Bauer, associate director of university relations at Iowa.
Bauer said this week that the Regents had asked the search committee to submit the names of four candidates, in addition to Horowitz and Richard D. Remington, Iowa vice president for academic affairs and interim president since last July.
Horowitz was one of four finalists to visit the Iowa City campus last month. The 17-member presidential search committee selected two of those candidates, Horowitz and Nils Hasslemo, provost at the University of Arizona at Tucson, as finalists for the job.
Hasslemo has unofficially withdrawn from the race since then, Bauer said, prompting the Regents to request names of more candidates
for the job. The Regents have the final authority to hire a new president.
Sam Becker, president of the search committee, said yesterday that there had been some misunderstanding about the number of names the Regents wanted. He said the request for more names was no reflection on Horwitz's abilities.
"Dr. Horowitz has been very good about this, very understanding," he said. "She is definitely a contender."
Horowitz said yesterday that she expected to receive word in March regarding the position. She declined further comment on her candidacy.
Horowitz received her doctoral degree in developmental psychology from Iowa She has taught at KU for the last 26 years and was named the first vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service in 1978.
Iowa's presidential search committee has been looking for a new president since May.
Iowa, a Big Ten conference university, had an enrollment of about 29,000 last fall. It has a reputation as a major midwestern research university.
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MOOSEHEAD
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From the heights of the Rockies
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Chamber Music Series Presents
WOMEN OF NOTE COLORADO QUARTET
VOLUME II OF THE WEEKLY FILM SERIES
THAT PRESENTS A VARIETY OF PICTURES
FROM THE 1970'S TO THE NOW.
Julie Rosenfeld, Violin Francesca Martin, Viola Deborah Redding, Violin Sharon Prater, Cello 8:00 p.m. Sunday, January 17, 1988 Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Program
Quartet in A major, Op. 20, No.6 "Suor" Haydn
Quartet No. 5
Quartet in B flat major, Op 130
"Liebquartett" ("Dear Quartet") Beethoven
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 & Other Students: $10 & $8
Funded, in part, by the KU Student Activity Fee, Swarthout
Society, and the KU Endowment Association
V
HALF PRICE FOR KU STUDENTS
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Experiments in MODERN PHYSICS Melissinos Academic Press College
THERMODYNAMICS and Statistical Mechanics
White Fluid Mechanics
SECOND EDITION THE LEGAL ENVIRONMENT FOR BUSINESS MANAGERS
O'Neil Advanced Engineering Mathematics
ANALYSIS for Business Economics, Life Sciences and Social Sciences
DECISION ANALYSIS · Raiffa
third edition
Foundations of Chemistry
Third Edition Miller · Freund PROBABILITY AND STATISTICS FOR ENGINEERS
NILSON ELECTRIC CIRCUITS Second Edition
Elements of Econometrics
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, January 14, 1988
9
KU lands cancer research grant
By Brenda Finnell
Kansan staff writer
The Wesley Foundation of Wichita awarded its largest grant ever Mon- tuary to the University of Kansas, the Univer- sity Center and Kansas State. University
The $1.8 million grant will be spread over two years. It will be used for cancer research and to recruit and train cancer researchers at the schools.
The grant will enable the universities to develop a program capable of gaining national visibility, said Terry Johnson, professor and director of the Division of Biology
and the Center for Basic Cancer Research at K-State.
Johnson and Jane Henney, associate vice chancellor for administration at the College of Health Sciences and the school's interim dean, headed a committee to complete the grant proposal.
Thirty-four senior cancer researchers at the three schools will use the money to hire post-doctoral fellows, to be called Wesley Foundation Scholars. The grant also will pay the salaries of these scholars, said Duane Dyer, Wesley Foundation president.
The Wesley Foundation was established in 1978 as the Wesley Medical Endowment Foundation. In the past two years, the foundation has awarded about $1.8 million through about 180 grants.
"The foundation has a real interest in strengthening the total research community in Kansas," Dyer said.
The researchers will use the grant to study molecular biology and cell growth regulation; anti-cancer drugs and multiple-drug resistance; and tumor immunology and host resistance to cancer.
In addition, the grant will pay for start-up, communications and administrative costs, Dyer said.
Johnson said financing for the program would begin immediately and that the program would be operational by July 1.
Johnson said the grant would aid the researchers at each school and improve the state's ability to attract new students, post-doctoral fellows and technical support. "It adds to the intellectual base and economic development of the state," he said.
Scientists in Kansas, because of the state's small population, often have to work harder than larger states to attract researchers. Johnson said.
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Present this coupon and receive any large pizza for the price of a medium.
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STATAL INFORMATIONS 11:40
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The TL-60 Advanced Scientific features such built-in functions as hexadecimal/octal conversions integration using Simpson's rule, statistics (including linear regression), trend line analysis and metric to English conversions. There are also 84 programming steps for repetitive calculations.
Look for the free TI Monthly Planner at your bookstore.
The TI-74 BASICALC $ ^{\mathrm{TM}} $ is a calculator that you can program in BASIC. It provides
The TL-65 Technical Analyst $ ^{\mathrm{TM}} $ offers all of the built-in functions of the Tl-60, plus a stopwatch/ timer for labwork, eight physical constants for use in thermodynamics and physics as well as Decision Programming (if...then) capabilities. There are also 100 programming steps for repetitive calculations.
T1-74 BASIC LANGUAGE CALCULATOR
is a calculator BASIC. It provides direct two-keystroke access to 41 commonly used BASIC commands. The TI-74 also functions as an advanced scientific
THE DYNAMICS OF GENEVA
BY RICHARD W. FURKE
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TEXAS INSTRUMENTS
10
Thursday, January 14, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Race tracks on hold
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Jimmy Grenz, executive director of the Kansas Racing Commission, told a legislative committee today that applications for race tracks would be accepted at the end of the month.
But Grenz said he did not know when horse or dog racing would be a place for him.
The Racing Commission decided to take no formal action until after its members are confirmed by the Senate, which could happen next week. The commission held its first meeting in August, and Grenz said that it had been meeting weekly ever since.
"I know there has at least been
conversation that things have not moved as fast as they could," Grenz told the Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee. "I would almost take issue with that. We're very, very pleased with where we are."
Grenz, a 21-year veteran of the Garden City Police Department, the chief of police, appointed executive director by Gov. Mike Hayden last fall.
He told the committee the Racing Commission would give applicants 45 days to file applications to build race tracks. After that, the applicants must undergo extensive background checks.
"We honestly don't have good figures on how long that'll take." Grenz
said. He added that it could take as long as two months to complete the background investigations.
the cost of the background checks, which will be done by the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, could be as high as $1 million, Grenz told the committee.
He said the KBI charged the Kansas Lottery for the background checks it conducted, and KBI officials also plan to charge the Racing Commission for the security investigations.
Grenz suggested charging the applicants for the cost of the background checks, an idea that Committee Chairman Edward Reilly, R-Leavenworth, said merited consideration.
TOPEKA — Sen. Ross Doyen, R-Concordia, yesterday introduced a bill intended to determine the number of accidental deaths involving alcohol or drugs.
The bill would require that blood tests be performed on the victims of fatal accidents to determine the presence of either alcohol or drugs. The tests would be performed on people killed in any accident involving cars, airplanes or boats.
The results of the analysis required by this section may be used by state and local officials only for statistical purposes that do not reve-
The Associated Press
at the identity of the deceased person,
the proposed legislation says.
AIDS blood tests would be mandatory for people convicted of incest or aggravated incest under one of several bills introduced in the House.
The bill would require one AIDS test after a person's conviction and another six months later if the first test was negative. Positive test results would be reported to both the state Department of Health and Environment and the victims, but the results would otherwise be kept confidential.
Drug tests called for by bill
vided counseling for incest victims whose attackers test positive for the disease, acquired immune deficiency syndrome. However, Rep. Frank Buehler, R-Claflin, one of three sponsors of the measure, said he did not know how much the measure would cost.
Also the bill would start state-pro-
"Education is fine, but we need to go a step further," Buehler said.
In addition, a proposal to exempt all property owned by non-profit organizations performing "humanitarian services" from taxation was one of several bills introduced in the Legislature on Tuesday.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, January 14, 1988
Leisure
11
SKIKANSAS
Flatland winters get a lift from cross-country sport
By Stacy Foster
Kansan staff writer
You might think it's a joke, but it isn't. Skiing in Kansas has become a serious sport for those who want an outdoor winter activity.
Chuck Adams, assistant manager for Sunflower Surplus, 804 Massachusetts St., said that in the past few years the popularity of cross-country skiing had increased dramatically despite the lack of heavy snowfall.
The ideal condition for cross-country skiing is 4 to 16 inches of snow, Adams said.
Cross-country skiing is an appropriate winter sport for this area, Adams says. It's convenient, less expensive than downhill skiing, easy to learn yet still challenging. It's a good way to enjoy the outdoors and get a workout.
"Many of the people who ski have a regular warm weather activity and want to do something during the off-season to stay in shane." Adams said.
"Cross-country skiing is one of the best aerobic exercises there is because you use your full range of muscles," he said. Depend on a "cruiser number" (the second behind swimming)
Andrew Merrick, Lawrence freshman,
windsurfs in the summer and skis cross-
country in the winter. He began skiing
because he wanted to do something to stay
in condition in the winter.
"I like to be outdoors a lot, and this is a good way to stay in shape," he said.
great way to stay in shape. Merrice: I will get him doing better than runners. "You don't get as tired as much, probably because you don't notice it as much. It's exhilarating."
Sunflower Surplus and Litwins, 830 Massachusetts St., carry full lines of cross-country skiing equipment and also rent skis by the day.
--public: $3.00; KU Students: $1.50;
Senior Citizens and Other Students:
$2.00.
Compared to downhill skiing, cross-country skiing is less expensive. There are no lift tickets to buy. Rental is about $8 a day and a package to buy including poles, skis, boots and bindings can range from $110 to $200. Downhill skis cost about twice that amount.
Cross-country skiing is convenient. Lawrence has plenty of flat space available; the nearest trails could be right in your backyard. No more waiting in long lift lines. No more being weary of miniature hotdoggers on the slope.
One family has created a private winter sports resort right in its own backyard. David and Susan Millstein, owners of Sunflower Surplus, have about three miles of ski paths on their 120-acre farm south of Balawin City.
The ski trail was originally cut for a running trail. But Susan Milstein realized that with a little extra effort, they could have their own cross-country ski trail.
Skiing has become an activity for the entire Millstein family. Their oldest children, Josh, 10, and Audrey, 8 have been skiing since 1995. Casey, 3, is just starting to hit the trail.
"They skii really well. They are very competitive. Nobody likes to be last in line except mother. It's a great way to wear them out." Millstein said.
"It really helps to have the trails so close. Since Kansas doesn't have a long ski season, everything has to be ready so you can take advantage of the snow while it's here. Right now, we're into ice skating."
Mary Cheng, 45, Lawrence resident,
bought her daughter a set of skis two years ago. She used to borrow her daughter's set.
She loved her daughter. The Cheng decided to invest in her own set.
Cheng also has been discouraged by the lack of snow. She said she didn't get out as often as she liked. But she likes to ski on the jeeves north of the Kansas River and at Centenial Park.
"Last year I only went out about five times. This year I've been out twice." Cheng said.
Leslie Patterson, Topeka junior, got more than she ever expected from cross-country skiing. She decided to ski to class one day last winter and met Brian Cafc-frey, Tonganoxie senior, nearly running him over on the way to class. She apologized, and he asked her out to dinner.
McCaffrey, Tonganoxie senior, never had skied before he met Patterson. He said cross-country skiing was a relatively easy sport to learn.
"It just takes a little coordination. It's like walking on skis; you have to develop a pattern." McCaffrey said.
"Leslie introduced me to it when we met. Now I also like to hunt on skis because it's quieter."
Golf courses, wooded areas and wide open spaces are all good for cross country golf.
Jerry Waugh, senior vice president for Alvamar Golf and Country Club, said skiers often used the golf course. He said the club was glad to be able to provide a service when the course was otherwise empty.
"We've been sking ever since," she said.
"They are at liberty to use the course at any time," he said. "We just ask that they stay off the greens. We don't assume any responsibility." And they, they have to, to skip at their own risk.
John Folz, club manager for Lawrence Country Club, said he did not want skiers on the course.
"Due to the liability and possible damage to the greens, we would rather skiers didn't use the course." Folt said.
There are plenty of public places around Lawrence available for skiing. The Kansas River leeve is a favorite spot for skiers, Adams said. It has a good clear path and covers more than eight miles.
Fred DeVictor, director of Lawrence Parks and Recreation, said River Front Park had several trails that could be used for cross-country skiing. He said that the 10 miles of trail on top of the levee was a popular place to ski, but that many other trails in the park could be used.
Clinton Lake also has a three-mile trail made especially for skiers. Clyde Umscheid, park ranger at Clinton Lake, said the lake was available to the public at no charge.
A forested area was cleared in 1981 for paths complete with trail signs indicating where curves were and where deer might cross.
Umscheid said the trail got a lot of use when there was good snow. "With the last snowfall we counted 66 in one Sunday afternoon," he said.
Cross-country skiing is different from its steep slope counterpart.
Cross-country skiing requires a different type of equipment. Adams said that cross-country skis were more flexible, lighter and narrower than downhill skis.
Cross-country skis can have a patterned bottom surface or a smooth bottom surface. The patterned surface does not require waxing but still provides a good grip. The smooth surface needs waxing, and different waxes can be used for different snow conditions.
--public: $3.00; KU Students: $1.50;
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Different poles also are needed. Cross-country ski poles can come up to the shoulder, while downhill ski poles come up to the elbow.
A noticeable difference when looking at a cross-country skier is that the foot is secured only at the toe of the boot. This allows for a wide range of movement.
Adams said. With a downhill ski, the entire foot is fixed. The downhill boot positioning gives control at high speeds.
But knickers aren't necessary. A lot of men won't wear knickers, Adams said, but wool pants do just as well.
Because the sport requires a person to be out in the cold, proper dress is a necessity, Adams said. The key is not to over dress, something that many beginners do.
Jeans aren't practical because they retain too much water and can freeze. Jeans can absorb their weight in water, making them very heavy and uncomfortable when they get wet. Wool pants are better because they absorb less water than jeans and still keep you warm when they get wet.
"Knickers are ideal for skiing, with long socks," Adams said. They allow freedom of movement and are not as restrictive as you might think, moving you won't get cold. Adams said.
Adams recommends long johns, tights and nylon pants with a turtleneck and wind breaker. [for use]
Joe Wilkins III/KANSAN
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12:00 Program Alderson Auditorium Kansas Union
12
Thursday, January 14, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Improving our roads
Series' focuses are highways and economics
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — To promote economic development, Kansas and neighboring states should work together to build highways serving commercial areas, state Transportation Secretary Horace Edwards said yesterday.
Speaking at Washburn University at a meeting on the future of the state's transportation system, Edwards said Kansas did not have the money to construct the highways it needs by itself. The federal government should provide some money for
some type of multi-state plan, he said.
"These are routes which would complement the interstate system and fill the gaps not covered by it." Edwards said. "By linking markets which are not currently tied, we can encourage economic growth and prosperity."
Edwards said he had been talking with officials in neighboring states to gauge their interest in some type of multi-state plan.
The meeting, called Transportation 2020, is part of a series of public forums scheduled in each state to discuss possible federal transportation programs as the interstate system nears completion. It was organized by the state Department of Transportation and road support groups.
Gov. Mike Hayden, whose plan for $1.7 billion in highway improvements
was rejected by a special session of the Legislature in September, told transportation officials attending the meeting that he still wants a plan to improve Kansas highways. But he said he would wait for lawmakers who opposed his plan to take the initiative.
Legislative leaders have said the issue probably wouldn't come up until the 1989 session of the Legislature because of lack of interest this session.
However, Gene Bicknell, president of National Pizza with headquarters in Pittsburg, said Kansas businesses needed improvements in highways right away.
"We should have a sense of urgency," Bicknell said. "I know everyone says we're not going to do anything because it's an election year, but that's not good enough for me."
N.J. targets failed schools
The Associated Press
TRENTON, N.J. — Gov. Thomas H. Kean yesterday signed a bill giving New Jersey broad powers to take over school districts deemed failures at educating children.
The signing ended a bitter two-year legislative battle that included teachers, principals, school boards, municipal leaders and the governor's
"This is a historic day for New Jersey and, most important, a day of
nope for thousands of our children who have been left out for a long, long time," Kean said at the bill-signing ceremony.
"When schools fail, it's adults who failed, and adults should pay the price." he said.
Kean said he already had fielded inquiries from eight other governors who wanted to know details about New Jersey's law.
The law gives New Jersey the power to move into a district that has failed at three attempts to make
improvements. The state will be able to fire top administrators and the local board of education, and appoint a state superintendent to operate the district for five years.
Kean and other officials said they hoped the prospect of a state takeover would spur improvements in districts rife with incompetence or patronage.
Nevertheless, a recommendation is expected within a month that the state take over inner-city schools in Jersey City.
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Cat plaques, cat statues, cat clocks, even a cat mat. I couldn't begin to duplicate her collection of kitty litter if I spent a year at a garage sale. Conspicuously absent, however, was a real cat. Strange. I thought, and began to fear that a weekend with cat woman could be a
When Mark and I decided to spend the weekend at his mother's house, I never imagined I would be walking into a mouse's nightmare. There were cats everywhere.
weekend with cat woman could be a lot less than purr-fect.
But then she came home, and Mark introduced her. She was dressed surprisingly well—no leopard pants. In fact, you could say she was the cat's meow, but neither
but I'd rather not. She offered me a cup of Dutch Chocolate Mint. Now that was something I could relate to. Then she brought it out in the most beautiful, distinctly unfeline china I'd ever seen. As we sipped, I found out that Mrs. Campbell has my same weakness for chocolate, loves the theater as much as I do, but, incredibly, never saw "Cats." So Mark and I are taking her next month.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, January 14, 1988
Sports
13
Tigers spoil Jayhawks' Big 8 opener
33
Lisa Dougherty, left, and Sandy Shaw, right, guard Missouri's Monique Lucas during the second half. Kansas lost to the Tigers 72-67.
By Keith Stroker
Kansan sports writer
When Missouri guard Sandie Prophete hit two free throws with 25 seconds remaining, the Kansas women's basketball team saw its 10-game home winning streak come to an end.
The Tigers' 72-67 victory over the Jahayhaws spoiled Kansas' Big Eight opener. In addition to Propete's clutch shooting, Missouri center Tracy Ellies' game-high 22 rebounds also contributed to the Jahawhaks defeat.
Kansas' last home defeat came in February to Oklahoma State, 81-68. The disappointing outcome overshadowed the accomplishment of senior forward Lisa Dougherty, who at the 9:45 mark of the second half, hit a 12-foot jump player and became only the seventh player in Kansas history to score 1,000 points in her career. The all-time scoring leader for Kansas is Lynette Woodard, with 3,649 points.
"It hasn't sunk in yet," said Dougherty about the accomplishment. "It is nice to reach that goal, but it would have been a lot nicer if we would have won."
Coach Marian Washington said that there were three things that keyed the loss for Kansas: rebounding, missed free throws, and missed open layups. She said that Missouri played an outstanding game.
"We missed too many opportunities that should have been ours." Washington said. "I wasn't pleased with our physical effort and I felt we didn't show much poise in the final 15 to 20 seconds."
The teams played better and battled back and forth in in the second half.
The Jayhawks had a chance to tie the game in the final 15 seconds, but a missed three-pointer by Dougherty and losing the ball out of bounds hurt their chances. Tracy Ellis closed out the scoring by hitting a layup with 5 seconds to play for the Tigers.
The first half was even, with both teams pushing the ball up the court. Kansas had a 31-10 lead when Missouri's senior guard Lisa Ellis hit a drive layup with 4:22 to play, keying a 6-0 run that helped give the Tigers a 38-33 lead at halftime.
Both teams looked sloppy during the opening period, with each of them committing 10 turnovers.
On a 9-0 run, Kansas tied the score at 17 with 12:45 left. Then, Missouri had a similar spurt, taking a 56-7 lead with 11:21 remaining on a free throw by junior forward Monique Lucas. Although Kansas closed the gap, it was never able to overcome that burst.
The Jayhawks were led by Dougherty's 20 points, senior forward Lisa Baker's 10 rebounds, and sophomore guard Lisa Braddy's eight assists.
The Tigers were led by Tracy
Ellis with 18 points, and junior guard Tonya Jorgenson with 4 assists
The game also marked the debut for senior guard-forward Cheryl Jackson for the Jayhawks. She finished with four points, scoring her first point as a Jayhawk on a free throw at the 13:13 mark of the second half.
Washington said that Jackson played a fine game for her first time out in a year and a half.
"Cheryl played with good intensity and played good defense,"
Washington said. "She will be a good addition to the team."
Washington also said that the accomplishment by Dougherty was a great one, but she wasn't surprised.
"Lisa has taken the tools she has and has used them to the best of her ability." Washington said. "She always works hard and is a person a coach can always rely on."
The next game for the Jayhaws is Saturday, at Ames, Iowa, against the Iowa State Cyclones.
Missouri 72, Kansas 67
B0 2+ D-1. 2ucs 5 1-3. 11, Ellis 7. B 6-18. 12,
Jorgenson 4. 2-10, Prophet 4. 6-15, Bandten
2. 0-2. 4, Ellis 7. 4-1. 9, Yancey 0-0. 0
Totals 27 15. 28-12
upper 2-2.2, Struprother 4-2-3.1, Richardson 3-1.7, Bradley 0-1.2, Dougherty 3-2.4, Shane 4-3.1, Martin 3-1.7, Page 1-3.5, Jackson 0-4.6
Hansen Maunster 38-33 Total failure - Missison 34-
Hansen Kailan 22 Failed out - Missison one, Kailan -
none Rebounds - Missison 52 Kailan 39
Technique -ouri 13, Kailan 14, Technique -
technique 13
Bo has permission to play two sports
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Bo Jackson has received a letter from the Kansas City Royals giving him full permission to continue playing baseball and football, his attorney said last night.
Attorney Richard Woods said he received the letter yesterday from Royals co-owner Avron Fogelman apologizing for any misunderstanding relating to having to choose between baseball and football.
Fogelman caused controversy earlier this week when he said he planned to meet with Jackson this summer and tell him he has to decide if he wants to be a baseball player or not.
"He wrote that he is supportive of Bo pursuing two sports," Woods said. "He gave his full permission to play both."
Jackson batted .235 with 22 home runs and 53 RBI last season, but slumped badly after the All-Star break, about the time he signed with the Los Angeles Raiders of the NFL. He hit only four homers in the second half, finished with 158 strikeouts and lost his job as Kansas City's starting left fielder to Gary Thurman.
"He said that as long as Bo is able to do both, more power to him," Woods said. "He (Fogelman) said he had no problem with the situation and hoped he would be successful at both."
But in his letter to Woods, Fogelman said there would be no ultimatum.
Jackson ran for 554 yards, averaging 6.8 yards per carry, and scored four touchdowns this season. He ran for a team-record 221 yards, including a 91-yard touchdown, against Seattle.
The Royals wanted Jackson to play winter ball and Fogelman was upset when he instead reported to the Raiders. Jackson, a Heisman Trophy
The 1988 season will be the final year of Jackson's three-year contract with the Royals. He made $330,000 last season and will be paid $333,000 this year. If Jackson decided by July 1 to drop baseball and play football full-time, he would have to return some money to the Royals.
winner for Auburn, played seven games for the Raiders and was a standout at running back.
Jackson, 25, signed a five-year, $7.4 million deal with the Raiders last summer and his contract stipulates he must join them shortly after the
Jackson has maintained that he wants baseball to be his No.1 priority and that football is merely a hobby. He has adamantly refused to choose between the two sports and gives no timetable as to when, or if, he would make such a choice.
baseball season ends.
Raiders owner Al Davis has not pressured Jackson into deciding between baseball and football.
"The Raiders are very happy with the arrangement." Woods said.
The Royals, who lured Jackson from a multimillion-dollar offer by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers as the NFL's top draft choice, have been more anxious to clear up Jackson's future. For now, though, Fogelman and the Royals say they can accept Jackson's time-splitting status.
Brown leaves Iowa with Hilton blues
The Associated Press
AMES, Iowa — Kansas coach Larry Brown saw his fifth try for a victory in Ames, Iowa disappear at the free-throw line.
Cyclones forward Elmer Robinson made four crucial free throws in the last minute of the game to lead Iowa State over Kansas 88-78 last night in Hilton Coliseum.
The 14th-ranked Cyclones are now 1-0 in conference play and 14-2 for the season while 16th-ranked Kansas dropped to 11-4 and 1-1 in the conference.
Robinson scored a team-high 20 points and grabbed six rebounds. Besides Robinson's offense, Iowa State was able to limit Kansas' forward Danny Manning to only one basket in the first 16 minutes.
But the Jayhawks managed to keep the game close until the last seven minutes of the first half, when Iowa State went on a shooting spree and outscored Kansas 19-4.
Manning, who finished the night with 32 points and 14 rebounds, stopped the scoring streak with three consecutive baskets, and a jump shot by Keth Harris cut the Cyclones' score to 11 points for a halftime score 42-31.
For Harris, this marked the first game this season where he was left in the game for more than 10 minutes. He scored five points, two rebounds and two assists.
The Cyclones' Lafester Rhodes
also hurt Kansas with 19 points and was 4-for-4 from the free-throw line.
Iowa State's ability to connect from the three-point line halted any chance for a Kansas cornhole winner and on Sunday Born both had two three-point shots.
Iowa State was 7-for-16 in three pointers, and Kansas was 0-for-7.
pointers, and at least 10 points.
While the Jayhawks out-rebounded the Cyclones 45-27, they could not convert the advantage into points.
Kansas got within six points with 3:45 left in the game, but foul trouble and turnovers prevented the Jayhawks from getting any closer. Kansas had a total of 25 turnovers to the Cyclones' 15.
The Jayhawks played without starting center Marvin Branch for the first time. He was declared criminally ineligible earlier yesterday.
Chris Piper, who has been suffering from a pulled groin muscle since the beginning of the season, was able to start for the Jayhawks and grabbing 6 rebounds and putting 5 points on the board.
Big Eight Conference scoring leader Jeff Grayer, who was benched much of the time after getting into foul trouble early in the game, scored 15.
Milt Newton scored 15 points and had 12 rebounds for the Jayhawks while Lincoln Minor had 12 points.
Kansan sports writer Elaine Sung contributed information to this story.
Kansas 78
Kansas
Kansas 78
Iowa State 88
| | M | FG | FT | R | A | F | T |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Manny | 38 | 12-25 | 8-5 | 14 | 4 | 19 | 32 |
| Newton | 25 | 11 | 2-1 | 6 | 1 | 32 | 12 |
| Jackson | 28 | 2-7 | 1-2 | 6 | 2 | 2 | 5 |
| Pritchard | 28 | 2-7 | 0-6 | 2 | 1 | 5 | 6 |
| Livingston | 20 | 0-1 | 2-2 | 5 | 6 | 4 | 2 |
| Minor | 22 | 6-10 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 12 | 1 |
| Harris | 19 | 0-0 | 1-0 | 0 | 1 | 12 | 1 |
| Maddux | 7 | 0-1 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| Normore | 5 | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| Barry | 4 | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 0 |
| Masucci | 2 | 0-00 | 0-00 | 00 | 1 | 20 | 0 |
| 10 | 23-32 | 0 | 00 | 19 | 12 | 32 | 0 |
point goals 0-7 (Newton 3). Blocked Shots:
1 (Maddox 1) Turnovers 2 (Livingston 6)
3 (Maddox 4) Turnovers 5 (Livingston 6)
Masucci 2 0-00 00-06 06 16
Totals 40 33-70 14 37-10 45 19 23 78
M FG MF FT R A F TP
Grayer 30 7-15-1-4 1 4 0 15
Robinson 39 7-16-4-5 1 4 0 15
Thompkins 39 7-16-4-5 1 4 6 19
Thompkins 30 4-5-4-4 1 5 6 13
Woods 10 2-2-0-0 1 2 1 5
Bourk 30 2-2-0-2 1 2 1 5
Becht 9 2-2-0-1 1 4
Baugh 6 0-0-0-0 1 0 1
Doreferd 11 1-1-2-0 1 0 3
40 10-2-0-1 1 4
In contrast, Cash was supremely confident after his win, saying he was very happy with the way he had played.
Iowa State
"I if made six unforced errors then that was six too many," he said.
40 30-57 21-28 22-12 18 68
Percentage goals: 7.16 (Robinson 2-14) Turnovers:
15 (Thompkins 5) Technicals: Rhodes 1
Half: Iowa State 42-31
MELBOURNE
The Associated Press
Cash battling toward another major title
Aside from moving Cash into the third round, the victory helped quiet talk that the 22-year-old doesn't look good on any surface but grass.
Cash played impressively on the new synthetic Rebound Ace court.
MELBOURNE, Australia — Wimbledon champion Pat Cash stamped himself as a serious contender in the Australian Open tennis championships with a 6-1, 7-6 (9-7), 6-3 victory over fellow Australian Carl Limberger yesterday.
The hometown favorite now faces another local figure, Paul McNamee, in the third round of the $1.9 million event.
But the Czechoslovak felt there was room for improvement.
McNamee, a former Davis Cup player, plans to retire following the Open.
All of the top seeds advanced Wednesday, led by No. 1 Ivan Lendil who beat American Matt Anger 6-0, 6-1, 6-1 in just 89 minutes.
Lendl, who was critical of Cash's performances on surfaces other than grass following his defeat by the Australian in last year's Wimbledon final, made just six unforced errors during his victory.
"I've won two matches in straight sets against onon opponents." he said.
Neither 0.2 seed Stephan Edberg or third seed Mats Wilander of Sweden played Wednesday, but fifth seed Yannick Naoh of France found his touch late in his second round match. He defeated Italy's Massimiliano Narducci 6-7 (6-8), 6-2, 6-2.1
Noah, a last-minute entrant in the tournament because of a groin injury, said he still had plenty of room for improvement.
"I'm pleased, but I've played one tournament in six months," said the former French Open champion.
He was joined in the third round by 12th seed Christo van Rensburg of South Africa who downed Nigerian Tony Mmoh 6-4, 6-3, 6-2.
"I'm not looking too far ahead. I'm not that confident I can stay well."
Frenchman Henri Leconte, the seventh seed, also moved on with a 7-5, 6-2, 6-2 win over Australian Peter Dooban.
Other seeds to advance included Sweden's Jonas B. Svennson and Australian Wally Masur, the 14th and 16th seeds respectively.
In the 128-player's draw, big guns Martina Navratilova and Chris Ewert blitzed their second-round opponents.
Navratilova, the No. 2 seed who is chasing her fourth Australian Open title, whipped Anna-Maria Fernandez of Torrance, Calif., 6-1, 6-0 while Evert downed Beverly Bowes of Lubbock, Texas, 6-0, 6-1.
Former Dodger star Steve Garvev ends celebrated career
LA JOLLA, Calif. — Steve Garvey, baseball's quintessential good guy and one of the game's great clutch hitters, retired yesterday after 17 years in the major leagues. He spent the last five with the San Diego Padres.
The Associated Press
"This is in many ways the toughest day of my life. In other ways, it's quite exciting," said Garvey, a first baseman who starred 12 years for the Los Angeles Dodgers before joining the Arizona as a free agent in December 1982.
He had been on the disabled list since May 30 with a torn bicep tendon near his left shoulder, an injury that required reconstructive surgery.
a lifetime .294 hitter, Garvey batted .211 with one home run and nine runs batted in 27 games last season before being sidelined.
Garvey, a 10-time All-Star who enjoyed a tremendous fan following, said the injury that cut short his 1987 season also influenced his decision to
"It's a retirement that is decided upon almost involuntarily because of the severe injury that I had," Garvey said. "It's an injury that has taken much longer to heal than I expected. It's an injury that over the last four or five weeks has come along very slowly."
He had hoped to play one more season and held several preliminary discussions with the Dodgers as well as the Padres, who were the only non-roster player. But the slowness of the rehabilitation forced him to change his mind.
Garvey wasn't offered a 1988 contract by the Padres and became a free agent in November.
"I didn't think it would be fair to the Dodgers or the Padres — the two teams I wanted to play for — or the fans if I went out there at less than 100 percent."
— Steve Garvey
Former baseball player
"I didn't think it would be fair to the Dodgers or the Padres — the two teams I wanted to play for — or the fans if I went out there at less than 100 percent." Garvey said.
Garvey broke into professional baseball in 1968 with the Dodgers' farm club in Ogden, Utah. He shuttled between the minor leagues and the big leagues before spending his first full season with the Dodgers in 1971.
He leaves the game as the best fielding first baseman in history with
a fielding percentage of .996, and as one of its most durable players, holding the National League record for consecutive games at 1,207.
The NL's Most Valuable Player in 1974, Garvey hit 272 homers and drove in 1,368 runs while batting .284. He was the league's best, though, in postseason play.
in five World Series with the Dodgers and Padres, Garvey hit 193 (36-for-113), and in five NL championship series he batted .356 (32-for-90) with eight homers and 21 RBI.
Asked what he would miss most now that his playing days are over,
He led the Padres to their only NL title in 1984 with a dramatic two-run homer in the ninth inning of Game 4 of the playoffs against the Chicago Cubs. The Padres lost the World Series that year to Detroit in five games.
"I've had a wonderful 20 years," Garvey said. "I've been blessed in these 20 years, accomplished a lot. I know also that those accomplishments will be with me, and I'll have an opportunity in the future. I think, to use them off the field to help people enjoy the game of the baseball."
"Being able to entertain the fans, I think, will be the biggest void in my life, that and the camaraderie with my teammates and organization, the coaches and staff.
---
"I truly enjoyed working with a group of fellows trying to win a game or a championship or have that winning season. The fans have been my inspiration. So, I'll miss that rapport on a daily basis with the fans but you can never take away that relationship I've had with them, not only in Los Angeles and San Diego but throughout the country."
He said his greatest thrill was putting on a baseball uniform.
Garvey said he would continue working with his public relations firm, Garvey Marketing Group of La Jolla, and would consider a baseball front office job should the opportunity arise.
Nicknamed "The Senator" by his Padres teammates, Garvey said he also would consider running for a public office in the future.
14
Thursday, January 14, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Georgia finds some of Auburn's upset magic for an easy victory
The Associated Press
Georgia 87, Auburn 68
ATHENS, Ga. — Toney Mack and Patrick Hamilton scored 23 points apiece and keyed a late 28-10 run to spark Georgia to an 87-68 Southeastern Conference basketball victory over 19th-ranked Auburn Wednesday night.
The Bulldogs trailed for the first 30 minutes before Mack converted a three-point play midway through the second half to tie the score at 56-56.
Alec Kessler then hit two free
throws with 9-20 remaining to put the Bulldogs ahead to stay. Mack scored 11 points and Hamilton added nine in the 28-10 burst, which put Georgia in control with an 81-66 lead two minutes from the end.
Auburn, which knocked off nationally ranked Florida and Kentucky last week, scored the first eight points of the game and led 18-6 before Georgia rallied, cutting the halftime deficit to 37-35 when Hamilton hit a 60-foot despiration shot for a 3-pointer at the buzzer.
record at 2-2, and Auburn fell to 9-3 overall and 2-1 in the conference.
Georgia, 10-6, evened its SEC
The 23 points was a career-high for Hamilton, a junior. Kessler added 22 points for the Bulldogs, who were without star guard Willie Anderson, sitting out a suspension for violating team rules.
Chris Morris scored 27 points to lead the Tigers, who ran throughout the game after using deliberate tactics against Florida and Kentucky to make up for the loss of two inside starters — Mike Jones, for academics, and Jeff Moore with an injured
Pittsburgh 61, Connecticut 58
hand.
PITTSBURGH — Charles Smith, held to one point before halftime, scored 13 second-half points, including a clutch turnaround jumper with nine seconds left, as sixth-ranked Pittsburgh edged Connecticut 61-58 Wednesday in a Big East Conference game.
Freshman point guard Sean Miller scored 16 points and made four
consecutive free throws after Connecticut Coach Jim Calhoun was called for two technical fouls with six minutes left as Pitt, 12-1, rallied from a seven-point deficit.
Miller's free throws made it 52-44 and Smith boosted Pitt's lead to 10 points by making two foul shots with 5:34 to play, capping a 14-2 Pitt scoring run.
Connecticut, losing for just the second time in its last eight games, cut the lead to 57-53 when Lyman DePriest hit two throws with 3:21 left. Smith and Jerome Lane
then each made foul shots before Phil Gamble made his third three-point goal of the half to pull the Huskies to within three points.
Tate George's driving layup with 58 seconds left made it 59-58 before Pitt began working the clock. The Panthers took two timeouts before Smith, with just one second left on the shot clock, threw in a desperation 10-foot turnaround just to the right of the basket.
The Huskies, 1-3 in the Big East.
See TOP 20, p.16, col. 1
Total Tanning
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AIM HIGH
THE THRILL OF FLYING.
It can be yours as an Air Force Pilot. It's not easy, but the rewards are great. You'll have all the Air Force advantages, such as 30 days of vacation with pay each year and complete medical care—and much more. If you're a college graduate or soon will be, AIM HIGH. Contact your Air Force recruiter for details about Officer Training School and pilot training. Call SSgt Highland 913-491-8657 Collect or 1-800-423-USAF Toll Free
Dazzling to the Eye...
... Humor and Dance to Delight All Your Senses
Presented by The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series
8:00 p.m. Tuesday, January 26, 1988 Hoch Auditorium
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reserved For reservations, call 913-864-3982
Public: $14 & $12; KU & K-12 Students: $7 & $6; Senior Citizens & Other Students: $13 & $11
Funded, in part, by the Kansas Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts through their affiliation with the Mid-America Arts Alliance, a regional arts organization; additional support provided by the KU Student Activity Fee, Swarthout Society, and the KU Endowment Association; a University Arts Festival event.
Dazzling to the Eye...
...Humor and Dance to
Delight All Your Senses
Presented by The University of
Kansas School of Fine Arts
Concert Series
8:00 p.m.
Tuesday, January 26, 1988
Hoch Auditorium
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reserved For reservations, call 913-864-3982
Public: $14 & $12; KU & K-12 Students: $7 & $6; Senior Citizens & Other Students: $13 & $11
Funded, in part, by the Kansas Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts through their affiliation with the Mid-America Arts Alliance, a regional arts organization; additional support provided by the KU Student Activity Fee; Swarthout Society, and the KU Endowment Association; a University Arts Festival event.
Half Price for KU Students
LOOKING FOR PART-TIME EMPLOYMENT Find It At UNITED PARCEL SERVICE
Wanted Loader/Unloaders to work 3-5 hr. shifts Mon.-Fri. at Lenexa, Ks. facility (30 min.east of Lawrence). Day and Night Shifts $8.00/hr.
ups
eoe/m/f
UPS will interview on Friday, January 15, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sign up for interviews at Placement Center room 110 Burge Union $8.00/hr.
"You're what?!"
MOLLY RINGWALD RANDALL BATINKOFF
For Keeps
It's about sticking around, no matter what.
TRI-STAR PICTURES PRESENTS A JERRY BELSON PRODUCTION
A JOHN G. AVILDSEN FILM MOLLY RINGWALD
"FOR KEEPS" RANDALL BATINKOFF KENNETH MARS MUSIC BY BILL CONTI EDITOR JOHN G. AVILDSEN
WRITTEN BY TIM KAZURINSKY & DENISE DECLUE PRODUCED BY JERRY BELSON AND WALTER COBLENZ
PG 13 | PARENTS STRONGLY CAUTIONED ▶ ▶ ▶
DOLLY STEREO ★ ★ ★ IN REQUIRED THEATRE
DIRECTED BY JOHN G. AVILDSEN READ THE MON PAPERBACK
DELPHI © 1987 TRI-STAR PICTURES, INC.
Some Material May Be Imported for Children Under 19
TRI STAR PICTURES
STARTS FRIDAY AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, January 14, 1988
15
Division I schools reject GPA rules
The Associated Press
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — NCAA Division I schools decided Wednesday not to institute the stricter athletic eligibility standards that had been approved just hours earlier.
School representatives turned down the proposal by a 162-143 vote after approving it 163-151 earlier in the day Division II schools, which taught students in rams than Division I schools, approved the measure both times.
The "satisfactory progress rule"
sets uniform grade-point standards
Effective Aug. 1, 1989, Division II athletes will need a 1.6 cumulative grade-point, based on a 4.0 scale, after their first season of competition standard increases to 1.8 after the second season and 2.0 after the third.
A chief argument against the rule was that different schools have different grading standards. Opponents also said the rule would discriminate against athletes who are willing to enroll in more difficult courses.
Vanderbilt Athletic Director Roy Kramer delegates to the NCAA Convention that the higher grade requirements would cause more athletes to major in "tourism and Canadian fly fishing."
Gwen Norrell, faculty representative from Michigan State, was a strong supporter of the rule.
"This makes me even prouder to
be from the Big Ten," she said. "You'd have to say there are pockets of institutions that just do not want to upgrade their academic standards." She declined to identify those schools.
The Big Ten is the only major Division I conference with requirements similar to those adopted by the Division II schools Wednesday. Big ten athletes must have a 1.8 cumulative grade point after their first year of competition, stepping up in succeeding seasons to 1.9 and 2.0.
"We just feel these things should be left to the individual institutions," he said.
Big Eight Commissioner Carl James opposed the uniform grade requirements.
In a surprise move Wednesday morning, an amendment eliminating an official date for issuing bowl invitations was withdrawn from consideration. Last fall, NCAA President Wilford S. Bailey said the rule was "frequently and flagrantly violated."
"It's very difficult to say how many student-athletes might be affected," Big Ten Commissioner Wayne Duke said. "The idea is to improve graduation rates."
The amendment would have allowed bowl invitations to be extended at any time.
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
MUSEUM GIFT SHOP Museum of Anthropology Univ. of Kansas
SALE Jan.13-17, 10-3
※※
The Whole World
Knows the Music
Nobody Knows the Mart
SUA Movies presents:
Chuck Berry
Haill Haill Rock 'n' Roll
Fri. & Sat. 3:30,7,9:30 Sun. 2:00
in Woodruff Aud. in the Kansas Union
before forget泵杯 hour daily between 3 and 4 p.m. Soft drinks only .$3 at baxy's Drive-In 10am
ACADEMIC SKILL ENHANCEMENT WORKSHOP. Improve time management, reading, listening, notetaking, reviewing Tuesdays' assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall 864-404. ASSISTANCE Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall 864-404. COMMUTERS: Self Serve Car Pool Exchange. Main Lobby, Kansas Union
READING FOR COMPREHENSION AND SPEED WORKSHOPS. Mondays January 25, February 1 and 8; 7. 7 p.m. Materials fee: $15. Attendance fee: $40, at the student Assistant Center, 121 Strong.
- List your names with us. We refer students to you. Student Assessment Center, 121 Street
NEED A RIDE / RIDER? Use the Serve Self PC Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union
Foreign Language Study Skills Program. Help for students of any language. Thursday January 21, 7: 9 p.m. 300 Strong. Free! Student Assistance Center, 121 Strength 864-4064
If you would like to help GARY HART qualify for the Kansas ballot, call 842-1133 Padd for by Kansas for Hart (Don Stroll & Vick Shiphoy)
GET INTO THE GROOVE Metropolis Mobile Sound. Superior sound and lighting. Professional club and radio DJ. Hot spots. Maximum Party Thruat. 841.7083.
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 121
FOR RENT
D. J. for hire (indoor parties only). Excellent call rate. Free 18:49 amvime. cheap rate to call believe. 818-1254
ENTERTAINMENT
All the best known names in musical instruments and accessories; Alesis, JBL, Roland, Korg, Tascam, Kramer, Fender, Gibson, Martin, and many more!
MASS ST. MUSIC
WE'RE NOT JUST BOWLING
Come by and see us!
roommates needed for 3-bedroom Duplex, part furnished. $130 plus 1/2 up; $100, cap. 843-3833. 3 bedroom luxury townhome. 2 full bath whirlpool, fireplace, hot tub, tennis and basket court courts. On K.U. bus route. Extra storage. $650 per month, one year lease required. For in-unit condominiums.
BILLIARDS AND
VIDEO GAMES...
1347 Mass. 843-3535
home office appraisal
Found: Great apartment! 4 bdm, fireplace,
micro e. etc. Lost: Ten rooms! Respond: Ig
bdm ($180-135) plus 1/4 util. Call 843-2936
THE KANSAS UNION
JAY BOWL
864-3545 LEVEL ONE
Apartment: two bdrm, spacious, very clean, on bus route $300; plus low ult w 70 W 25 J 4
Completely Furnished Studios, 1-2-3 & 4 bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficiency. Appointed with you to call. Call 812. 941-8258, or 749-7415. Mastercraft Studio 812. 941-8258, or 749-7415.
Deluxe 3 B/1 2 house. Fp. Ca, garage. baseement. Couple or sm fam照. No pets, reef req. On bus route. Partially furnished. Baseement of few months. Must to take appreciation. 843,738
Furnished room for rent, most utilities paid, with off street parking, two blocks from university, quiet, statious atmosphere, and no pets please. 841-500
Mature male roommate need for two bedroom furnished apart. laundry, facilities, parking lot.
$150/m water pump. Behind Watson Library
943-2658
satisfied with where you're living? Naimuth has one female resident, but she also has such features as individual lease liability, excellent "All-U-Can" accommodations and you'll see why we are recognized as one of the best housing options at KU! For more info, call or come from Naimuth Hall, 1800 Nairn Drive.
Needed: non-smoking female to share spacious area in Meadowbrook female $162.50 or male $924.07 or both
ADVANTAGES
Nowhere at KU will you find a residence hall with the advantages of Naismith Hall. Applications for fall/spring semester are now being accepted while space remains.
NAISMITH HALL™
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
973-624-8550
OPEN HOUSE Villa 36 apartments. 2101 West 26th street. Brand new apartments. Immediate occupancy-free rental assistance. Saturday to 10.30. Call Kawai Valley Management 841-6800
Private, recently carpeted room, joint kitchen and living accommodations; handy to campus; off-street parking. Reasonable rent. Call evenings ( 913 ) 341-9542.
SHANNON PLAZA CLUB APARTMENTS on KU bus. route 'Washer/dryer included, water, trash paid. Dishwasher, microwave, ceiling fan. Gym equipment, basketball courts. 6- or 12 month lease. 841-7726
Wanted preferably two female roommates. Campus convenience. Two rooms available. $190 or $150 per month. No utilities. Call George at 842-5217.
ROOMMATE WANTED! Walking distance to
microphone. 841-4120 stove, stereo TV,
micron 841+ mpls use. 841-4120
Tuition apartment avail. now. $225 includes all utilities. Deposit plus lease (6 month) required.
- Microwave
Wanted: Non-smoking roommate. Own room,
free water/cable, $140/m. Bus route, very nice
room.
Villa26
T cooperative living. SUNKLOW HOUH
Suites. Lease from Nassim Place
Sublease apartment at Nassim Place Apart
- Energy Efficient
- Excellent Location
- On KU Bus Route
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
PLACE
EDDINGHAM
- Washer Dryer Hook-ups
OFFERING LUXURY
- Move In Todav
24th & Eddingham (next to Gammons)
FOR SALE
2201 W. 26th/Apt. E-102
—phones—
- Exercise Weightroom
- 10 or 12 month
842-5227 • 842-6454
841-6080
- Swimming pool
2 BR APARTMENTS
71 VW Super Beetle. AT-AC, New England.
72 VW Passenger. AT-AC, New England.
Excellent condition. $1209 4209 842-2000
Excellent condition. $1209 4209 842-2000
- Open Daily
Absolutely Awesome Array of Antiques, collectibles and new stuff we have; hardback and /2 price paperback books, full line of new comic books, signed prints, posters, decor, indian, and costume jewelry (glitter and good stuff), the right vintage clothes for any occasion, antique furniture, fine art, antique furniture, fiesta, and the best selection of antique furniture in the area. Quantrillas F Fire Market, 811 New Hampstead, Open Sal, & Sun
Free Showtime Satellite T.V.
841-5444
EDDINGHAM PLACE
For Sale Western Civ. 214-826 books Half price Western notes and tests. Tacque 664-839 644-839
Beautiful stressed-leather bomber jacket, brand new, gorgeous, size 40, 401, 749-1001
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Management, Inc
Rock-n-roll-Thunders of used and rare albums
to be sold at 1 p.m. every Saturday and Sunday
at Rock-N-Roll Records, 50 West 46th Street, New York, NY 10023.
FOR SALE! Posters by Nagel Warbler and
their friend, David Meyer. For sale at
70 wolf售后服务和 one queen
1973 ww bwg. Reconditioned engine less than 500 miles. Brand new radials on back. Very reliable.
- Fire place
- MOTHBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE
12 p. E8. 00, m. Saturday; 10 p. p.
32 p. E8. 00, m. Sunday;
For Sale: Big dorm rug, good shape $60. Golf Mechanical Engineering books Call
78 Dodge Challenger (made in Japan). Good Condition, loaded. $1700 obs. 864-7081.
For sale, limited edition prints by such artists as
Bernard and John Livers and Fernandez. Contact Robert 826-407-6750.
57
1888 Chevrolet Cavalier Z24 $695, Camaro Iz-24 $107, Monte Carlo as $135, 1898 Ford Mustang MK II $125, 1988 Mercury Cougar XR19. $135, 1898 Pontiac Fiero Coupe $489, Firebird $822, Trans AM $12,501 FACTORY warranty rebates financing, trade-ins. You choose options
Drafting tools, beds, lamps, chest of drawers,
Everything But Kitchen, 66 Vermont.
Woebel, and
- On-Site Management
1. Student basketball ticket. $70 or best offer
841-6345.
- Energy efficient
Car won't start! Mobile repair service on foreign
earth. Call Agent 814-4679
AUTO SALES
LOST-FOUND
Red Hot Bargains! Drug dealers' cars, boats,
planes, planes & area. Buyers
gift cards: gc-9000 - gc-9001
Found on Dec. 3: Blue; blue new ten speed campus park bike. To identify, call 841-7633.
Lost pupkey: "Born" tan lab with white chest and paws. Three months old. Call 841-2014.
HELP WANTED
Babystuff needed for 5 yr old boy every Tuesday
for 8 yr old Thursday 11:30-6:00 / 9o/ week
end Friday 11:30-6:00
Bucky's Drive-In is now taking applications for part time employment. Flexible hours. Half price meals. Apply in person between 10 and 5 at Bucky's Drive-In fifth and iowa. Thank you!
Career needed to drive to Topeka, leave at its ba.
bank town by 11 a.m. Mfr. Must have驾
车记录.
New Family Manager
Earn $100 per day marketing credit cards to students on your campus. Work F/T or P/C (Call
GOVERNMENT JOBS $10.400 $29.200 yr./won
GOVERNMENT JOB $67.000 677.000 fc. #5758 for current Federal List L
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $10.04-$59.20 JOB. Now
for current Federal Latest. x750.00 JFIF. For
current Federal Latest.
Graduate Student Assistant. Requires a 45-wpm typing, word processing and dictation experience. 20hrs/week. Through spring semester, increase to 30hrs/w week in May; $35-$450/month for half-time position. For a complete job description contact the Office of Study Abroad, 23 Lippincott
ous student resource aid for spring 88,
clerical and typing (39@mjw) skills. Data entry
experience preferred but not mandatory. Must be
available to work some morning hours. Apply
to:
For psychiatry department of Kansas Neurological Institute has openings for development and training specialists. Clients to be served and ad-hoc special needs and behavioral habilites include behavioral assessment, staff training, program development and support, pre-program supervision of the team psychologist. Applications must have completed an internship in a supervision of the team psychologist. Applications must have completed an internship in a treatment facility for the mentally retarded and have met the treatment and care of mentally retarded clients. Any experience may be substituted for the training. To obtain an application contact the personnel of KS Psychiatric Center W 21st, Toksko, Ks 643 (913) 928-5341 E-mail:
Penal Jobsh. $20.04 Start! Prepare Now!
Exam Workshop. (819) 454-4444. Ext 133
Hewed Wanted: Artist for shirt designs Apply with art pad, Jayhawk 933, Mass 834
Student work - study position. On-campus
publisher seeks help 10.5 hrs/wk to open and
distribute耻辱工作。 Must be eligible for
work and able to work afternoons. $3.50/$75 / hr
Student position: On campus publisher seeks help 10-15 hrs w/o to open and distribute daily mail, answer phones, type and assist in various duties. Must be able to work afternoons $35-$75/hr depending on experience. Come to University of Georgia Carruth, to complete application by l/15/88.
Office of Student Financial Aid is accepting applications for two positions beginning approximately February 1 through June 30 only, with a salary of $44.67 monthly DUTY ASSISTANTS; a student permit for approval/denial; act as financial aid resource person to visitors; conduct special projects as needed; provide education and excellent communication skills; Ability to work under pressure; admission to graduate programs; Referred Qualifications REFERRED QUALIFICATIONS Knowledge of KU; Knowledge of financial aid programs. Letters of application received by January 22,1888 will receive first priority when interested persons should submit a letter of application, resume, name(s) with addresses and telephone numbers, or a signed transcript to Jeffrey B. Weinberg, Associate Director, Office of Student Financial Aid, 26 Strong Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS. A degree in Kansas is an equal opportunity employer.
The University of Kansas has a position opening or a continuous half-time student assistant. The person in this position will help teachers for the university's budgets. This person will gain a good exposure to fund accounting and auditing for the university's financial environment. The position requires senior or mid-level hours of accounting, and good written and oral communication skills. Desirable applicant will be interested in January 20. Start with four months. $400-$480 per month for half-time employment. Classification is January 20. Start with three months. $160-$200 per month. Pestinginger, Budget Office, B44-1336. Applications available in 319强 Hillanghai from 1:4:30pm - 4:30pm.
Nurses needed in all subjects. Requirements: 3.0 GPA, 15 hrs in subject, good communication skills. Apply at Supportive Educational Services 863-3971
ing and/or evenings, weekends. 749-4355
Phone order taken wanted. $3.45/hr to start. App in person. Checker's Pizza. 2214 Vale Rd.
Pizza Drivers Wanted. Must be in or older, have own car and ins. $30/hr plus commute. Apply in person. Checker's Pizza. 2214 Vale Rd.
Warm caring people - who like children ages 3-5 are need not have a day per week, an easy day per week, between 7:30 and 3:30 M-F. Day care volunteers needed from 12:30-3:00. For more information visit www.warmcare.org.
PERSONAL
Person to assist with my care or support. Mornings and occasional weeks, 794-836.
Female roommate wanted to share 1/2 story townhouse with other females. New townhouse, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, AC 1/2 bath plus. Located close to campus now to bus route. Luxury and rent call 842-856-856
BUS. PERSONAL
$80 Value when presented toward new patient ser-
ience. $100 Value when presented toward new pa-
tient exam. Dr Johnson, Chiropractor.
CASH LOANS on almost all value of value CV'S, TV's, jewelry, guitars, musical instruments, stereo equipment, tool, cameras, firearms and more. Jayhawk Pawn and Jewelry.
Pregnant and need help? *Call Birthright at*
*Confidential help/free pregnancy*
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For the best in world and national news, complete business section, and extensive coverage of sports, movies, books, etc..
New York Times
National Edition
by subscription.
jan.18-May 12: $20.90
jan.25-May 12: $19.59
only 25¢ per copy Mon.-Fri by subscription
send to: N.Y. Times
P.O. Box 1721
Lawrence KS 66044
for Sunday Service
or more info call
841-5073
SUNLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-2316.
SERVICES OFFERED
Become a Valentine always remembered, with a
story of love and romance from a Photo
Plus. 749-750-767. Free consultation.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest
Driving School. Licensed driver's license,
driver's license, transportation,
HELP! Frustrated by red tape? Needing a movie or game time? Just don't know where to turn? Call the UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER at 864-3506, 24hrs a day.
Jeans's Alterations Quick Service Suits, coats,
jewels,裤装. All types of Service 2201 W
Hooded Pants.
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ektachrome
Services within 24 hours. Complete B/W services.
PASSPORT $6.00. Art & Design Building.
Room 206, 864-4767.
KU Photographic Services: Electrachome processing within 24 hrs. Complete B/W services.
Passport $6.00. Art and Design building, rm 296
864-4767
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A. $/hr; 843-9032
(p.m.)
PRIVATE OFFICER Ogb Ghb and abortion ser-
vices. Obg Ghb must have Prompt contraception and abortion services.
THE FAR SIDE
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided 841.2316
Weekly Beer Specials
WEBB'S PARTY SUPPLY (formerly Green's) 810 West 23rd
Jan. 13 - Jan. 19
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Asc
word processing 842-795 and 841-791, 831-913.
6-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Asc
word processing 842-795 and 841-791, 831-913.
The college of Liberal Arts and Sciences offers tutoring in math, english, business, and science, with a reasonable charge through Supportive Educational Services, apply at SES Building, 864-9971.
TYPING
Miller Lite 12 pk. $5.59
Bud 12 pk. $5.59
Busch 12 pk. $4.49
Old Style 12 pk. $3.69
Weidemann 12 pk. $3.19
A.I. Reliable Typing Service Term papers.
A.I. Reliable Typing Service typeform, him
Electronic Typewriter: 842-3246
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in terminal
processing. Perfect for correcting or correcting Selector
spelling corrected . 843-9549
Accurate. Affordable typing experienced in paper, papers, misc. materials or correcting Soilcraft
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS
service available 842-378-9 before 9 p. m. please.
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
is a two-week intensive course covering
applications, maillists, letter qualification
and editing skills.
For professional typing/word processing, call
Jim Bauer at 512-800-3640. Spring special $12/pack double
space, pica, space.
Quality typing. Includes excellent spelling, grammar, punctuation, editing. Fast, reliable service. Pick-up/delivery available. 843-0247.
FAST, ACCURATE, DEPENDABLE, Letter
tracing, spell check, spell check
TOP-NET SERVICE SERVICES
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes HAVE M.S. Degree. 841-6254
Typing at a reasonable rate. Call Holly at 845-0111.
Campus Manager. Individual need to implement promos on campus for Top Fortune 500 Company P/T, $100/w (1/800) 592-2121 Ann Brady.
Female roommate needed to share huge room in building with 4 adults. 1/2 to 1/3 of 1/2 rooms. Short walk to campus. 294-5120.
Formal female roommate needed to rent Rd and Lab,
Gas and water pal. Rent is negotiable. Call Lil
Lilly.
Part time student drafts person HVAC wanted to work at architectural Services. Duties include architectural and mechanical detailing on campus remodeling projects. Must have above average academic background, skills and proficient understanding of construction assemblies, materials, and building codes. Six months or more drafting experience with an architecture firm in the office. Call for an interview at 834.4331
Wanted. Bass guitarist for successful established K.C. base group. Band direction influenced by early Motown and Blues combined modern rock. Sound vocal ability preferred. Call 913-282-3535
wanted to work at Architectural services,
include blueprint machine operation, drawing
specification and product brochure file clerk
and preparation of inked roof plans. Must be expe-
cial in a state-of-the-art office environment.
Must be prequalified for state work-study pro-
gram. Call for an interview at 864-3431.
By GARY LARSON
Jason
© 1986 Universal Press Syndicate
Suddenly, in the middle of the flock, the cook is goosed.
16
Thursday, January 14, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Top20
Continued from p. 14
never got another shot off, with
Smith deflecting an in-bounds pass
from midcourt with one second left to
run out the clock.
Providence 78, Georgetown 74
PROVIDENCE — Delray Brooks scored a season-high 28 points, including a decisive seventh 3-point field goal with 1:17 left, as Providence upset 11th-ranked Big E rival Georgetown 78-74 Wednesday night.
Georgetown, 11-2. had overcome a 66-57 deficit with 8:55 left to go ahead 74-72 on Perry McDonald's layup
with 3:14 remaining. Then the Hoyas
self-destructed.
Dwayne Bryant missed the front end of a one-and-one foul situation with 2:32 to go. Then Brooks gave Providence, 8-4, the lead for good with his 3-pointer from the top of the circle.
Georgetown's Sam Jefferson was called for a double dribble with 55 seconds to play and Providence ran down the clock. With 17 seconds left, Georgetown's Charles Smith stole the ball from Carlton Screen, but Screen stole it right back and was fouled with 11 seconds to play.
He made both shots, giving the Friars a 77-4 advantage.
Georgetown's Jaren Jeckson fired up a 3-point air ball from the corner with five seconds remaining. Brooks was fouled with two seconds to play and made one of two shots.
Providence, 2-1 in the Big East, got 16 points from Darryl Wright and 10 from Steve Wright.
The Hoyas, 1-1 in the conference, were led by McDonald with 21, Smith with 16 and Mark Tillom with 15.
Kentucky 63, Alabama 55
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. — Ed Davenor scored 17 points and backcourt partner Rex Chapman added 16 as fifth-ranked Kentucky held off Alabama 63-55 in Southeastern Conference basketball Wednesday night.
Kentucky led nearly the entire game but was unable to put it away until the final minute, when Alabama missed two chances to pull within a basket.
"The best military comedy since M*A*S*H." TIME MAGAZINE, Richard Schiekel
In 1965, military D.J. Adrian Cronauer was sent to Vietnam to build morale. His strategy: keep 'em laughing. His problem: staying out of trouble. The wrong man. In the wrong place. At the right time.
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Friday January 15, 1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 76 (USPS 650-640)
Regents welcome budget Gov. Hayden's $536.2 million proposal praised
Kansan staff writer
By Rebecca J. Cisek Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — The Board of Regents said yesterday that it was pleased with Gov. Mike Hayden's 1989 budget proposals for higher education but found certain aspects of his fiscal plan surprising.
That raise would include only faculty who teach. It does not include librarians, department heads and research faculty.
Gene A. Budig
There is reason for the faculty at the University of Kansas to be genuinely optimistic.'
The Margin of Excellence is a Regents proposal aimed at bringing financing of Regents schools to 95 percent of their peer schools and increase faculty salaries to 100 percent of their peer average. Peer schools are similar in size, scope and mission.
Hayden's budget calls for the state to spend $363.2 million for the seven Regents schools. His budget calls for a 5-percent salary increase for university faculty and a 4-percent salary increase for student and classified employees. Classified employees will also receive a step movement, which is equivalent to another 2-percent increase.
Faculty will receive an additional salary boost from the governor's budget. His budget asked for 100 percent of the Margin of Excellence request for increased faculty pay.
"T
However, Regents Chairman Donald C. Slawson of Wichita reacted
The Regents were surprised that Hayden's budget did not include Margin of Excellence increases for non-teaching personnel.
Chancellor
positively to the governor's recommendations.
"The governor responded to our fondest wishes," he said.
Chancellor Gene A. Budig said during a break at the meeting that he too was pleased with Hayden's plan, especially fee releases and enrollment adjustments.
"There is reason for the faculty at
Kansas to be gentle with optimistic.
Hayden's budget would give instructional faculty at KU a 2.8 percent Margin of Excellence in their total salary increase 7.8 percent.
Budig said the Lawrence campus would receive an extra $1.7 million for enrollment adjustments that would create 24 additional faculty salaries will cost $1.3 million, and almost $400,000 will go to supplies. The governor's proposed fee release would give KU $466,382.
The governor did not recommend any increases in "mission-related" or program enhancements for the Margin of Excellence except at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
vice chancellor, said. "I will be
getting to the rest of the Margin
(funded)
Judith Ramaley, KU executive
She said she was optimistic about Hayden's recommendations.
"It's the most positive budget this campus has seen in years," she said.
But Budig and the Regents were concerned about Hayden's request to increase hospital revenue profits to partially fund the Margin of Excellence program.
Budig said that, originally, the MEd Center had to raise $100 million in cash receipts by the end of fiscal 1988. Now, the governor wants that amount increased to more than $103 million by June 30, he said. For fiscal 1989, the governor expects $105 million.
Budig said the Med Center would probably meet this year's figure, but he was cautious to say whether the hospital could raise $105 million for fiscal 1989.
"We will have to do some very aggressive and creative things to achieve the hospital revenue increase," he told the Regents.
Stanley Kopilik, executive director of the Board of Regents, said that the financing from hospital revenue was a key factor in the Margin of Excellence program.
He said that every reasonable effort to meet those projections would be made because they are in the best interest of the state.
The Regents had asked for a $5.5 million increase in state general funds, but Hayden recommended only $1.2 million. Hayden's 1989 budget also includes an increase of $11.1 million in tuition at the Regents schools. Hayden recommended that tuition increase 12.8 percent overall.
Also during the meeting, the Regents:
■ received a report from Gene Sauber, vice chancellor of hospital administration at the Med Center, that showed that the Med Center was fully accredited for the next three years and was in the top 10 to 15 percent of state-owned hospitals in the country.
- decided to study the economic contributions of the Regents distinguished professors
- ■ assigned the Council of Academic Officers to report within 90 days on the feasibility of uniform guidelines for evaluating undergraduate education at all Regents schools.
- decided to review campus policies on alcohol during the next 30 to 60 days. KU requested that all events that serve alcohol be approved through the office of the executive vice chancellor.
- received a report from Koplik on a proposed agreement with the University of Missouri-Kansas City dental school for Kansas residents.
Classes canceled for King holiday
By Stacy Foster
Kansan staff writer
A march across campus and speeches at the Kansas Union this morning at 11:30 will celebrate today's federal and state holiday.
For the first time, the University of Kansas will give students a day off in recognition of Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday. All Monday classes are canceled.
"We're living in a different generation," she said. "It's up to the older generation to educate the younger one and make them aware of his work and what it was about."
The office of minority affairs is sponsoring the march, beginning at the Chi Omega fountain and ending at the Kansas Union.
Juditr Ramaley, executive vice chancelor, and Ola Evelyn, academic adviser for the men's basketball team, will speak in Iderson Auditorium after the men's inspirational Gospel Voices will sing.
Students have celebrated King's birthday on campus since 1981.
The march is important to help educate a new generation about the works of a man who influenced an entire country, Evelyn said yesterday.
Belva Smith, a 1984 KU graduate, said she organized the march then because the University did not have anything planned to celebrate the day. She and her friends
Because of the holiday, the Kansan will not be published Monday.
sought the guidance of Sam Adams, associate professor of journalism, who had known King personally.
Smith said the march in 1981 was to demonstrate the importance of making Martin Luther King's birthday a national holiday.
"He was a man that represented the struggle for dignity, respect, freedom and equality for all people," Smith said.
Smith boycotted classes on Jan. 15 all four years she was at KU to draw attention to the importance of King's birthday. Her dedication was rewarded. Her governor John Carlin wrote Smith a letter in 1982 telling her that Kansas officially was going to recognize King's birthday.
Smith said that was a major accomplishment. But there were still issues to overcome, she said.
"There are still people and organizations that feel the need to establish themselves as superior. That is obviously wrong," she said. "It is an attitude as a whole that people must overcome."
Adams agreed that making King's birthday an official holiday marked an acceptance that was not previously there. Still, he thinks work remains to be done.
Steve Donziger, co-coordinator of Project Due Process, encourages law students to represent Cubans being detained in Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary in hearings scheduled to begin next month.
Students to help Cubans
Bv leff Moberg
Kansan staff writer
About 100 KU students have volunteered to assist Cuban prisoners being detained in the Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary at their release hearings next month before an Immigration and Naturalization Service review board.
Because the federal government has refused to help Cuban prisoners with their INS hearings, the Coalition to support Cuban Detainees, formed in Atlanta in 1985, made a stop at KU yesterday to persuade students to represent any of the 550 Cubans jailed in Leavenworth.
"I think a lot of people may assume they're all insane or criminals, but some are just political prisoners," he said.
Roberto Maldonado, a Wichita law student who volunteered to help the detainees, said he felt compelled to because he was of Hispanic descent.
11
think a lot of people may assume they're all insane or criminals, but some are just political prisoners. '
Steve McAllister, Lucas law student, said that people in the legal community, including students, had a responsibility to people like the Cuban detainees.
Roberto Maldonado
Many of the Cubans have no legal help, so the coalition travels around the country visiting universities near prisons where Cuban detainees are held, asking law students and anyone else interested to help. The program is called Project Due Process. Leavenworth has the largest concentration of Cuban detainees in the country.
After November's prison riots in Atlanta and Oakdale, La. 718 Cuban
Steven Donziger, co-coordinator of Project Due Process, said that the coalition usually arranged meetings with local law students. That's because the students might know more about the law than the INS officials who run the hearings, he said.
detainees from the two prisons were sent to Leavenworth. About 150 Cubans have been released during the last month.
But the program is not just for law students. Donziger said it is for法学教授.
Principals given editing role
"Our aim is to train a corps of people to take some of the cases up at Leavenworth," Donziger said. "We would like a group of three to four people from this University to coordinate a trip there."
The coalition left Dwaine Hemphill, law graduate in team, to coordinate the local efforts. Hemphil said there would be a training session Thursday in Green Hall for anyone interested.
Supreme Court ruling limits freedom of high school press
By Christine Martin
Kansan staff writer
Some local high school officials and students are angry about a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that gives public school officials the right to censor student publications.
The court on Wednesday ruled 5-3 that a Hazelwood, Moe, high school principal did not violate students' First Amendment rights when he ordered that two articles, one dealing with teenage pregnancy and another dealing with children, be deleted from an issue the student newspaper, the Spectrum
The school district argued that because the student newspaper was part of the school curriculum, it had the right to control what was printed. The students argued that the paper was a forum for student opinion.
Three students sued the school district in 1983, saying that their First Amendment rights were violated.
Justice Byron R. White wrote in Wednesday's majority opinion, "A school need not tolerate student speech that is inconsistent with its basic educational mission even though the government could not censor similar speech outside the school."
But some local officials disagree.
Atthebury said that high school students had been reduced to second-class citizens because of the ruling.
"My students are pretty upset about it," she said.
"I think it a step backward," said Cheryl Attebury, faculty adviser for the Lawrence High School student newspaper, the Budget.
, W
What the ruling . . . has essentially done is to make the principal the editor of the paper.
- Susan Coughenour high school journalism adviser
Ann Grzymała-Busse, special projectors editor of the Budget this semester and editor-in-chief of the newspaper last semester, said, "I'm revolted. I'm certainly not surprised. For the past two years, the Supreme Court has been taking rights away from students.
"It's not a question of issues being disruptive. Now it's how the principal and the community see it. If we can't write about problems in school, what's the point?"
Susan Coughenour, faculty adviser for the Passage, the student newspaper at Shawnee Mission Northwest High School in Shawnee, said some students there were talking about organizing a petition against the ruling.
Brad Tate, Lawrence High School principal, said he didn't anticipate any problems with the ruling. He said he always saw the school newspaper only after it had been distributed to the rest of the school.
Coughenour said that the ruling put teachers and school officials in awkward positions.
"What the ruling says is that an administration has the right to continue."
"We have some guidelines, but it doesn't provide for that kind of censure."
she said. "What that has essentially done is to make the principal the editor of the paper."
Mark Goodman, executive director of the Student Press Law Center in Washington, D.C., said that the ruling was not ordering every school district to censor student publications but that they now had that right.
"I hope they decide not to," Goodman said, the ruling hates. "student journalists are not allowed."
Goodman said he had heard of one high school principal in California who started censoring the school newspaper for the first time only one hour after he became aware of the ruling.
Ted Frederickson, KU associate professor of journalism who teaches media law, said that he thought the court's ruling would pertain to only elementary and high school journalism, not to college journalism.
"What the Supreme Court has done is to give public school officials the right to give away the right of freedom of expression," Goodman said.
"I'm hoping that it is limited at a university level because we're dealing with adults, people who are likely independent," Frederickson said.
"I think it it's a different situation. I hope it is, he said." But then again, I thought high school students had First Amendment rights, too."
"It certainly teaches high school students the wrong lesson about journalism," he said. "The Supreme Court seemed to say that students had rights until the educational mission of the school took over.
"Good God, is that the lesson they want them to learn?"
Cold spell brings back ice skating to city park
By Jill Jess
Kansan staff writer
Ice skating has returned to Lawrence, after a year's hiatus because of mild weather.
Last week, the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department flooded the basin in Central Park for ice skaters. The park is between Seventh, Sixth, Kentucky and Tennessee streets..
Although the department began filling the basin last week, the ice was not ready until the weekend, said Fred DeVictor, director of parks and recreation.
"It's a bit rough," DeVictor said Wednesday, "that it's going to go."
He said that some skaters had been on the ice before it was solid and had roughed up the surface. Because the ice is outdoors and not in a professional rink the surface can not be expected to be perfect, he said.
"You have to recognize that it's not like an artificial rink," he said. "We rely on Mother Nature."
"We don't have an attendance record, but I've driven by and seen 20 to 30 people there at times," he said.
The number of skaters at the unsupervised rink varies, DeVictor said.
Lisa Palmquist, Concordia junior, was skating in the park
ICE
BASH
Greg Trimarche, Long Island, New York, law student, practices hockey in Lawrence's Central Park. Mild weather prevented the skating areas, provided by the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department since the early 70s, from opening last year.
Tuesday afternoon. She said that when she and two friends arrived, they were the only skaters but that the others were the skaters and an elderly man showed him.
to be there skating," Palmquist said.
"He was really proud of himself
The ice surface was good, she said, except that at one end, it had
See ICE, p. 6, col. 1
2
Friday, January 15. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Weather Forecast LAWRENCE.
A HANGING MAN
LAWRENCE
From the KU Weather Service
Mostly Sunny
HIGH: 46°
LOW: 30°
Will expect mostly sunny skies and mild temperatures. As we reach near 50 tonight skies will become partly cloudy as we fall to a low of 35.
REGIONAL
North Platte
49/18
Partly sunny
Omaha
43/24
Partly sunny
Goodland
48/28
Mostly sunny
Heya
49/29
Sunny
Salina
46/30
Sunny
Topeka
46/30
Sunny
Kansas City
45/30
Sunny
Columbia
46/33
Mostly sunny
St Louis
43/35
Mostly sunny
Dodge City
42/29
Sunny
Wichita
46/28
Sunny
Chenute
45/34
Sunny
Springfield
50/36
Mostly sunny
Tulsa
50/37
Mostly sunny
Forecast by Bill Hibbert.
Temperatures are today's high and tonight's low.
5-DAY
SAT
Partly cloudy
52/32
HIGH
LOW
SUN
Cloudy
46/26
MON
Partly cloudy
38/24
TUE
Partly cloudy
30/18
WED
Snow turnies
36/25
SAT
Party cloudy
52/32
HIGH LOW
雨
Photo Idea?
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Stephen Wade
photo editor
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Jennifer Rowland
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Attend the ACADEMIC SKILL ENHANCEMENT WORKSHOP
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Tuesday, January 19 6:30 to 9:00 p.m.
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SAC STRONG HOLD
Presented by the Student Assistance Center
From the heights of the Rockies
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Chamber Music Series Presents
WOMEN OF NOTE COLORADO QUARTET
Julie Rosenfeld, Violin Francesca Martin, Viola Deborah Redding, Violin Sharon Prater, Cello 8:00 p.m. Sunday, January 17, 1988 Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Quartet in A major, Op. 20, No. 6 "Sun" Haydn
Quartet No. 5 Shostakovich
Quartet in B flat major, Op. 130
"L'biquettet" ("Dear Quartet") Beethoven
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved/For reservations, call 913/864-3982 Public:$11 & $9 KU & K12 Students: $5.50 & $4.50 Senior Citizens & 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
On Campus
If the sky is clear, an observatory open house will be at 8 p.m. today in Clyde W. Tombaugh Observatory at 500 Lindley Hall. Call 864-3166 for more information.
■ Ecumenical Christian Ministries will show the movie "Roxanne" at 7:30 p.m. today at 1204 Oread Ave.
■ Komel Harasawa, piano, will present a master's recital at 8 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall at Murphy Hall.
Local Briefs
AUDITIONS SET: Lawrence Community Theatre, 1501 New Hamshire St. will have auditions for "A
. My Name is Alice," at 7 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday. Roles are
available for five to seven women.
Actresses are asked to prepare a
the audition. For more
information, call the theatre office at
843-7469.
Police Record
A car parked at an apartment in the 500 block of Fireside Road incurred $300 in damage to its roof and trunk Tuesday, Lawrence police said.
A window in a car belonging to a student living in the 400 block of North Second Street was broken Wednesday, causing $100 in damage, Lawrence police said.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, January 15, 1988
Campus/Area
3
Field house site may get garage Multi-level facility could add as many as 600 spaces by 1989
By Donna Stokes
Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas could gain as many as 600 parking spaces in a multi-level garage north of Allen Field House by the beginning of 1989. KU officials said this week.
The new garage is now in the design development phase, said Jim Modig, associate director of facilities planning. The construction of the garage is still subject to approval by the Board of Regents.
"What has been presented to date of the image has been accepted." Modis said.
The garage will be financed through bonds that must be approved by a state bonding committee appointed by the governor. Parking Services will be responsible for paying off the bonds, Medig said.
"We have authorization to do it in the manner we are proceeding." Modig said. "The only thing that would stop the plans would be proof that it could not be supported financially. And I don't believe there should be any problem with that."
Two sites originally were proposed for the parking garage. Facilities planning recommended building the garage on the two parking lots north of the field house. The other site was east of Robinson Center.
The architecture firm for the project, Kiene and Bradley Design Group of Topeka, thinks it can have the project ready for a bid by early this summer and the garage can be built by late 1988 or early 1989. Modig said
The joint committee on state building construction met Wednesday with facilities planning officials at KU and said they did not have problems with proceeding at the Allen Field House site, said Allen Wiechert, director of facilities planning.
"The purpose of meeting with the committee was to advise them where we were with the project and to discuss the accommodation of water retention," said Wiechert. "They seem to have no concerns with the field house site."
Ray Moore, chairman of the parking board, said, "The amount and intensity of potential water drainage from a reservoir can to people living south of campus."
One of the requirements of building
The only thing that would stop the plans would be proof that it could not be supported financially. And I don't believe there should be any problem with that.'
"T.
Jim Modig
associate director of facilities planning
the structure was building a water- retention system under the garage. Water will be retained until it can be released into the drainage system.
The field house site was chosen over the site between the computer center and Robinson Center for several reasons. KU officials said.
"For a parking structure of the scale that it needs to be to provide the optimum capacity of spaces, the Robinson site just really didn't fit as well as the Allen Field House site," Moore said.
The terrain from Irving Hill Road to the field house slopes to the south. "This causes the garage to be more aesthetically pleasing," Moore said. "The garage will look much lower than if built on level ground."
elements into the garage that blend with the architecture already existing in Anschutz and the field house," he said.
"There is also a possibility of incorporating some architectural
Negative aspects of the site east of Robinson were also a factor in the failure of the project.
At the Robinson site, drivers would have no direct access from Sunny side Avenue. The only way to reach it would be from the south or the east, which would cause a traffic flow problem and could be through residential areas. A building on the site would also be less pleasing to the eye, Moore said.
"You have to look at how you can approach the garage without using residential neighborhoods and also doing something about directing people to it." Moore said.
The field house site also will be more convenient for people attending theater productions at Murphy Hall and athletic events, he said.
Even though the Robinson site will not be used for the garage, it may still be used for additional surface parking.
No formal decision has been made about the temporary lot or how parking in the new structure will be designated, Moore said. It may be a mixture of permit and metered parking, but it is still under discussion.
KU computers to link in new Xerox network
Bv Michael Carolan
Kansan staff writer
Computer systems in five campus buildings will soon be able to link with one another and communicate up to about 40 times faster once a contractor is found to install new computer links.
KU officials said yesterday that the Ethernet, a computer network developed by the Xerox Corporation, will begin replacing the University's current computer link as its chosen option is chosen to install copper wiring.
Currently, bids have been sent to five companies. KU officials hope to select a contractor for the project by next month.
"The phenomena we are seeing is that more and more departments and faculty are getting computer resources," said William Bulgren, chairman of the department of computer science. "The question was how do we get connected. We can now."
The Computer Center will be linked to computers in Learned, Nichols, Malott and Strong halls when the system is complete. The departments of computer science, electrical and computer engineering and physics and astronomy will have access to the system.
Dewey Allaire, KU director of telecommunications, said that computer systems in the buildings would be linked by attaching about 1,500 feet of copper wire to existing fiber-optic telephone lines and data switches that were installed on campus last June.
Ken Jordan, a technical support programmer at the computer center, said, "The current network allows computer terminals to talk to systems, but the new network allows systems to talk to systems."
He said the Ethernet would allow users in five locations to send more information and communicate rapidly by what is called electronic mail, which involves direct animal-to-terminal communication.
Alaire said that the different departments that received the Ethernet hookup would pay for its installation according to the footage of wire required to reach its destination. The network will cost the departments with the connection about $75 a month, he said.
Add/Drop
form
on table un
Amy Randles, SenEx vice chairman, hands fliers to Scott Swenson, Lawrence senior, and Mike Connor, Lawrence graduate student. The fliers encouraged students to express concerns about the shortened add-drop period.
Closed classes cost students
By Elaine Woodford
Kansan staff writer
The frustration of crowded and closed classes has become a source of irritation for both students and faculty.
"As long as enrollment remains at the current level, we will continue to have a problem," said James Carothers, associate dean of liberal arts.
Instructors say the problem is complex. Underclassmen need these core classes for their majors. But tight budgets do not allow departments to hire more instructors to meet the growing demand.
"It's a terrible problem," said Wilmer Linkugel, chairman of the department of communication studie.
Linkukel said the department hadn't received approval to hire additional faculty after several professors retired or left the department. This has created a critical need for qualified professors, he said.
The department decided to close four sections of Communications 150 to free instructors to teach upper-level communications classes.
"This isn't an ideal situation. It's a makeshift situation." Linkugel said. "We need regular faculty to teach upper-level classes."
"More faculty is the only solution," said Burtel Lettom, chairman of the university's physics department.
"Frequently, our own majors are having problems getting into courses," he said. "Students in other majors are having problems getting into courses ahead of majors."
Carothers said that courses in political science, English, psychology and communications were taken by students from many schools in the University and, therefore, closed faster than other classes.
Problems stem not only from lack of funds and staff, but also from the small size of classrooms.
"Classroom space is critical on this campus," Johnson. "We have the English of our class."
Loomis said, "We couldn't even accommodate larger sections if we wanted, due to the small size of the classrooms."
Bion Clark, Topeka junior and a political science major, said he had
been able to enroll in only six hours of political science since his freshman year.
Despite two trips to the enrollment center last fall, Clark said he was unable to enroll in any political science courses this semester.
"I've been to classes to ask professors for closed-class openers and been put on a waiting list," Clark said. "Sophronores and non-majors are getting into the classes before majors. It's been really frustrating."
Loomis said, "The problem with the add-drop system is that we aren't able to control the size of the classes. Students who aren't majors are enrolling in classes that aren't suited for their needs, while political science majors are on waiting lists."
Loomis said that political science majors were given priority on class waiting lists and that seniors were the first students offered a place in the class.
"While we wait for the state to give the University more money, it's costing students their education," Clark said.
---
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Friday, January 15, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
SenEx add-drop proposal would force hasty choices
What would be said about a student who attended a class once, or maybe even twice, and then decided to drop it?
He would likely be told that he acted hastily, that he didn't give the class a chance. But, a proposal passed recently by the University Senate Executive Committee seeks to force such uninformed, spur-of-the-moment decisions on students.
Under the proposal, the drop period would be shortened to two weeks, and the add period would be set at 17 days. But, altering the add-drop system in this way would go against its intent.
Add-drop is designed to allow students time to evaluate their classes to make sure they are enrolled in the proper courses. If a student decides that he does not like a class or does not belong there, he can drop it during add-drop without receiving a withdrawal notice on his transcript. He then can add a class that is better suited to his needs.
A two-week drop period, however, would rob students of valuable time needed to make informed decisions. And a 17-day add period would compound the problem by rushing students into picking replacement classes.
Under such a system, students with Tuesday-Thursday classes would meet a maximum of three times before the drop deadline loomed. Once-a-week classes would meet only twice. And when one considers the nature of most first-day meetings, which usually involve a pep talk and a syllabus, students could be dropping classes after only one legitimate session.
Alan Player for the editorial board
Thus, students would be forced to make hair-trigger decisions to drop classes, and hasty adds would be necessary to maintain adequate credit hours. Such an add-drop system would damage students' educations by increasing the likelihood of poor class choices.
Programs spread warmth
Enduring the blustery winter months is as easy as slipping on an extra sweater or turning the thermostat up a couple of notches.
But for the less fortunate who must endure the cold without heat or coats or, for some, even homes, the long winter months can result in sickness. depression and perhaps death.
The call to help these less-fortunate people is answered by local efforts to "share the warmth." And these efforts deserve hearty commendations and support for the aid they give in warming the lives and hearts of those who have nowhere to turn.
Scotch Industries recently ended a month-long Share the Warmth campaign that resulted in the collection and distribution of 1,300 coats in Lawrence and 4,500 in Topeka. Employees of the Scotch plant in Lawrence, who work six days a week, donated their evenings and weekends to clean the coats. That added up to 150 hours of volunteer work in Lawrence and 500 in Topeka.
Project officials reported that many coats still were available at the Salvation Army for those who need them.
Another winter help project still is going on and will provide continuing support to those who need help paying their heating bills. Warm Hearts, the utility bill assistance program, has extended the deadline of its donation drive from Jan. 15 to Feb. 1. Organizers hope that an extra $12,000 can be raised to ensure the program's existence through spring.
Few foresee needing help just to stay warm. Giving support to these and similar programs now will ensure their existence in the future.
Jody Dickson for the editorial board
Other Voices
Some UNL (University of Nebraska-Lincoln) students have been misled by an error in the Fall Schedule of Classes calendar. The calendar lists the first day of classes as Jan. 18 — one week after the Jan. 11 start.
Jan. states and the problem can't be attributed to just a single typographical error. The schedule states that general registration will be Jan. 14 and 15 and that Jan. 19 will be the first day to drop and add classes. The whole schedule was set an entire week behind.
Fortunately, someone in the administration office was sharp enough to catch the error and corrected it before the second-semester schedule was printed.
This mistake might not inconvenience too many students because many of them relied on the accurate second-semester guide.
Daily Nebraskan University of Nebraska-Lincoln
News staff
Allison Young...Editor
Todd Cohen...Managing editor
Rob Knapp...News editor
Alan Player...Editorial editor
Joseph Robello...Campus editor
Jennifer Rowland...Planning editor
Anne Luscombe...Sports editor
Stephen Wade...Photo editor
Richard Stewart...Graphics editor
Tom Ellis...General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Kelly Scherer...Business manager
Clark Massad...Retail sales manager
Brad Lenhart...Campus sales manager
Robert Hughes...Marketing manager
Kurt Messersmith...Production manager
Greg Knipp...National manager
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Jannie Brown...Classified manager
Jeanne Hines...Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and less than 200 words and must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University of Kansas, please include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stainbarrow Hall Letters, guest columns 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 Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest columns. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 11 Stauffer Flint Hall.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stuffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6045, 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. 6044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $40 in Douglas County and $50 in Burlington County. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through City.
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stupper-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 68045.
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Missile treaty creates problems
Now that President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev have signed the INF treaty, it seems the worst is over.
No quip.
The dirt thing about heads of state is they always let the dirty work to someone else. They sign their names on the dotted line — everyone applauds politely — and then they go on a vacation. They seem to forget that someone has to clean up the mess.
Enter top mess-cleaners, our Secretary of State George Shultz and their Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze.
"You know, George, this missile treaty is just the beginning of many problems for both our countries."
"Why do you say that, Shevy?"
"Well, we both get stuck with hundreds of leftover missiles that neither one of us can use anymore, and we don't have a clue what to do with them!"
Shultz scratched his head. "I don't think anyone gave that part of the treat么 thought ... that's a pretty serious problem. Any ideas?"
"Well, first we have to remove the warheads," Shevardnadze said thoughtfully. "Then maybe we can just dump the launchers on the side of the road when no one is looking."
"I don't think that would be a good idea, Shevy." "Perhaps, then, we could have a in yard, as you call it in America. I'm sure there are many countries that would love to have a few. Or better yet, we could put them on wheels and help eliminate the transportation shortage in the Soviet Union!"
Van
Jenerette
Staff Columnist
I
"That's quite an idea, Shevy. You Russians just might have more brushes than you've given credit for," Shultz replied. "But then again, I can't picture an ICBM with 'AMTRAK' stenciled on the side."
"How about a lottery, or a tax sale? Your share of the profits could be used to help balance your trade deficit with the Japanese." Shevardnadze suggested.
"Well, now we're smoking, Shev! Maybe you could turn Gorky Park into a Sony version or Disneyland called 'Leftover Missileiland.' The average Russian seems to love weapons — I've watched your parades on the news. Tanks, rockets, a million marching soldiers ... what a great idea!"
"Maybe you ought to sit down, George. I have to agree that the average Russian isn't exactly a Mardis Gras-type personality, but I have the feeling that 'Missileland' could be a little bit extreme."
excellent. Kitz rubbed his nose quickly. "Perhaps to keep things on the safe side, we could hire a 'THINK TANK' corporation to come up with the best solution."
"Do you honestly believe that they will come up with better ideas than us, George? After all, we are the best of the world's professional bureaucrats.
aren't we?" Shevardnadze implored
"Shevy, Shevy, Shevy — have you got a lot to learn. American bureaucrats hire think tanks to do their thinking for them! It's the American way. When in doubt — contract out! No taxpayer actually expects a politician to do any real thinking!"
"I don't get it, George. Why do you even bother to have elections for public officials then? Why don't you just elect the "THINK TANK" corporations and get rid of the middlemen?"
"In the first place, Shevy, politicians fill an important role in U.S. society. They make speeches, and they kiss lots of babies. And more importantly, they have a few scandals every once in a while, which keeps the newspapers very happy! Who really cares if an executive from a 'THINK TANK' spends a weekend frolicking into the Caribbean with a boat-load of young beauties?"
"You know George, this is getting more complicated than I thought. We have got some monumental problems. Just what are we supposed to do with all these missiles?"
"Don't worry, Iushy. Let's give it some time. Meanwhile, I just happen to know this guy with a real big ocean barge. I'm sure he'd be more than willing to take our missives and sail up and down the eastern seaboard for as long as it takes us to think of something."
Van Jenerette is a Lawrence graduate student majoring in journalism.
BLOOM COUNTY
HAVE
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YUPPIES ARE DEAD.
WEALTH IS OUT.
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THEN WHAT'S "IN"?
PA55E.
IS SOMEBODY
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1-15
---
University Daily Kansan / Friday, January 15, 1988
5
Smoot once again on public payroll
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Bradley J. Smoot, a former assistant attorney general who served four months in a federal prison after pleading guilty in September 1986 to cocaine possession, is back in state government.
Smoot, 38, is working as a special assistant to Secretary of Administration Edward Flentje, researching cybersecurity practices doing no legal work. Flentje said,
Before joining Flentje's staff this month, Smoot worked part-time for five months in the secretary of state's office, checking papers in the
corporate division.
Smoot, who lives in Lawrence, voluntarily surrendered his license to practice law when he pleaded guilty to the cocaine possession charge. He once practiced law in Lawrence.
Smoot was arrested in January 1986 and accused of buying cocaine from Richard von Ende, who then was chief lobbyist for the University of Kansas. Von Ende also went to prison.
The state Board for the Discipline of Attorneys is still reviewing whether Smoot should be allowed to resume practicing or have discipline imposed.
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6
Friday, January 15, 1988 / University Daily Kansai
Tickets delay enrollment
Overdue penalties are leaving some students in a fines mess
By Kim Lightle
There's no place to hide
Eventually, those overdue library books or unpaid parking tickets will catch up with those who forget, refuse or are unable to pay their fines.
The many students who did not pay their fines last semester had holds placed on their enrollment this week. Students who paid their fines were allowed to pay fees, but those who didn't clear their holds lost their enrollment.
Patrick Busch, Overland Park
park, junior said he had to stand in line for
15 minutes to take care of an $18
charge. He said he was allowed to complete fee payment.
"I wasn't really mad," Busch said.
"I knew I would have to pay. I anticipated it. I was just a little frustrated that I had to stand in another line."
Busch was one of 13,000 people who had a hold placed on his enrollment. Gary Thompson, director of student records, said that 13,000 was high because many people remained listed although they had graduated, dropped out or wouldn't be enrolling again.
Students have hold placed on their records if they fail to repay student loans or don't pay for added classes, parking or other fees. Capitalization, Thompson said.
If students are unable to clear their holds by either paying the fines or working out a payment agreement, they lose their enrollment. Students
have to work out a payment schedule with the department that is trying to collect. Thompson said.
Students will be notified of holds in advance if possible, he said. The comptroller's office tries to notify students of fines. Also, the department that is trying to collect will sometimes send a notice to the student.
Many students paid their fines during fee payment this week. Pat Lashier, assistant comptroller, said $195,359 in fines had been collected as of yesterday.
The easiest way to avoid having to stand in an extra line and other inconvenience is not to ignore fines, Thompson said.
"It's best not to ignore holds because they don't go away.
Ice
Continued from p. 1
melted enough that grass showed through.
DeVictor said that one reason people might not use the rink was that few people in Lawrence owned ice skates. Neither he nor Palmquist knew of any place in Lawrence where skates could be rented. Student Union Activities does not have ice skates.
does not have ice skates.
"But they're not very expensive," Palmquist said. "I got mine
for $16, and one of the people I went with got his for $20."
Except for last year, when the weather was too mild, the Central Park basin has been flooded for skating every year since the early 1970s. DeVictor said.
When the park was renovated about three years ago, drains were installed to hold the water in the basin. Before that, sand dams had been used at one end of the park.
DeVictor said.
DeVictor said the rink would stay open as long as the weather stayed cold.
Palmquist said that the cold weather did not hamper the fun of skating.
"You'd think it'd be really cold, but it's such great exercise that you move around a lot," she said. "Only your face gets really cold."
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, January 15, 1988
NationWorld
7
Iranian warship launches first strike of new year, fires on Dutch tanker
MANANA, Bahrain — An Iranian warship radioed "happy voyage" to a Dutch-owned tanker, then blasted it for an hour with machine guns, cannon and rocket-propelled grenades yesterday, injuring two people, crewmen said.
The dawn attack on the 35,731-ton Petrobulk Pioneer was Iran's first shipping strike of the year. It apparently was in retaliation for Iraqi raids this week on Iranian oil traffic that broke a nine-day calm in the
Persian Gulf
Government will collect on debts, Meese says
Iraq claimed later yesterday that its aircraft hit a large vessel off the Iranian coast. The planes returned safely to base, according to the Iraqi News Agency.
Iran, meanwhile, praised Syria for efforts to arrange talks with the gulf Arab states threatened by a spread of the Iraq-Iran war, and a diplomat in Abu Dhabi that said such a meeting was likely to occur soon in the United Arab Emirates.
Dole campaign official resigns post
that there is no such thing as a free ride," Attorney General Edwin Meese III said. Meesee, along with Budget Director James C. Miller III, announced the crackdown during a news conference at the Justice Department.
WASHINGTON — The Reagan administration announced yesterday that it would be tapping credit cards and paychecks and even seizing cars to collect an estimated $80 billion in delinquent loans and taxes owed to the U.S. government.
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Dave Owen, general finance chairman for Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole's presidential campaign, said yesterday that he was stepping down from his post until questions regarding his business activities were resolved.
questions about business arrangements that allowed Owen to make a profit from associates who obtained government contracts.
Recent news reports have raised
Owen said that Dole had not asked him to step down. He said he had decided to temporarily suspend his campaign activities after consulting with campaign leaders.
"To me, nothing is more serious than to have my honesty questioned, and when it is, I am the one who demands the answers," Owen said.
He said that he hoped to rejoin the campaign and that answers to many of the questions raised recently would be forthcoming, he hoped, in a few days.
"We're indicating to people who willfully refuse to pay their debts
Owen continued to refuse to answer questions about his involvement with a blind trust for Dole's wife Elizabeth, former secretary of the Department of Transportation. He said that federal law prohibited him from releasing information about the trust and that he did not discuss any transactions with Dole or his wife.
BUSH WINS MICHIGAN: Early Bush, storming back from early setbacks, defeated a coalition of conservative opponents last night in bitterly contested Michigan caucuses that set the stage for selection of the first Republican presidential nominating delegates.
News Roundup
ARAFAT WANTS RECOGNITION: Palestine Liberation Organization leader Yasir Arafat said yesterday that he would recognize Israel's
right to exist if it and the U.S. accept PLO participation in an international Middle East peace conference. Israel considers the PLO a terrorist organization and refuses to deal with it. ESPIONAGE SUSPECTED: An Army sergeant stationed at the Aberdeen Proving Grounds in Maryland was arrested yesterday on charges of attempting to deliver defense information to the Soviet Union, the FBI announced. Sgt. Daniel
Walter Richardson, 42, will be charged under the Uniform Code of Military Justice.
BORK TO RESIGN: Robert H. Bork will resign as a federal appeals court judge on Feb. 5 to correct "a public campaign of miseducation" that prevented his nomination to the Supreme Court, the White House said yesterday.
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Friday, January 15, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Arts & Entertainment
Jacque Janssen, arts/features editor
Art insurance selling at a premium
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Spencer Museum copes with high rates
By Elaine Woodford Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff write
Protecting priceless works of art requires more than silent alarms and watchful security guards.
Insurance increasingly has become an expensive necessity
For more than 200 years, museums, galleries and private owners have purchased insurance policies to protect valuable collections from damage.
The roots of art insurance are quite old, according to information from the National Association of Art Museum directors.
In the 1400s, investors loaned sea captains money for voyages, which was repayable with interest on the successful completion of the trip. If the voyage failed because of a disaster at sea, the loans were canceled. But investors used the interest earned from successful voyages to pay off their losses, in effect creating the counterpart of today's insurance premiums.
Janet Dreiling, registrar for the Spencer Museum of Art, said that during the past two to three years, premium rates for the museum's collections and exhibitions had doubled.
She said that the increase was due to the fact that more art work was being transported and that insurance premiums were increasing overall.
"We hope that the rates will level off in the future," she said.
The higher insurance rates and the increased value of artwork have affected the number of exhibitions from other institutions coming to the museum as well as the number of exhibitions the museum rents to other galleries.
"It does affect us. The higher insurance rates take up a larger amount of our budget. To compensate, we raise the rates we charge
other museums to rent our shows," Dreiling said.
Dreiling also said that the rising costs gradually affected the art museum. The results of this problem would be more noticeable at larger museums that have the funds to house bigger exhibitions such as the King Tut exhibition, which would cost between $50,000 to $60,000. The art museum is affected, she said, but on a much less noticeable scale.
Museums and private owners of paintings, drawings, sculptures and other rare articles can obtain broad protection policies, similar to homeowner's insurance. But these policies do not cover artwork during travel, which is when artwork is most likely to be damaged, Dreiling said.
However, the rates for traveling in insurance are very high
"The major contributing factor in damaging art work is travel." Dreiling said "More museums aren't able to lend exhibitions because of the high value of the artwork."
She said that museums increased restrictions and the cost of lending art work if it could be easily damaged. Some pieces, especially paintings on wood panels and glass objects, are almost never lent because of the strong possibility of damage.
Because of the care that must be taken to transport valuable art, the cost of shipping it is extremely expensive. Dreiling said. The art museum shipped pieces by air in crates, packed well to avoid
breakage, she said.
The crates are specially constructed by Cotter Mitchell, who is employed by the museum to make the crates. Mitchell also helps pack crates and makes other displays.
"Crate-making is almost an art within itself." Dreiling said.
Many museums have adopted more secure methods for transporting pieces of artwork.
Small pieces can be hand delivered by currier to the destination or curators can accompany the exhibition to each individual museum on the tour.
"On the last day of the show, a fly somehow got into the space between the scroll and the plexiglass. Someone thought it would be funny to smash the fly and it was crushed into the silk scroll, staining the silk and the background. We filed an insurance claim after that incident," she said.
Despite the care taken in preparing the exhibition for travel. Dreiling said, there's only so much museums can do to avoid damage.
"Two years ago, we sent our Japanese Ghosts and Demons to the west coast. There were several scrolls, which were protected by placing a sheet of plexiglass over the scroll, allowing for a few inches between the plexiglass and the scroll.
Dreiling said mishaps still happened even with the most careful planning.
Committee is seeking museum director
By a Kansan reporter
The search for a new director for the Spencer Museum of Art might be nearing an end, said Doug Tilghman, acting director of the museum.
The position has remained vacant since March of last year, when director Jay Gates resigned to become director of the Seattle Art Museum. At that time, a 12-member committee was appointed by Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for academic affairs, to choose a replacement.
Tighman said that the committee reviewed more than 30 applications and received several nominations from departments within the University, but a permanent replacement still hasn't been found.
"This has been going on long enough, and I certainly hope we will be able to select someone very soon, within one or two months," he said.
The committee is now interviewing six applicants, all from out of state, he said.
There also is an opening in the curatorial department. Tilghman said the museum was looking for a curator of Western art, who would work with European and American paintings, sculpture and decorative work.
Tighman said that he planned to recruit for the curatorial position at the College Art Association meeting in February.
The curator of photography, Thomas W. Southall, has taken a one-year leave of absence to become curator at the Amon Carter Museum in Fort Worth, Texas. Diana Gaston, Columbia, Mo., graduate student in art history, will work in the photography office during his absence.
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Friday, January 15, 1988
9
Hampton coach is ready for Kansas test
By Elaine Sung
Kansan sports writer
Hampton coach Malcom "Zeke" Avery is treating his team's game tomorrow night against the Jayhawks as any other game.
Not Danny Manning, not Allen Field House, not even "The Streak."
None of the things that Kansas is known for fazes him.
"They're ready and they're out to win," he said of his players. They know the popularity of Kobe Bryant is excited to come out and play.
"We know the tradition that Kansas has and what the home court has done for them," Avery said. "All we can do is give it our best effort.
Hampton, an NCAA Division II team in the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association, plays in a building with a capacity of 3,800. They will face the Jayhawks in Allen Field House, which seats 15,800.
Avery also knows about The Streak, now at 54 games, and the determination Kansas has in keeping the home winning streak alive.
"Everything may be larger there, but I think our kids will come around, even with the noisy background," he said. "We should just prepare mentally."
"We'll have to stop him from reaching the triple threat: rebounds, scoring and assists." Avery said. "Hopefully, we can control the tempo and keep them from their running game."
Hampton will be led by 6-foot-6 forward Peltre Williams, who averages more than 15 points and eight rebounds a game.
And then there's the challenge named Dannv Manning.
KU
Game 15
"We had our chances," he said.
"In the second half, we tried to get things right, but then we turned the ball over."
Kansas
Jayhawks
COACH: Larry Brown
Record: 11-3
Kansas coach Larry Brown, in the meantime, spent yesterday watching films from the Iowa State game, which Kansas lost 88-78.
HAMPTON
UNIVERSITY
Pinnacle
Hampton Pirates
COACH:Mcalm Ave
F-25 Danny Manning 6'10" 22.5
F-21 Milton Newton 6'4" 6.2
C-24 Chris Piper 6'8" 8.4
G-12 Ols Livingston 6'0" 3.6
G-14 Kevin Pritchard 6'3" 11.0
PROBABLE STARTERS
COACH:Malcolm Aver
Record: 6-3
F-40 Sylvester Hartford 6'5" 5.7
F-42 Peltei Williams 6'6" 8.3
C-50 Derrick Dunson 6'8" 7.4
G-10 Raymond Lee 6'0" 1.8
G-33 Stacy Clark 6'0" 5.0
Kansas had a better game in terms of rebounds, but the Cyclones forced 25 turnovers, which prevented the Jayhawks from getting any closer than six points in the second half.
Despite the loss, Brown was pleased with the Jayhawks' overall performance, considering the loss of starting center Marvin Branch, who was declared highly ineligible on Wednesday.
KANSAN graphic
COVERAGE: Sat., Jan. 16 at Allen Field House, Lawrence, 7:35p.m. Radio: KLZR 105.9 FM, KJHK 91FM. There will be no live television coverage.
"It's hard to evaluate; our team's changed so much," he said. "We just started adjusting after losing Marshall."
Kansas lost the services of Marshall after he injured his left knee
last month
Starting in place of Branch is Chris Piper, who is suffering from a pulled groin muscle. Piper played 28 minutes against Iowa State, scoring five points and grabbing six rebounds.
about it. I want to try to forget it.
There's nothing I can do about it."
Another player who nas,
Brown's eyes, improved enough to
deserve more time is sophomore Keith Harris, who played 19 against Iowa State and contributed six points and two rebounds.
"I felt good at the game. I don't think about it anymore." Piper said of his injury, which requires surgery in order to heal completely. "That's why I don't like to talk
"It was nothing exceptional," Harris said. "It has to be better. Give me two more weeks."
Washington says rebounds are the key to defeating Iowa State on home court
Kansan sports writer
By Keith Stroker
The Kansas Jayhawks women's basketball team looks to bounce back from its five-point loss to Missouri when they face the Iowa State Cyclones tomorrow in Ames, Iowa. Tipoff is set for 3 p.m.
Jayhawk coach Marian Washington said the key to success in the game will be rebounding, something the Jayhawks did not do well against and 0-1 in the Big Eight Conference, was outbounded by Missouri 52-39.
"If we control the boards and play our games, we have a good opportunity to win."
Washington said the Cyclones, 8-4 overall and 0-0 in the conference, had a strong perimeter game and liked to run. Senior guard Etta Burns leads the Cyclone fast break with an average of 12.6 points a game.
"Burns is an outstanding point guard," Washington said. "Because
of her, they like to play an up-tempo game."
IOstate Iowa lost a great player in center Stephanie Smith, who graduated last year as a first team all-Big Eight performer. Washington said the Cyclones had a couple of quality players to take her place in junior forward Lisa Greiner and junior center Carmen Jaspers.
Greiner equalled her career high in points with 23 against Kansas on Feb. 28 last season in the Big Eight postseason tournament in Salina. Jaspers had a career high 14 rebounds against the Jayhawks on Jan. 28 last season in Lawrence.
Last season, Kansas faced Iowa State three times, winning all three by scores of 79-64, 75-68 and 73-67.
The Jayhawks have a 16-2 overall record against Iowa State, including a 7-1 mark at Iowa's Hilton Coliseum. Kansas' only loss at Ames came on Feb. 4, 1986, by a score of 68-60. The only other time the
PROBABLE STARTERS
Kansas 10-4
Coach: Pam Wetting PPG
F-33 Lisa Dougherty 5'9" 13.9
F-30 Lisa Baker 5'11" 6.2
C-55 DebraRichardson 6'1" 10.4
G-34 Mesho Stroughter 5'9" 7.9
G-24 Etta Burns 5'9" 9.2
lowa State Cyclones 8-4
Coach: Marian Washington PPG
F-40 Shelly Coyle 6'1" 8.0
F-30 Lisa Greiner 6'1" 10.4
F-44 Garmen Jason 6'3" 15.0
G-15 Tracvay Horns 5'8" 7.2
G-24 Etta Burns 5'8" 12.6
Cyclones have beaten the Jayhawks was in the opening round of the 1982 Big Eight Postseason Tournament, by a score of 66-64.
The Cyclones also feature 6-foot2 freshman forward Lymen Lorenzen, who won the 1987 Naismith Award as the national women's prep basketball Player of the year. Featured last
year on the CBS Evening News, Lorenzen scored 6.736 points during her four years at Ventura High School in Clear Lake, Iowa, the most points scored by an amateur — man or woman — in college or high school.
Last week, Jayhawks senior reserve forward Sandy Shaw received the Big Eight Player of the week award for her performances against Oral Roberts University and Missouri-Kansas City.
Shaw, the 6-10 Topeka High School graduate, averaged 18.7 points and 8.3 rebounds in the two games, including 7 of 9 three-point shots. It is the first time she has received the award and the first time a Kansas player has been honored this season.
"At first, I really didn't think about it and I kept playing the best I could." Shaw said. "It is a nice award, but something that I can't get to my head. I need to press on and keep playing hard."
Ex-Packer coach takes SMU post
The Associated Press
DALLAS — Forrest Gregg left his coaching job with the Green Bay Packers and returned to his alma mater yesterday to start anew the scandal-rocked football program at Southern Methodist University.
"It's a distinct honor for us at SMU today to announce the selection and appointment of our new head football coach — Forrest Gregg." SMU Athletic Director Doug Single said at a news conference.
Gregg, who was the SMU football captain in 1955, now has the job of restoring a program tainted in a play-for-pay scandal that blotted out the school's 1987 and 1988 seasons.
"I am really pleased to be home," said Gregg, who has never coached college football but took the Cincinnati Bengals to the Super Bowl in 1982. "I've been doing a lot of things — the National Football League for a long time — and I always thought that somewhere along the line . . . I'd like to be here."
Gregg was expected to get a four-year contract with a one-year option at SMU's choice and was expected to take a two-thirds pay cut from the $300,000 he was going to earn with the Packers this year.
SMU originally offered the job to Colorado Coach Bill McCartney, who at first accepted and then declined. Former Ohio State Coach Earle Bruce and high school coach Tim Edwards of L.D. Bell were other top candidates.
The Mustangs have not had a coach since Bobby Collins and Athletic Director Bob Hitch left the school after improper payments to SMU football players were made public during the 1966 season.
The NCAA banned football at SMU for the 1987 season. It was the first application of the NCAA's death penalty for a football program. The team won't start playing until the 1989 season.
Gregg, 54, was a pro football Hall of Fame tackle with the Packers during their championship seasons in the 1960s. The late Vince Lombardi called him "my best player."
Gregg coached the 1981 Bengals into the Super Bowl, where they lost to San Francisco. He also coached at Cleveland in the NFL.
Gregg, 5-9-1 last year and 25-3-1 overall at Green Bay, had one year left on a five-year contract that provided for between $250,000 and $300,000 a year.
"Forrest would probably have to be here five years to equal one year of the package he had in Green Bay," Single said. "But he didn't leave to avoid the ack there. He could have
'I've been doing a lot of things . . . and I always thought that somewhere along the line . . . I'd like to be here.'
Forrest Gregg
Southern Methodist football coach had a front-office job. He just wants to rebuild this program.
"Forrest will be great in helping rebuild the foundation of our program. He's a man of great integrity."
Gregg's decision, climaxing a 10-day courtship by Single and SMU President A. Kenneth Pye, was made complete by Gregg's telephone call of resignation Wednesday night to Packers President Robert Parins.
"I had a long visit with the coach last night," Parins said yesterday in Green Bay. "He has agreed to take the job. I have agreed to release him."
Parins said he did not try to induce Gregg to stay with a contract extension or a raise.
"I told him if that he what he wants to do, it is his decision, that I was sorry to see him go because of the position of the team at the present time," Parins said. "But I told him it might not come again."
Gregg, a native of Birthright, Texas, was an All-Southwest Conference tackle at SMU, which both of his children also attended.
Gregg will be able to hire five full-time assistant coaches until Aug. 1, 1989. SMU can resume practicing this spring and can sign 15 scholarship athletes on Feb. 10.
The Mustangs will play their normal SWC schedule when football returns in 1989. SMU had scheduled intersectional games against Oklahoma, Notre Dame and Boston College, but there is some question whether those non-conference games will be plaved.
"We're obligated to play Notre Dame, but Oklahoma and Boston College want out of their commitment," Single said. "We will probably let them out and not play somebody as physical. It will take us some time to get back on our feet."
The school decided not to field a team for the 1988 season, although the NCAA said it could play seven Southwest Conference games on the
SMU received $250,000 bowl and television receipts from the SWC for the 1987 season but will receive no money this year.
10
Wilfredo Lee/KANSAN
Lisa Baker struggles for the basketball against Missouri's Tonya Jorgenson, KU women's basketball coach Marian Washington said it
would take that sort of tenacious play if the Jayhawks hoped to win tomorrow in Ames, Iowa, against the Cyclones.
Second-half burst ignites Tar Heels
The Associated Press
COLLEGE PARK, Md. — Sophomore center J.R. Reid scored 16 of his 24 points in the second half as second-ranked North Carolina beat Maryland 71-65 last night in its Atlantic Coast Conference opener, extending its winning streak to eight games.
After the Terrapins pulled within 34-29 just after halftime, Reid scored two inside baskets and converted a three-point play that put the Tar Heels in front 41-29 with 18:05 remaining.
With the Tar Heels leading 50-41, Reid converted another three-point play for a 12-point North Carolina edge with 13:34 to play.
Maryland then got a 3-point basket from junior-college transfer guard Rudy Archer and a basket by Derrick Lewis to pull back within seven, 53-46.
North Carolina then outscored Maryland 8-0 in a little over a 2-minute span, getting baskets from three points. They free throws from Steve Bunkall and free throws from Steve Bunkall and
maryand could get no closer than the final margin in losing at home in Cole Field House for the first time this season. The Terrapins fell to 2-1 in the ACC and 9 overall.
a layup by Pete Chilcutt for a 61-46 lead with 4:40 to play.
Lebo scored 17 points for North Carolina, which defeated Maryland for the 13th time in 15 games and improved its record to 12-1.
Steve Hood and Lewis each scored 13 points to lead Maryland. Tony Massenburg, who was averaging 15.8 points a game, was in foul trouble most of the game and scored only two points.
North Carolina outscored Maryland 9-0 over a 5:38 span in the first half to open a 16-14 lead.
After senior guard Keith Gatin hit two of the four free throws that the Terrapins managed in 13 attempts in the game, Reid scored on a baseline fadeaway and a jump hook to give the Tar Heels a 20-6 advantage with 9:05 to play in the first half. North Carolina led 34-26 at the half.
China going to Summer Olympics
The Associated Press
BEJIING — China announced yesterday that it will send a team to the Summer Olympics in Seoul, South Korea.
The Chinese decision to wait until only two days before the Jan. 17 deadline for accepting an invitation to the Games, following decisions by the Soviet Union and other socialist nations earlier this week to participate, was seen as a gesture to North Korea, a close ally.
China fought alongside North Korea in the 1950-62 Korean War and has been a stanunch supporter of the Pyongyang government in its policies toward U.S.-backed South Korea.
China also stood behind North Korea in its demands to be named the Olympic co-host, at the risk of leading a boycott.
But China, while maintaining no diplomatic ties with South Korea, has steadily expanded its unofficial relations, particularly in the areas of indirect trade and sports exchanges.
China sent 385 athletes to the 1986 Asian Games in Seoul and came home with 94 of the 270 gold medals. There was little doubt, despite official support of North Korea, that the Chinese would take part in the Seoul Games.
Beijing is scheduled to stage the next Asian Games in 1990 and has indicated its interest in hosting the
Olympics in the year 2000. Passing up Seoul would have effectively eliminated Beijing from the running for the 2000 Games.
Chinese athletes captured 15 gold medals at the Los Angeles Summer Games in 1964, a total of 23 wins. Romania and West Germany.
A gold in men's free pistol shooting won by Xu Haifeng on the first day of the 1984 competition was China's first ever in the Olympics. After sending a small team in 1952, China boycotted the Olympics from 1956-76 because of the participation of its rival, Taiwan. It boycotted the 1980 Moscow Games because of the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.
KU swimmers to meet Arkansas
By Tom Stinson
Kansan sports writer
Kansas' men's and women's swimming teams finally get to take on a tough Arkansas squad in familiar territory at 1 p.m. tomorrow in Robinson Natatorium.
ney in the 50-yard freestyle
This meeting will be the third for the women's teams this season, and each squad has one victory. The Arkansas women beat the Jayhawks 120-97 on Nov. 21 in Fayetteville, Ark., but Kansas evened the score Dec. 5 in the Alabama Championship Dual Invitational, 86-54.
"They beat us by one point in their pool," junior Glenn Tramml said. "So we're looking forward to getting them in our pool."
The Razorback men barely defeated the Jayhawks 57-56 in the November meet. Kansas coach Gary Kempf said the meeting between the men included a disputed judges' decision involving junior Allan Che
Kempf said the Arkansas men were strong in every event and the women's team was the best Arkansas team he had ever seen.
"Their men have a couple of great swimmers in spinner Mike Neuhofel and backstroker Dave McCraley, and their women have two or three good swimmers in every event," he said. "Their women's coach, Martin Smith, has done an excellent job."
The Razorback women are led by spinner Nancy Duncan and by
Kempf said juniors Barbara Ann Smith and Jennifer Fisher were swimming well for the Jayhawks. For the men, Trammel, sophomore Pat McCool and junior Bobby Kelley have been performing well and providing the team with excellent leadership. Kempf said.
"Bobby Kelley just recovered from mononucleosis and is doing great." Kempf said. "And Jenny Fisher has made a world of difference between this year and last year."
---
Trammel, nationally ranked in the 100-yard backstroke, and McCrarey have already met twice this season. McCrarey won the first meeting in November before Trammel beat him in the U.S. Open Invitational in December.
"With their men beating us by one point and the women trading victories, this meet will be like a playoff," said Kempf.
10
Friday, January 15, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
District attorney to seek re-election
By David Sodamann
Cansan staff writer
Douglas County District Attorney Jim Flory announced yesterday that he would seek re-election.
He announced his decision during a morning press conference at his office in the Judicial and Law Enforcement Center, 11th and Massachusetts streets. Flory was first elected district attorney in 1984.
Flory said that when he first took office, his goals were to establish an open and responsive office, to enhance services to victims and witnesses of crimes, to attract and retain an experienced legal staff and to improve relationships with other law enforcement agencies. Over the past three years, he said, progress has been made toward accomplishing these goals.
"The past three years have been a source of pride and accomplishment for me, and I look forward to this campaign, and the prospect of serving the people of Douglas County for another four years, with eager anticipation and enthusiasm," he said.
Flory said the increased number of criminal cases filed by his office was an indication that he was achieving those goals. In 1984, before he took office, a few more than 700 criminal cases were filed. During 1987, 1,100 cases were filed, he said.
Flory said he had maintained an
aggressive attitude toward drug law enforcement and said he planned to continue that policy.
As chief law officer in Douglas County, Flory works with KU police and University officials when crime occurs on campus. His relationship with KU police is good, he said.
Flory said that if he were reelected, he would do more to protect consumers. He said he had plans for programs to reduce shoplifting and bad-check writing. The growing criminal case load has made it difficult for new consumer protection programs during this term, Flory said.
Flory, 39, is married and has two daughters.
He earned a law degree from KU in 1979. He earned a bachelor's degree in general studies, psychology and political science from KU in 1975.
The district attorney's office, which has a staff of 19, will operate with a budget of $511,000 this year, he said.
He served in the U.S. Air Force in Vietnam. He has served as an assistant and chief of the criminal division at the Kansas attorney general's office. He also worked as an assistant attorney for the state Alcohol Beverage Control Board, was legal counsel for the Department of Corrections and was a deputy sheriff in Douglas County.
Kansan Classified (913) 864-4358
FURNITURE RENTAL Quality Furnishings at Affordable prices
101
Month to Month Rentals • Rent to Own
Sofas • Sleepers • Dinettes • Desks
Beds • Chairs • Tables • Bunk Beds • Televisions
Book Shelves • Lamps • Dressers • Recliners
Entertainment Centers • VCRs • Stereos
Thompson-Crawley FURNITURE RENTAL 520 E. 22nd Terrace 841-5212
gallery
Start Jan. 18th Now Enrolling Call
Commonwealth
Bailor Malmee* & Senior Citizens $2.50
Classes In
BALLET • TAP • JAZZ
• AFROBICS
Granada
1020 Market Street
Harrisburg, PA 17604
GOOD MORNING VIETNAM (R) 7:15, 9:35
Varsity
1020 Market Street
Harrisburg, PA 17604
DANCE GALLERY
WALSTREET (R) (4.50, 7.15)
OVERBOARD (PG) (4.50, 7.15; 9.40)
COUCH TRIP (R) (5.00, 7.25; 9.50)
BROADCAST NEWS (R) (4.35, 7.15; 9.45)
THROW MAMMA (PG-13) (4.50, 7.15; 9.35)
TRUMP TRIAN
REPORT OF THE LIVING GLAD 1973/1976
Interest
RETURN OF THE LIVING DEAD II (R) 7.30, 9.20
FOR KEEPS (PG 13) 7-10, 9-15
(PG 13) 7:10,9:15
JEAN de FLORETTE
"ENTHRALLING" ACTING ON THE GRAND SCALE*—Richard Schieck, TIME MAGAZINE
THREE MEN & A BABY (PG) 7:25, 9:35
VIB MONTAND GERARD DEARBEAU DANIEL ATTELIU
RAN de FLORETTI he wrote the novel by MARCEL PACER
A FILM BY CLAUDE BRIEZ
PACIFIC TERRAIN NORTHWEST WESTERN EASTWEST
CONFIDENCE BANK
505 681 7200
A foreign language film with subtitles.
STARTS SUNDAY 7 & 9:30
Performances through the week.
BORNERS
LIBERTY HALL
Can't Believe It's YOGURT! Frozen Yogurt Stores
642 Mass. 749-1912
At
ATTENTION KU BASKETBALL FANS!
You "Win" when the IAYHAWKS "WIN"'!
Each time the Men's Kansas Basketball team is victorious at home, We'll help with the treats! Here's how it works: On Home Game Days, you'll receive the percent off your total purchase that matches the point spread. For instance, if the Jayhawks win by 15 points, you'll receive a 4
KU
So Cheer The Jayhawks On To Victory... Against Hampton! and then come in to celebrate
by 15 points, youll receive a 15% discount, etc
come in to celebrate with us!
I Can't Believe It's YOGURT! Frozen Yogurt Stores
Louisiana Purchase
843-5500
23rd and Louisiana
11 a.m.-11 p.m. Daily; noon-11 p.m. Sun.
Fantastic Buys on Darkroom Supplies
Item Other Camera Store Discount Store CameraAmerica
D-76 Developer 3.53/gal. 3.49 2.87
Dektol Developer 3.70/gal. 3.69 3.04
Fixer 3.28/gal. 3.69 2.67
Stop Bath 3.61 3.29 2.94
Photo Flo 2.69 2.29 2.21
8x10 Polycon F 100 41.77 39.99 35.22
25 12.00 11.99 10.13
8x10 Polyfiber F 100 53.04 44.99 44.76
25 15.27 12.99 12.87
TMax 100' Rolls 27.96 24.99 23.13
Developing Tanks 13.95 7.99 6.52
Steel Reels 6.95 2.99 2.99
Trays 11x14 (3) 12.95 ---- 9.95
NEC
CameraAmerica
“EVERYTHING TO MAKE YOUR PHOTOGRAPHY PICTURE PERFECT”
Camera America
One Hour Photo
1610 W. 23rd
841-7205
Canon Yashica NEC
Fuji Kodak Nikon
Minolta Sony Tamron Lenses & Accessories
• Quality One Hour Photo Finishing • Enlargements • VCR's • Complete Video Accessories • Prints from Slides
Camera
merica
STORY or PHOTO.IDEA? Call 864-4810
THE BUM STEER
THE BUM STEER All You Can Eat Chili for $1.00
Before the game 1/16/88 Between 5-7 p.m.
[2554 Iowa --- 841 Smok"e"]
HAPPY NEW YEAR
CLASS SCHEDULE 1988
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
LSAT
**Exam:** JANUARY 20
| | | | | | | | | |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| | 1/2 | 1/20 | 1/3 | 1/6 | 1/12 | 1/24 | 1/36 | 1/72 |
| | | | | | | | | 1/15,184 |
| | | | | | | | | 1/748 |
Exam: JUNE 12
LASER
LASER # 4/98 4/16 4/23 4/30 7/17 5/21 5/28 6/24 6/29
OVER $1,500
LASER
LASER # 5/15 5/16 M 5/19 5/26 5/31 K 6/22 6/26 N 6/27
WITH $1,500
*
BANK OF OCTOBER
| | 6/22 | 6/23 | 7/24 | 6/25 | 6/26 | 7/27 | 8/28 | 9/29 | 10/30 | 11/31 |
| :--- | :---: | :---: | :---: | :---: | :---: | :---: | :---: | :---: | :---: | :---: | :---: |
| | 822 | 823 | 824 | 825 | 826 | 827 | 828 | 829 | 830 | 831 | 832 |
MCAT
Exam:
11.099M
WITH 7.120M
7/25 M
8/28 W
8/74
8/4
M
GMAT Exam: January 25
G14988
12/24 12/21 12/26 12/15 12/24 12/23 1/9 1/12
OCTOBER
4.500m
Exam: MARCH 19
GASB
1/19 1/24 2/2 2/9 2/16 2/21 1/1 1/8 1/3
GASB
1/19 1/24 2/2 2/9 2/16 2/21 1/1 1/8 1/3
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
GRE
Exam. APRIL 15, 70
MAR288 MAR308 MAR408 CA MAR508
1/170 2/16 2/19 2/20 2/21 3/15 3/19 4/22
2/27 3/17 3/19 3/19 4/22 4/29 4/16 4/17
1.000 mm 1.000 mm 1.000 mm
ENROLL NOW!
Stanley H KAPLAN
EDUCATIONAL CENTER LTD.
TEST PREPARATION SPECIALISTS SPACE 903
Call:
842-5442
V
--don't forget paper hour between 3 and 4pm drinks with our $1 at Drive-In's drive-thru.
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE
MANY AREAS OF THE KANSAS UNION WILL BE OPEN ON MONDAY, JANUARY 18,1988 MARTIN LUTHER KING DAY
THE SCHEDULE WILL BE AS FOLLOWS:
BUILDING
BUILDING INFORMATION COUNTER Candy Counter Banking
INFORMATION COLLE
Candy Counter
Banking
FOOD SERVICES
Hawk's Nest
Big Eight Deli
Prairie Room
Hawklet
BOOKSTORE
KU Bookstore
Mt. Oread Shop
JAYBOWL
BUSINESS OFFICE
Reservations
Banking
PERSONNEL
SUA OFFICE
Tickets
CONCESSIONS
Stadium Office
Wesco Cafeteria
Murphy Hall Snack
Visual Arts Snack Ba
Vending
7:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M.
8:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M.
8:00 A.M. - 4:30 P.M.
CLOSED
7:00 A.M. - 4:00 P.M.
7:00 A.M. - 4:00 P.M.
CLOSED
CLOSED
CLOSED
8:30 A.M. - 5:00 P.M.
8:30 A.M. - 5:00 P.M.
CLOSED
9:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M.
8:30 A.M. - 4:30 P.M.
CLOSED
8:30 A.M. - 4:30 P.M.
CLOSED
CLOSED
CLOSED
CLOSED
CLOSED
CLOSED
CLOSED
CLOSED
CLOSED
THE BURGE UNION will be closed. However, the University Information Center will be answering calls at 864-3506.
Classified Ads
ANNOUNCEMENTS
ACADEMIC SKILL ENHANCEMENT WORKSHOP Improve time management, reading, listening, notetaking, reviewing Tuesday January 18 6:30 p.m. - 7:00 p.m. COMPUTERS I. Strong Hill 844-404 COMMUTERS: Self Serve Car Pool Exchange Main Lakes, Kauai
Foreign Language Study Skills Program. Help for students of any language. Thursday January 21, 7:4 p.m. 300 Strong. Free! Student Assistance Center 121 Stronz 864-404-6
LISTENING AND NOTETAKING INTENSIVE WORKSHOP Tuesday January 26, 7: 9 p.m., 300 Strong. Learn to listen carefully, take useful notes. Student Assistance Center 121 8444-6444
NEED A RIDE / RIDER? Use the Self Server Cark Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
♫
AT YOUR REQUEST
D. J. Sound & Lighting for any occasion Professional and Affordable 841-1405
University Daily Kansan / Friday, January 15, 1988
11
QUALITY PRESCHOOL. Ages 24/2-5. Extended care 7 - 36. Easy access from 19th or 32rd. Large playground. Limited spaces! Sunshine acres 842 ABCD.
READING FOR COMPREHENSION AND SPEED WORKSHOP Mondays January 25, 10am to 12pm in the m. material fees: $15 Register, pay by courier or at the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 121
If you would like to help GARY HART qualify for the Kansas ballot, call 842-1133
*Paid for by Kansas for Hart*
(Don Stroll & Kirk Shingblow)
*comprehensive*
COTTON TIGHTS
THE BEACH HOUSE
GIFTS & ACCESSORIES
9 EAST BTH
749-0334
SALE
$10.00
MUSEUM GIFT SHOP
Museum of Anthropology Univ. of Kansas
※※
SALE
Jan. 13-17, 10-3
Wilderness
MUSEUM SHOI
Museum of Natural History
UNIQUE GIFTS
Toys, Posters, Jewelry, Books
Mon-Sat 10.5/Sun 1.5 - 864-4450
Hillel
Welcome Back
Bagels and Lox Brunch
Sunday, January 17 12:30 p.m.
Lawrence Jewish Community Center 917 Highland Drive
$1 for Hillel members
$3 for non-members
For rides/more information call Hillel at 749-4242
ENTERTAINMENT
MASS ST. MUSIC
D. J. for hire (indoor parties only). Excellent stairs and lightning systems. Very cheap rate.
GET INTO THE GROOVE Metropolis Mobile Sound. Superior sound and lighting. Professional club and radio DJ. Hot's. Maximum Party Thrust. 841-7038
All the best known names in musical instruments and accessories; Alesis, JBL, Roland, Korg, Tascam, Kramer, Fender, Gibson, Martin, and many more!
Come by and see us!
1347 Mass. 843-3535
The Whole World
Knows the Music
Nobody Knows the Mart
SUA Movies presents:
Chuck Berry
Hail! Hail! Rock 'n' Roll
Fri. & Sat. 3:30, 7, 9:30
Sun. 2:00
in Woodruff Aud. in
T. G.I.F.
the Kansas Union
50¢
A GAME
ALL WEEKEND
THE KANSAS UNION
JAY BOWL
864-3545 LEVEL ONE
Tonight, Jan. 13 PARLOR FROGS
LONESOME HOUNDOGS
Thursday, Jan. 14
50 cent DRAWS
NO COVER
Friday, Jan. 15 TRIP SHAKESPEARE from Minneapolis
Saturday, Jan 16 BCR
ALTERED MEDIA
THE
BOTTLENEK
FOR RENT
2 roommates needed for 3 bedroom Duplex, part furnished, $130 plus I/7 upd. $100, #84-3830
3 bedroom luxury townhouse, 2 full baths, whirpool, fireplace, hot tub, tumbler, vanity, storage, extra store. $650 per month, one year lease required. For information or appointment, call #84-1957
Found: Great apartment 4 bdrm, fireplace,
kitchen, laundry room, bathrooms
bathroom (115+115) + 1/4 unit | B4-8392-386
phone: (800) 783-2455
Apartment 2, two bdrm, spacious, very clean, on
high floor. Low utility. W 70 25 W
481-279 Call Anvita
Clean rooms furnished, 5 minute walk from campus, sing in room suite, share utilities, kitchens, laundry facilities.
Completely Furnished Studios. 1-2-3 & 4 bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call 841-1121, 841-5255, or 749-2415. Mastercraft
Deluxe B 1/2 1/2 house. Fp. Ca, garage, baseement. Couple or Sm fam preferred. No pets, refs on bus rent. Possibly partly furnished. In need of new months. Must see to appreciate. 843-776-98
FREE RENTAL ASSISTANCE - For studio 1 and 3 bedroom apartments and duplexes. All in good campus locations or on bus route. Immediate occupants - Kaw Valley Management, 811-908-8400.
Furnished room for rent, most utilities paid, with off street parking, two blocks from university, quiet, studious atmosphere, and no pets please. 841-500
HARVARD SQUARE Now available large
network access for your business.
Excellent location and on bus route
CALL 1-800-555-9999
MASTERCRAFT offers beautifully furnished apartments, various sizes, all great locations! Designed with the K.U. student in mind. Call 814-1212, 814-5255 or 749-4236.
Mature roommate need for two bedroom
room. Must be 25' tall, $150/mo water paid. Between Walden Library
and Ursula's house.
Needed: non-smoking妹子 to share spaces
at 748-3661, 50/50. Call 842 4697 or
leave message at 748-3661.
Nice 1 bed apartment. Must sublease
Call for more info. Havane Power
841-1212 or 841-1213
Not satisfied with where you’re living? Naimishm has medical care not only in NY, but across the country. Consider such features as individual lease liability, excellent "All-U-Can" insurance and you'll see why we’re recognized as one of the best housing options at KU! For more info, call, email or visit Naimshh at 1803 Washid Drive, 845-859.
OPEN HOUSE VILLA 26 apartments. 3201 West 26th street. Brand new apartments. Immediate occupancy-free rental assistance. Saturday 10-3, Sunday 9-4, Monday 1-2, call Kaw Valley Management 841-6080.
ROOMMATE WANTED! Walking distance to campus, away from the library, to stereo, tv, cell phones or utilities. 841-235-7900.
Responsible, non-smoking vegetarian woman to
share house. $166.67 plus 1/2 utility. 796-283-5400
JHANNON PLAZA CLUB APARTMENTS on KU. bus route. Washer/dryer included, water. trash paid. Dishwasher, microwave, ceiling fan. basketball courts. 6 or 12 month lease. 841-7278.
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
EDDINGHAM
24th & Eddingham inext to Gammons
recently carpeted room, joint kitchen and living accommodations; handy to campus; off street parking. Reasonable rent. Call evenings (913) 341-9542.
try cooperative living. SUNFLOWER HOUSE.
746 0871, ask for Ann, Deb, Col.
(360) 297-5500
contract
Swimming pool
Room apartment avail now. $225 includes all utilities. Deposit plus lease (6 month) required.
Exercise Weightroom
841-5444
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
- On-Site Management
2 BR APARTMENTS
AT AN AFFORDABLE PR
Fire place
- Fire place
Satellite T.V.
Sublease apartment at Naimish Place Apartments. Security deposit paid. Call 841 6097.
Sublease, Duplex two, fee $350 per month for KU student, $80/m, 1/2 block E of Naimish Hall. 841-3972.
- Laundry room
- Energy efficient
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Management, Inc
Free Showtime Satellite TV
EDDINGHAM PLACE
ADVANTAGES
Sunflower House has private rooms, low rates and a great location. Call edwards.com
Nowhere at KU will you find a residence hall with the advantages of Naismith Hall. Applications for fall/spring semester are now being accepted while space remains.
*Undiscovered* Beaver Creek is great skiing.
*Unsurpassed* Lakefront is reasonable with all amenities. (303) 526-0044.
Wanted: Non-smoking roommate. Own room, private suite. Bui. route, very nice Quail Creek. 841-5531
NAISMITHHALL
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
911-834-8559
Villa26
Apartments -Townhomes
Apartments - Townhomes BRAND NEW 1. Apartments
1 Bedroom Apartments
- Energy Efficient
- Microwave
- On KU Bus Route
- Excellent Location
- Open Daily
- Washer Dryer Hook-ups
- Move In Today
2201 W. 26th/Apt. E-102
—phones—
842-5227 • 842-6454
841-6080
FOR SALE
Wanted preferably two female roommates. Campus convenience. Two rooms available. $190 or $150 per month. No utilities. Call George at 842-3217.
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, fine art glass, furniture, Indian, queen and costume jewelry (glitter and good stuff), the right vintage clothes for any occasion, antique toys, fine art glass, doll house furniture, jewelry, fine art glass, antique furniture of antique furniture in the area. Quanta Frills Market, 119 New Hampshire, Open Sat & Sun.
71 VW Super Beetle AT-AC, New England,
72 DODGE Camaro AT-AC, New England,
Excellent condition 1200 IBD 842-2000
1360 IBD 842-2000
For Sale: B big dorm rug, good shape. $60.
Eo: Mechanical Engineering books, KU banknote
card. $30.
For Sale
Western Clwr 3942-800s. Half
keep notes and tests. Call Tracy 648-3699.
keep notes
FOR SALE. Posters by Nagel Warbob and
for Sale. Mail to Nagel Warbob.
For Sale. Wait 50 satiy win tickets and one queen
to receive a free postcard.
For sale, limited edition prints by such artists as
Gregory K. Roberts, Levels and Fernandez.
Collector Robert 82-46-309.
Bike Sale 20% off all 108 bikes 10- speeds
Bike Sale 50% off Mountain bikes from 19.99
Up to $79.99
Lost puppy "Boris" tan lab with white chest and
paws. Three months old. Call 841-2014.
FUTTON FRAME, Full size sofa sleeper $200. Bunny Flame, good condition, $70. 841-4675.
Drafting tools, beds, lamps, chest of drawers,
Everything But Ice, 616 Vermont.
Beautiful stressed-leather bonder jacket, brand new, worn twice, size 40 reg. 125, 749-190l
Spacious mobile home. Top Quality. Large bedrooms and kitchen. 16 by 18 living room. Extra storage beds and exercise room. Privacy room. Not less than $329. Rent available! Call 749-3532
1898 Chevrolet Cavalier ZA2 $49.97, Camaro I-Z
$18.08, Monte Carlo as $23.58, 1898 Ford
Mustang as $26.99, 1898 Ford Turbo $14.79, 1898 Mercury Cougar XR1 $19.55,
1898 Pontiac Fiero Coupe $18.48, Firebird $9.22,
Fiat 500 FACTORV2 warranty
rebates financing, trade. You choose option
colors you want $83-44.99
Sandstone Amphitheater
AUTO SALES
labbysister needed for $ yr old boy every Tuesday
1:30 and 3:00, Thursiday 11:30 to 4:00, $20 week.
$10 for each day.
1972 ww bag. Reconditioned equipment less than 500
bags. Brand new radials on back. Very reliable.
Ships free.
Found: Set of keys on western side of Potter Lake. Call 804-4358
1988 summer positions available
Rock-n-tell-Thousands of used and rare albums
10 m to 5 b. p.m. every Saturday and Sunday
10 a.m. to 7 p.m. every Saturday
HELP WANTED
- MOTHRAIL GOOD USED FURNITURE
Monday to Friday 10:50 p.m. - 6 p.m.
Wednesday to Saturday 9:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Car won't start? Mobile repair service on foreign cars
*Aaron at A41-8469*
Red Hot Bargains! Drug dealers' cars, boats,
planes, planes. Our area. Buyers
971-680-2500. 971-680-2500.
87 Dodge Challenger (made in Japan). Good Condi-
nation, loaded. $1700 obo. 864-7881.
Administrative assistant Production assistant T-shirt security Step-by-step
Bucky's Drive-In is now taking applications for the "Bucky's Price Inspection" price meals. Apply in person between 10 and 5 at Bucky's Drive-In in 6th and 8th. Thank you!
Please be on campus. Please have students on your campus. Work F/T or P/C/L. Call
General office work - part-time. Lawrence is a graduate of the University seeking highly organized individual width an outgoing personality. Good verbal communication skills and aptitude in business and sales. 12hrs/w
LOST-FOUND
Stage hands
For information call:
(913) 287-1154
Found on Dec. 3: Blue. To almost new ten-speed
campus sport bike. To call, identify 845-1763.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $10,400-$49,200 yr. New
GOVERMENNT JOBS. $87,600-107,600 yr. I. 9758 for
current Federal List.
GOVERNMENT JOBS: $10,495-$10,950/jr. 320 yrs.
current federal List: 879,000-879,000 19.9758 for current Federal List.
Graduate Student Assistant. Requires a 45-wpm typing, word processing and dictation experience. 20hrs/week. Through spring semester, increase to 30 hr/session in May. $150-$450 per month for half-time position. For a complete job description contact the Office of Study Abroad, 28 Lippincott Hall
Help Wanted: Artist for shirt designs. Apply with art pad, Jayhawk Spirit, 935 Mass.
Immediate opening for laboratory assistants for pharmaceutical research, half-time or more. Requires college course work in physical sciences, including 16 brts of chemistry, and transcribes reports in English. Required: Merck, Medica, Robert, 200 W. 21, Lawrence, Ks. 66044, an equal opportunity M/F/H/W.
math instructors for GMAT, GRE, ACT review courses. Qualifications-excellent test scores, top 10% on GRE or GMAT. 3.5 undergraduate G.P.A. undergraduate degree, excellent communication skills, ability to motivate students. Instructor initial time for success class. Call 824-54244.
Needed student resource aid for spring 88, clerical and typing (300pm) skills. Data entry experience preferred but not mandatory. Must be a full-time student or early morning jobs. PSN build 844-7071
Office of Student Financial Aid is accepting applications for two positions beginning approximately February 1 through June 30, with a half-time period. Students who enroll in KU Endowment Loans by interviewing students for approval/denial; act as financial aid resource person to visitors; conduct special projects as needed; and assist in building a client communication skills. Ability to work under pressure, admission to graduate school.
PREFERRED QUALIFICATIONS. Knowledge of KU. Knowledge of financial aid programs. Letters of application received by January 21, 2008 will receive first priority with initial screening of applicants. The following responsibilities should submit a letter of application, resume, names (with addresses and telephone
resume, names with addresses and telephone
number(s) of the applicant. Use an official
fax transcript to Jeffrey B. Weinberg, Associate
Professor at NYU Langone School of Medicine.
Director, Office of Student Financial Aid, 26 Strong, University of Kansas, Kansas. Opportunities in an equiv opportunity employer. Women and minorities are especially encouraged to apply.
Part time house cleaners wanted. Day and evening hours await. If you enjoy cleaning and are meticulous, Buckingham Palace is interested in your assistance with transportation. Must be available over breaks.
Person to assist with my care or supper. Mornings and/or evenings, weeks. 749-4395.
Polar Post Jobs! $0.201 Start! Prepare Now!
*Exam Prep Exam*
Workshop 10/09/14, Ext 151
Preschool aid after school 4-5:30m Early school experience 842-223 or 793-223
Institute has openings for development and training specialists. Clients to be served and adult males with severe behavior disorder. Respon-
sibility training, program development and support, program monitoring. Work is conducted under the supervision of a qualified
must have completed a mental retardation or psychiatric aid training program in a treat-ment or two years experience in the treatment and care of mentally retarded clients. Relevant academic experience may be substituted for the training.
Fresher position offered to Kansas Neurological Institute, 310 W 21st,
Topeka, KS. (6044) - 9133 - 5341 EOI
Qualified individuals earn up to $440/mr. F. Soph.
Full time students physically练车.
Full time students physically练车.
Student work - study position. On-campus
publisher sees help 104 hrs/week to open and
work with students. Must be eligible for work
study assist in various duties. Must be eligible for work
study assist in work afternoons. $5,95-$75/hr
for one week.
The University of Kansas has a position opening for a continuous half-time student assistant. The position requires a Master's degree in budget and accounting transfers for the university's budgets. This position will gain a good experience in job security to work within the university's financial environment. The position requires senior or junior faculty, plus 8 hours of accounting, and good written and oral communication skills. Desirable applicant will be a graduate student with 6 months. $400-$480 per month for half-time employment. Closing date is January 28. Start date is February 10. Applicants must posting Budget Office, 864-3138. Applications available in J38 Strong Hall between 1:43pm - 3:30pm.
Tuition needed in all subjects. Requirements: 3.0
Skills tutors. Apply to Supportive Educational
Tutors. Apply to Supportive Educational
Kitten: You are very important to me and I need you. I Love You. Paco Bear.
Tamera from Walmart, give me a call to let me meet you. Call time for your 3:30 Spanish class. Steve 841-7200
Warm caring people - who like children ages 3-5 and older - participate in a day per week, of 2 burs per day, one per day week, from 7:30 to 3:30 and 3:30-M-F. Day care volunteers from 12:30 to 5:30. For more information call 842-6511.
Happy 23rd, birthday, Tom!
A. R. S. Pandey
BUS. PERSONAL
Love, K.A.K
**$50 Value when presented toward new patient service**
**Exam of the spinal Exam.** Dr. Johnson, Chiropractor.
Female roommate wanted to share 1 / 2 story townhouse with other females. New townhouse has modern conveniences, and is located near campus to close campus next to his route. Low rent and util. Call 842-6525.
CASH LOANS on almost all value of value VCR'S, TV's, jewelry, guitars, musical instruments, stereo equipment, tool, cameras. 184 Wth H., 749-1919
PERSONAL
Female roommate wanted to share 1/2 story townhouse with other females. Need a toilet, dishwasher, AC 1/2 bath plus. Located close to campus next to bus route. Hot and rent use. B43-8265
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at Confidential help/free pregnancy testing.
SPRING BREAK
SOUTH PARK ISLAND **128**
NORTH PARK/MUSTANG ISLAND **156**
DAYTONA BEACH **199**
MIDTOWN **187**
GASTONBURY ISLAND **124**
FORT WALTON BEACH **126**
ORLANDO/DISNEY WORLD **132**
MIAMI BEACH **133**
HILTON HEAD ISLAND **131**
**DON'T DELAY**
TOLL FREE SPRINT, BREAK INFORMATION AND DESIGNATIONS
1-800-321-5911
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Mastodon Mothers
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© 1984 Universal Press Syndicate
Early wheel gangs
12
Friday, January 15, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
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Second Section
Grades improve at LHS extension
By Kim Lightle
Kansan staff writer
Skipping classes at Lawrence High School used to be the biggest challenge in Eric Gauna's life.
But since last September, all that has changed. Now the biggest challenge in his life is pleasing teachers like Trish Davies and Mary Phillips.
Changing from the high school to the Lawrence High School Extension Program was enough to keep Gauna, a junior, in school and change the D's and F's on his report card to A's and B's.
It is not the typical high school. There is no football team or glee club. Students must go about a mile to the high school for those activities.
Then again, most of the students are not average either. Most of them have more pressing things to think about than who is going to win the next football game.
Some of them have been through the courts for various offenses, some couldn't keep up with the course of their trial. The other, like Gauna, had truancy problems.
The program's director, Michelle Meyers, said there were as many reasons for attending the extension program as there were students.
Alexandra Mason, director of Spencer Research Library
A sense of friendship
The Lawrence Extension Program center is set far back in Holcom Sports Complex. A one-lane road leads to the parking lot in front of the school.
The program's secretary, Linda Snider, and the place was the best-secret place.
Inside, rust-colored partitions section off classrooms filled with the usual array of tables, chairs, desks and computers.
In the small office, eight teachers joke and commiserate about their day during planning periods.
Occasionally a student will wander through to asse for something or just to rest.
There are no misses, ma'ams,
misters or sirs here; it's first names
only. There is a sense of friendship
among both teachers and students.
"It's a more honest relationship," said Sue Mallory, who has been an art teacher at the program for eight years. "The students love to watch my mouth. I can vent."
The honesty exists between students and teachers because they know where they stand. While teachers care about the students, they are not there to play mother hen, said Davies, who teaches math.
Skipping is no longer a challenge for Gauna because he knows no one will stop him from leaving. The program's policy is to let students over 16 years old leave if they want.
Ultimately, the responsibility for failure or success lies on the student's shoulders. Students must want to come to school and do the work, says Gauna.
THE LIBRARY
Gauna and a classmate, Julie Purcell, a junior, said that much of their motivation for being at school and doing the work came from the attention they get from their teachers.
A contract to learn
Each student's teachers make an individual contract or curriculum to fit the student's abilities. Each contract is for 70 days of work. A contract might cover several chapters in a math textbook or lessons to be completed on a computer. Fulfillment of the 70-day contract earns the teacher credit toward the units required for graduation. But being in class is not enough If students fail to do their work in class, they lose credit for the day.
A limit of 20 students per class and as well as individual programs allow teachers to give more help to struggling students by pressure off the student. Purcell said.
Being able to take time to work on problems and individual student-teacher relationships is the school's main advantage. Davies said.
Many students find the fast pace and anonymity that comes from being one of thousands of students at the high school frustrating.
At the 72-student extension, Gauna said, "The teachers don't just go home at 3 o'clock. They are here when you need them. That's what makes people want to come to school.
Personal attention
Although the students give the
Purcell said that the teachers do not make her feel as if she is taking something from them when she asks for help. The program focuses on individual attention instead of homework, making schoolwork easier to complete and allowing students to concentrate on part-time jobs. But the difficulty of the work equals that done at the high school.
See SCHOOL, p. 6B, col. 1
She loves books,convertibles
KU librarian honored for long service
Jeff Klein/KANSAN
By Katy Monk
Special to the Kansan
Ask her what she does as head of the Spencer Research Library, and she says, "Mostly I sit like a spider in my web."
Alexandra Mason looks the part.
Sensible haircut. Sensible shoes.
Tweed jacket over a high-necked blouse. Office lined with books, and paperwork piling up on the desk. Librarian
Ask her about her cat, Meggie, or her hobbies ("sometimes I make model airplanes") or her passion for convertibles (she recently had her 1976 MGB repainted bright red), she then went on to ask her about books, and it's hard to get her to stop talking.
Her eyes light up, her speech becomes punctuated with emphatic hand gestures, and her tone rises from low, philosophical whispers all the way up the scale and she gets involved. Because her whole body gets involved.
She whips off her glasses and thrusts her face to within an inch of a text to study how the writer decorated the manuscript.
"You get to know these people," she says, poring over a 12th-century Latin manuscript. "You know their handwriting."
Reading, she says, is about more than just the black marks on the page. It's about absorbing the universe of the writer: the paper or skin he wrote on, the ink he used, even his handwriting. For example, the library owns two manuscripts made distinctive by the shaky written of the person who annotated them.
"They call him 'the Tremulous Worcester Hand.' Mason says. "We don't know whether he was very old or had a nervous disorder of some kind or was freezing to death the whole time he was writting. It took to be a British Library and was looking at manuscripts, and by God, there he was, wobbling his way between the lines!"
Mason has been studying manuscripts and putting together collections of works at the University of Kansas for 30 years.
She scans catalogs every day in hopes of finding rare or antique books that would make good additions to the library. Occasionally she goes on buying trips to reestablish ties with book sellers so they will keep her in mind when a selection falls into their hands.
Some of the works in Spencer are 1,000 years old, written by hand in languages long dead. Many of the library's best collections, such as the 18th-century newspapers and the early Anglo-Saxon texts, were built by current staff members. Mason is quick to
give all the credit to her staff.
Reluctantly, she admits that she has had something to do with it. "It was recently drawn to my attention that the collection had more than doubled in the time we'd been here," she says. "And I decided that, by Jove, I must have been doing something." She laughs, as if appreciating a good joke on herself.
Bill Mitchell, associate special collections librarian, says books make Mason happy. "She must realize she's building something here — not for today or next week but for the real long run," says
Mitchell, who has worked with Mason since they both came to the library in 1957. "This place is . . . I think it is all of her life."
“It’s my impression that she is perhaps more recognized or what she does outside of Lawrence than in lawrence.” Mitchell says.
Mason quickly brushes aside efforts to discuss the honors bestowed on her, such as her induction into the KU Women's Hall of Fame or her election to the Grolier Club of New York, a small and select
See LIBRARIAN, p. 2B, col. 1
Insurance costs force some to gamble on health
By Ben Johnston
Special to the Kansan
Michael Foubert had a scare last March.
It cost him about $100.
Foubert, Lawrence graduate student, had a fever, so he went to Watkins Hospital. He was worried that he would have a long hospital stay. But he stayed only one night. It cost him about $100
Most KU students would have at least part of any medical bill paid for by their parents or their own insurance policy.
But Foubert is one of 35 million to 40 million Americans who do not have medical insurance. Each year many of these people become ill or
are injured and go deeply in debt after long hospital stays.
After spending only one day and $100 at Watkins Hospital, Foubert said he knew he was fortunate he had not been seriously ill or injured.
"The $100 is less than I would have paid if I had to pay the premiums for the insurance," Foubert said. "But if I had been really sick, and I had to pay larger bills, it would have really hurt me financially."
before he graduated and got a job.
Foubert said he had to choose between medical insurance and paying for rent and utilities because he couldn't afford both. So he reluctantly gambled that neither he nor his wife would become sick or be injured
"I know it's a gamble," Foubert said. "It's like shooting the dice. A lot of people would say I was foolish for not having medical insurance.
"If I did get seriously ill and had a large medical bill, I would treat it like any other bill. I would pay it off gradually. It doesn't make sense to save money just in case something happens. I see no sense in that when I need the money now."
Health officials at KU said they do not know exactly how many KU students lack health insurance.
Few have insurance
Jim Strobl, director of Watkins.
said hospital staff members took a survey about two years ago of students waiting for treatment. About 14 percent of the students said they did not have insurance, he said.
Another survey, which was mailed to every student living in a residence hall and to students in some classes, indicated that about 15 percent of KU students said they knew they did not have medical insurance.
Strobl said the hospital staff was waiting to do a new survey until a new computer system is installed later this year. The new system will determine how many patients lack insurance he said.
Strobl said he did not know whether
there were many students, treated at Watkins, who could not pay their medical bills. He said students rarely had high bills and most paid immediately.
Each semester, $56 is taken from each student's tuition to pay for checkups and all lab work done at Watkins Hospital, Strobl said. Students pay only for medication, overnight stays and sitches. Consequently, many students pay nothing for treatment, he said.
Strobl said patients with serious illnesses or injuries were treated at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, where their costs were usually higher.
office at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, said he did not know how many noninsured students his hospital treated. But some students do have large bills that must be paid for over a set period of time. he said.
"If we do have someone who cannot pay their bill, we work with them," Finn said. "We will make payment arrangements over a period of time. We can't let someone pay for 10 years, but some students look at a low payment arrangement over six months to a year." Finn said.
Discount health policies
Jim Finn, director of the business
students can have health coverage See HEALTH. p.2B. col.1
New KU statue's identity prompts many questions
By Paula Messbarger
Special to the Kansar
"The surfing judge hanging ten for the law."
That is what Kelly Hamilton, Topeka sophomore, thinks the Tai Chi figure in front of Green Hall should be called.
The eight-foot bronze sculpture was created by Ju Ming, a Taiwan-born sculptor, and was given to the University of Kansas earlier this fall by former Chancellor W. Wescos and his wife, Barbara.
"I was there when it first went up and that's the first thing I thought of." she said.
There are several KU students who are finding it difficult trying to identify the shape of the figure.
A
"I walk by here every day and I'm still trying to figure it out," said Brian Peterson. Hours ago
by Brian Peterson, Hays junior.
Ken Kraushaar, Baldwin graduate
assistant in the KU轨迹
office, said, "It looks like a person
pointing. I just realized that about
five minutes ago and I've been
passing it two or three times a day
since it's beeen up."
Ted Barnickel, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore said, "It looks like a piece of rock to me."
"It looks like a guy stretching like he is ready to field a baseball," said John Pavelcik, Overland Park senior.
Because it sits in front of the law school, many students think the sculpture has something to do with the justice system.
Ryan McCammon, Overland Park sophomore, said, "I think it's some guy kneeling, getting ready to throw a disc."
Patrick Schlotterback, Mankato junior, said, "I thought it looked like the way the lawyers dressed in the old days, squatting down and pointing to the jury."
The Tai Chi sculpture outside Green Hall
"I thought it looked like a lawyer pointing to the opposing party," said Bev Platt, Lawrence senior.
Many students thought the sculpture was an athletic figure of some sort.
Steve Gilchrist, Hays senior said. "I think it looks like an umbrella."
Some students' responses did not fall into any specific category.
Wescoe said this week that they chose the sculpture because they liked it
"It doesn't pertain to the law. We just thought it was a nice modern art sculpture," he said.
Scott Gesner, first-year law student, said, "It has a nice sound to it when you bang on it, like a temple gong."
Ellen Unruh, Lawrence senior said, "It looks like the Grim Reaper on a skateboard."
For the artist, Ju Ming, the figure is his interpretation of the Tai Chi martial art figure. Doug Tilghman, acting director of the Spencer Museum of Art, said that
Tai Chi is a form of oriental meditation exercise.
Tilghman said that the Wescos chose to put the sculpture in front of KU's law school in memory of Mr. M. Benton, Mrs. Wescos' father
Med Center launches search for its new dean
Kansan staff writer
By Brenda Finnell
The University of Kansas School of dean is beginning a search for a new dean. Eugene Jacobson, who became the school's dean in 1985, resigned in December to become dean of the University of Colorado School of Medicine.
"It has been a pleasure to work with the Medical Center faculty and with the many fine students at this institution," he said. "I will remember my days at the Medical Center with great pleasure."
Tomorrow is Jacobson's last day at the Med Center. In a statement announcing his resignation, Jacobson said he had enjoyed his job.
Jane Henney, head of the Med Center's Cancer Center and associate vice chancellor for administration at the Med Center, will serve as interim dean. She came to the Med Center in 1985 and is a former deputy director of the National Cancer Institute.
D. Kay Clawson, executive vice chancellor of the Med Center, said he hoped to name a search committee to find a replacement for Jacobson later this month. He expects a new
Clawson said he felt no pressure to find a replacement quickly because of his confidence in the interim dean. "I don't anticipate we'll have any difficulty in continuing to function," he said.
dean to be named by fall.
He said Med Center officials were currently examining the dean's job description. Advertisements for the will appear soon in trade papers.
Clawson said the search committee would look for a candidate for the dean's position who fit the job description and would stay in Kansas long enough to address issues that affected the Med Center.
Jacobson's resignation was a surprise, Clawson said. However, he said he was aware that Jacobson was interested in working for a university with a larger research program than KU's.
The budgetary problems facing KU are affecting the departure rate of University employees, Clawson said. They would have a higher salary at Colorado.
---
Money problems are something the Med Center will have to deal with, Clawson said.
2B
Friday, January 15, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Health
Continued from p. 1B
by getting discount rate medical insurance offered though KU's Student Senate. For about the last 20 years Student Senate has had insurance companies offer students insurance at a discount rate, Strobl said.
G—M Underwriters, Inc., a Rochester, Mich., currently offers a discount insurance plan to KU students and students at 65 universities and the United States. About 2,800 KU students have health coverage under this plan.
Meredith Uttley, Lawrence graduate student and chairman of the KU student health advisory board, a group of students and Watkins administrators that sets health care policy at the University, said G-M Underwriters was selected by the Student Senate two years ago.
Each year, the board draws up a list of specific benefits and sends them to insurance companies, she said. Then the companies say how much each benefit will cost students, Utley said.
The board, working on behalf of the Senate, chooses the least expensive plan that meets the criteria, Uttley said.
Then the board makes its recommendation and Student Senate votes on it. This year's discount rate insurance costs about 35 percent less than similar plans, Uttley said.
The policy G—M Underwriters offers students covers students for up to $1 million in medical costs at any hospital in the world. The plan covers students for sickness and accidents only. The deductible, the amount a student must pay, is $100.
Out of reach
Strobli said students with large medical bills for complex and expensive medical care such as open-heart surgery have had almost all of the bill paid by the medical insurance offered through Student Senate.
The policy costs $459 a year for a single student, $1,308 for a student
and a spouse, $1,011 for a student with children and $1,512 for a student with a family.
Foubert said he could have purchased the insurance if it had cost a
"If it would come down a little bit to become a real game, I could still watch." "Foubber said."
Utley said she knew there were students who do not have medical insurance because either they can't afford it, they don't believe they need it or they don't know that discount rate insurance is available.
She said even though she and the members of the Student Senate knew there were students who wanted the discount medical insurance but couldn't afford it, the Senate did not plan to change the benefits of the insurance or lower the cost.
Students without insurance
Many of the students who do not have insurance are graduate students and non-traditional students, Uttley said.
"Graduate students, especially often don't have the money to pay for insurance," Utley said. "Other graduate students want insurance, but they feel the insurance the University offers does not serve their needs."
Janine Demo, a health educator at Watkins, said that while physical examinations were being given to students, she had talked to many foreign students who had told her they did not have health insurance. The American Health Officers organization, which educates students about health issues through activities such as distributing pamphlets in residence halls.
"I really think a lot of them don't have insurance because so many countries have socialized medicine," Demo said. "They don't understand our medical system."
"Foreign students don't understand what insurance is. They think the fee they pay at enrollment covers
it all. What they don't realize is that the tuition fee doesn't cover the disasters that may happen."
Students discontented
Glenn Shirtliffe, Gloucester, Canada, graduate student and Student Senate finance chairman, said he had talked with graduate students last spring who approached him when Student Senate was voting whether to renew the policy with G-M Under-writers. Some of the students, he said, told him they did not like the coverage the discount insurance offered.
"Some graduate students are a little discontented with the insurance," Shirliffe said. "Some of the students, especially those with families, are not too thrilled about the plan."
"Blue Cross and Blue Shield was not as easy to work with a G-M Underwriters," Uttley said. "We didn't get reports in as quickly from Blue Cross and Blue Shield and they didn't pay their claims as quickly. They didn't seem as interested in the student as G-M Underwriters, which even have a student representative at Watkins to answer any questions about the coverage."
But Ottley said she thought the G-M Underwriters plan was more attractive to students than the Blue Cross and Blue Shield plan offered several years ago.
Chris Newman, marketing director for G-M Underwriters in Rochester, Mich., said she thought G-M Underwriters offered students good benefits.
She said the cost of coverage had to be raised an average of $10 a month last year because the maximum they were raised from $250,000 to $1 million
"We seek to find the best plan that suits students' needs," she said. "If the University wants a comprehensive package, we have to charge for that."
Attracting students
The number of KU students who have policies with G-M Underwriters went from 2,100 students two years ago, when the company took over the Student Senate contract from Blue Cross and Blue Shield, to 2,800 students this year. The increase in student policies shows that students are satisfied with the plan, Newman said.
"We know enrollment has gone up at KU," Newman said. "But we think students are getting good service from our company and that is why the number of policies we sell to KU students has gone up."
Newman said that G-M Underwriters knew there were KU students who didn't have medical insurance because they either didn't know the discount rate insurance was available or they didn't think they could afford it.
To reach the students who don't know the discount rate insurance is available, the company is placing advertisements in the basketball programs for all KU home games. The company will also place advertisements in Lawrence newspapers this year, she said.
"We think that when students see we offer, they will want to get input," he said.
Strobli said the cost of the plan offered to students was about half what he paid for his medical insurance though the coverage was similar.
"I think it is a very excellent plan," Strobi said. "As a staff member at the University, I'd love to have that money." I say, "Save some money on my insurance."
Strobl said that even students who have low incomes should try to find a way to purchase medical insurance.
"I think everyone absolutely has to have insurance." Strobl said. "Anyone who says they can't afford it is not very informed. They can't afford not to have insurance."
Librarian
society of noteworthy people in the book world.
Continued from p. 1B
But she doesn't like to talk about it. It sounds too much like self-praise. She'd rather think of herself as a spider just sitting in her web.
Mason has worked on national committees, dealing mostly with rare books and manuscripts, almost continuously since the 1960s. Her appointments to posts in the book world stretch into a long list. If it's about books, it seems, Alexandra Mason has done it.
she doesn't mind talking about how she loves to relax by driving her shiny red MGB. "I've never had a car that wasn't a convertible." she says, "I suppose I'll have to sometime when I get old and rheumaticy and can't take the top up and down.
"Then I'll get a sunroof."
It makes perfect sense to Alexandra Mason. If it relaxes her to play in tidal pools, then by Jove, she'll play in tidal pools. And if she likes the sound of the words when she pronounces "tellyvision" and "aeroplane," then why not say them that way?
Mason has a habit of pepping her conversation with these odd turns of phrase. She uses phrases like "By Jove" even though she isn't British; in fact she was raised in Massachusetts, where she earned a degree in Greek from Mount Holyoke College.
Reading is her first love, and has been ever since she was a little girl reading soap boxes in the bathroom. "It's words. The history of words. How they're used and where they came from," she says.
If it relaxes Mason to play in tidal pools, then by Jove, she'll play in tidal pools. And if she likes the sound of the words when she pronounces "tellyvision" and "aeroplane," then why not say them that way?
"If I couldn't read. . . God! Yeah, I'd be done for. I could probably live without being able to walk, but reading. . ." She shakes her head. The thought is to terrible to dwell on.
"I was one of those really nasty kids who loved school," she says. "Except for recess and lunch hour. Which I hated! Because learning is the most stimulating thing there is."
Alexandra Mason has been a part of the Spencer Research Library for a long time.
She points to a round silver plate on the windowsill. It is a plaque commemorating her 30th year with the library. She takes a final drag of her Benson & Hedges and stubs it out in an ashtray. "It's kind of funny," she says, "I don't go for that sort of thing. But I got a charge out of it."
The inscription on the plate is short:
Alexandra Mason
Spencer Libarian
The First 30 Years
1957-1987
1984
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, January 15, 1988
3B
Court says murder suspect is mentally able to stand trial
Ex-wives' testimony ruled necessary and admissible in trial
By Ric Brack
Kansan staff writer
A Lawrence man accused of murdering his wife is mentally competent to stand trial, a Douglas County District Judge ruled Tuesday.
Carl L. Kemp is charged with first-degree murder in connection with the death of his wife, Judy, who was found dead in a wooden box in a storage shed near the Kemp family's trailer house last year. His trial is scheduled to begin Monday.
Judge Ralph M. King also ruled that certain testimony by Kemp's ex-wives and other family members was admissible as evidence.
Kemp's attorney had filed motions to suppress their testimony on the grounds that it was irrelevant and prejudicial to a jury.
District Attorney Jim Flory said that the testimony was necessary to prove a history of violence in Kemp's marriages.
Flory argued that in order to convict Kemp of first-degree murder,
the state must prove premeditation and present evidence obtainable only from the testimony of people who had heard Kemp's wife express fears about her husband.
Chad Beers, the 18 year-old Lawrence man accused of robbing the Lawrence National Bank, 27th and Iowa streets, on Nov. 16, is free on a $5,000 bond, according to District Attorney Jim Flory.
Beers waived a preliminary hearing that had been set for Jan.11.
David Baston, another 18 year-old Lawrence man, has been charged with aggravated robbery in the case. Janis Bunker, the bank's security director, identified Baston as the driver of a getaway car that was used in the robbery. Lawrence police took him into custody on Nov. 18.
Beers was taken into custody by
police and South Carolina and extradited to Kuwait.
Beers allegedly walked into the bank on the morning of Nov. 16,
pulled out a gun and took an undisclosed amount of money.
Eldon Alldritt, Wichita junior,
pleaded not guilty to charges of
driving while intoxicated and reck-
ounted to the Johnson County District Court, on Jan. 8.
Witnesses said the suspect fled the bank on foot minutes before the police arrived. Police were notified that a man had been shot, that that was activated by a bank teller.
Aldritt had pleaded no contest to the same charges in Lawrence Municipal Court. He is appealing the case in order to have a jury trial, which is scheduled in district court for Feb. 3.
The charges stem from an accident last May in which John Buzbee, Hutchinson junior, was injured when the car Aldritt was driving struck several parked cars in the 2000 block of Stewart Avenue. Buzbee's legs were pinned between two of those cars. His left leg was later amputated below the knee as a result of injuries.
Court rules KU is not responsible for student's sledding accident
By Regan Brown
Kansan staff writer
A KU student is "disappointed but not bitter" over losing a 85 million personal injuries suit against the University of Kansas for injuries he sustained in a 1985 sledding accident on campus.
In a Dec. 11 decision, the Kansas Supreme Court ruled that KU was not responsible for the accident in which Gregory Scott Boaldin, Derby junior, a tree. He was riding a plastic, saucer-shaped sked behind Ewlorth Wallow
Boaldin, a freshman at the time of the February 1985 accident, fractured his back and has remained in a hospital. He has two operations and physical therapy.
The court said, "sledding is a
winter tradition on the hills of the University of Kansas campus," and classified Daisy Hill as a recreational area. State law exempts government entities from responsibility for injuries that occur on recreational areas unless negligence can be proved.
KU has no official sliding policy, Mary Prewitt, KU assistant general counsel, said Monday. No changes are made because of Bauldin's lawsuit.
"However, we regret a tragic accident that we wish had never happened," she said.
Bouldin said he did not plan to appeal the Supreme Court decision. The lawsuit was heard by the state Supreme Court after it was dismissed in Shawnee County District
Boaldin said he regretted the Court's decision for himself as well as for victims of past and future sledding accidents.
Boaldin, who plans a career in advertising, said that he was stronger and more insightful since his accident, and handled the pressure of the job. Boaldin briefly walks possible, and Boaldin's doctors predict that he will walk again.
"I do feel that the University has ignored the dangers involved," he said. "I had hoped that some good might come of this suit, like warning signs and removal of obstructions from the hillsides."
Court last year.
Bouldin said he would not brood about the outcome of the lawsuit.
C
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4B
Friday, January 15, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Union renovation is nearing an end
By Jeff Suggs
Kansan staff writer
After almost a year's work and millions of dollars spent, the renovation on the third floor in the Kansas Union is nearly completed.
James Long, director of the Kansas and Burge Unions, said he hoped construction on the third floor would be completed by February, along with the renovation in the mechanical room on the first floor. Renovations on the first and third floors will cost approximately $6.5 million, he said.
Long said the renovation project was on budget and was running about 35 days behind schedule. He said the delay was caused by a sheetmetal workers' strike in the summer.
When the construction is completed, the third floor will house a kitchen, a bakery, the Hawk's Nest, the Prairie Room, and Union Square, which will be a cafeteria. All food services will be unified on one floor.
Long said that the food service operations would be brought up from the second floor to the third in stages, beginning sometime in late February and ending in early March. He said having the food services on third floor would make it easier for people to find a place to eat in the Union.
"in terms of the customer," Long
said, "he'll know where to get the
food."
The Prairie Room will operate like a restaurant, with waiters and waitresses, but the Hawk's Nest and the
cafeteria will operate in a fashion similar to a dining area in a shopping mall, with different compartments for different foods. Customers will be able to go to various compartments to select different types of foods and beverages.
Long said the Hawk's Nest would serve mostly fast-food type items, including ice cream, baked goods and deli items.
The food service area on the third floor will offer a variety of seating, from tables and chairs, to booths and private dining rooms. All facilities on the third floor will be accessible to the handicapped.
"It'll be much more efficient in terms of getting people through the cafeteria," Long said.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, January 15, 1988
5B
Interest is stirring in political clubs
Groups add members during sign-up
By Jeff Moberg Kansan staff writer
With the Iowa caucuses coming up Feb. 8, the presidents of both the College Republicans and the KU Democrats have been encouraged by the number of people expressing interest in their clubs this week.
The clubs ran sign up booths Monday and Tuesday in the Music Room on the fourth floor of the Kansas Union. As of noon Tuesday, 23 people had expressed an interest in joining KU Democrats and 18 people were interested in joining the College Republicans.
Brenda Eisele, president of the College Republicans, said she was encouraged but not surprised by the number of people who showed interest in her club.
"The amount is about typical for the beginning of the spring semester's Activity Fair, considering the location of the fair," Eisele said.
Sitting in his club's booth at the fair, Joe Orrick, president of KU Democrats, said that he also was happy with the turnout, but that he expected more people to join after the primaries began.
"The momentum is starting to build and the interest is growing. Next semester when the election gets closer, there will be a lot more people wanting tooin." Orrick said.
Eisele also expected more people to become politically aware as the presidential election drew near. She said that she expected up to 300 people to join College Republicans at next semester's Activity Fair.
Brett Frazier, Pratt junior and leader of the Dole presidential campaign on campus, said that students could sign two separate sheets — one for the Dole campaign and another to show interest in joining the club itself. Last spring, College Republicans throughout the state officially endorsed Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole for president.
Frazier said the special sign-up sheet for Dole was used for financial reasons, and the other sheet was for
'T
The momentum is starting to build and the interest is growing. Next semester when the election gets closer, there will be a lot more people wanting to join.'
— Joe Orrick president, KU Democrats
anyone who might not back Dole but was interested in the club.
"I thought there needed to be a dedicated resource on campus to the Dole campaign during the primary season. The other one is there if people in the club wanted another candidate. We work together with the College Republicans and we are (both) here to further Republican goals in general." Frazier said.
A student who expressed interest in the College Republicans said he visited the booth for two reasons.
"I wanted to see what the group was like," said Shawn Simmons, Haysville sophomore. "Also, with President, I wanted to support him."
Two students who expressed interest in the KU Democrats offered different reasons.
"I basically signed up because I would receive information on Democratic candidates," said Todd Williams, Prairie Village sophomore. "I'm not into going to meetings. I signed up to get information, so I can make my own choice."
Kim Ellison, Shawnee senior, said she was interested in the club because she wanted to find out more about the Democratic Party.
"Right now, I'm more on an interest level and I want to see what goes on. If I can put in some input or help out, I'd like to. You don't see a lot of things in the press that tell you how the party works," she said.
THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA
Bird's-eve view
Students seen from the seventh floor of Frazier Hall make their wav along Javhawk Boulevard
Gephardt would be tough on tariffs, ad says
The Associated Press
BETTENDORF, Iowa - Rep. Richard Gephardt had just finished speaking to a small crowd in a bingo hall when a woman walked up and mentioned how much she liked his television commercial about Hyundai, the South Korean automobile.
Gephardt shook her hand and thanked her for the praise, an encouraging sign that his bid for the Democratic presidential nomination has survived a rocky period and is
very much in contention as the Iowa caucuses approach.
The commercial shows Chrysler K cars coming off the assembly line in the United States while the announcer says that the South Korean government slaps on so many tariffs that a buyer in that country has to pay $48,000 for the American-made car.
or leave a meeting with the new president wondering "How many Americans are going to pay $48,000 for one of their Huyundas."
After Gephardt reaches the White
Square, says the White House,
South Korea's government to go back.
Like many candidates, Gephardt needs a strong showing in Iowa to remain a contender for the primaries to follow. Unlike the others, he has based his appeal largely on a call fortougher dealings with overseas trading partners, and the woman's comment is a sign that the message is an attractive one.
The voters, he says later as he stares out into the frozen nighttime landscape, "are beginning to focus" on the candidates and their campaigns.
Gephardt set out to out-organize and out-campaign everyone in Iowa, where Feb. 8 caucuses are the first test of the election year. He made his first foray into the state in January 1985, and even rented an apartment for his mother to use when she stumps the state.
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6B
Friday, January 15, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Kassebaum asks for Soviet help with alcohol research
By Kim Lightle
Kansan staff writer
Although the United States and the Soviet Union don't share many of the same opinions, they do have something in common — a high incidence of alcoholism.
The seriousness of the problem and the commitment that Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev has expressed about the issue led Sen. Nancy Kassaebaum, R-Kan., to propose last month a joint alcohol research program involving Soviet scientists and researchers at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
Kassebau suggested the plan in a letter she gave to Raisa Gorbachev, the Soviet leader's wife, during the U.S.-Soviet summit in Washington, D.C., in December. The letter outlined research done at the Med Center and proposed that both countries work together to research alcoholism.
Donald W. Goodwin, chairman of the psychiatry department at the Med Center, said the project could give U.S. researchers a new perspective and a better chance at finding a remedy for the problem. But, he said, there are many cultural differences in drinking habits.
Goodwin served as the director of the Addiction Center at Washington University in St. Louis before he came to the Med Center in 1976.
The Med Center is now conducting research on fetal alcohol syndrome and the connection between heredity and alcoholism, he said.
Goodwin said he had observed firsthand the drinking habits of Soviet citizens. He has been in the Soviet Union and studied alcohol treatment centers there.
"The Soviets have no concept of social drinking. When they drink, they drink to get drunk," Goodwin said.
The Soviet methods for treating alcoholism vary greatly from methods in the United States, he said.
"The Soviet's method of treatment is modeled after Pavlov's approach. Patients are given a drug to make ill when they drink alcohol," he said.
Goodwin said that the Soviet Union had about one treatment center for every 6,000 people, compared to one for every 10,000 in the U.S.
Both Goodwin and D. Kay Clawson, the Med Center's executive vice chancellor, said they were optimistic about Kassebaum's proposal. Both said they had doubts that the program would become a reality.
Larry Shainman, an aide to Kassbaum, said the senator would follow up her proposal with a letter to the Soviet ambassador to the United States in the next few days.
"we want to keep the ball rolling on this," he said.
School
Continued from p. 1B
school good marks, not everyone is enthusiastic at first. Gauna said his father thought he should stay at the high school and make F's rather than go to the extension.
"He thought it was a place for flankes," Gauna said.
Gauna's father decided to let him try the extension after talking to Meyers. Gauna said his father was much more enthusiastic about the school after seeing the dramatic change in his son's grades.
"A lot of people think it's a cop-out I did." Percell said.
She decided to give the extension a try after an automobile accident caused her to miss several weeks of school.
She quickly changed her mind about the extension, she said. Now she would rather stay at the extension than go back to the high school.
The reaction isn't unusual. Many students resist being placed back into the high school although that is the program's main objective. Meyers said.
Often, students will purposely do poorly in classes so that they can remain in the program. Meyers said.
There are no misses, ma'amis,misters or sirs here; it's first names only. There is a sense of friendship among both teachers and students.
Not only do the students like being at the school, but they are also working to change its image from a place for flunkies and misfits to a normal place, like any other school.
The students talk about ways to improve the program's image in their weekly group meetings with Linn Suderman, the school counselor.
Currently, the students are working on an exchange program with another extension school in Topeka.
But the extension already has a good reputation among educators. Administrators recognize the program as one of the best.
Don Richardson, associate professor of education at the University of Kansas, said that the program was highly regarded.
"I think it's an excellent program," he said.
The students agree that the school serves its purpose in keeping students from dropping out.
Sarah Schockley, a senior, said that if her older sister had been able to attend the program, she probably would have finished high school.
Not only is the program making it easier to stay in school, but students also can receive one credit hour for every 180 hours they work. Both Gauna and Purcell have part-time jobs, and they said that the little extra credit is nice.
of food and they prepare the school lunches.
The students also may take classes to give them work experience. There are two food-preparation classes designed specifically for this. One class runs a non-profit cookie order business. The other class teaches students how to cook large amounts
Enrollment is high
Those on-the-job-training classes are a big attraction and help boost the program's enrollment, Meyers said.
The program can handle a maximum of 72 students and has been full by the second day of classes for the past couple of years.
The board that reviews students' requests for admission to the program receives requests for admission from the smaller areas in Kansas that lack such programs. But the board must turn them down because there is a long waiting list within the district.
Administrators never expected the program to be so popular when they started it seven years ago. The project was considered experimental, but it soon was apparent that there was a need to provide a place specifically designed to help potential dropouts.
There is no doubt in Gauna's mind that the program is important.
With help from the program and his teachers, he's going from cutting classes to college.
Janine Swiatkowski/KANSAN
When all was calm
The Robinson Center pool awaits the return of students for the beginning of the spring semester.
Kansan Fact:
KU students spend over $4 million a month on discretionary items
Good Grief.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, January 15, 1988
7B
Star studies find little to support life
The Associated Press
AUSTIN, Texas — The universe may be a more lonely place than once believed because many stars thought capable of producing planets are actually unable to do so, a scientist said Wednesday.
Frederick M. Walter, a University of Colorado astronomer, said he had found that most young sunlike stars appear to lack the clouds of gas and dust thought essential for the formation of planets, the eradle of evolving life.
"This could mean that the number of solar-like stars that could develop planets is smaller than many believe." Walter said. He emphasized that this is only speculation because "nobody really knows how disks (the star clouds) collapse into planets."
Walter, in a paper presented to the American Astronomical Society, disputed the traditional belief that all sun-sized stars go through a phase when they
Stars that could be in the planet-formation stage are commonly called T Tauri stars. When the dust surrounding these objects disappears, after about 10 million years, they are called post-T Tauri stars.
are surrounded by clouds that could eventually form planets.
But Walter said that a study of the star-forming areas of the constellations Taurus, Orion and Scorpius found that many stars considered post-T Tauri stars are actually young stars that have no dust clouds. He calls them "naked T Tauri" stars.
The popular concept is that all sun-sized stars are surrounded by a dust cloud after they are formed. It's believed that over a 10-million-year period, matter in the clouds clumps together and eventually form planets orbiting the star.
The theory is that life evolves on the planets where conditions are right.
Based on this idea, theorists have said there are
billions of stars that could be the cradles of planets and life. The idea has inspired an organized search for extraterrestrial intelligent life using powerful radio transmitters, but the effort has yet to produce evidence.
Walter said he found that "naked T Tauri" stars were actually 10 times more numerous than the traditional T Tauri stars.
Larry Traffan, a University of Texas astronomy professor, said that if Walter's conclusions were correct, it would significantly reduce the possible stars where planets could form by traditional concepts.
The new star class was found when Walter analyzed X-ray data collected by satellite. He said X-ray readings and followup observations located more than 150 "naked T Tauri" stars as young as the traditional T Tauri.
"This is important because of the large number of naked T Tauri stars that are implied." Walter said.
Biologist traces life to bacteria
The Associated Press
The organism, which apparently lived at least 3.5 billion years ago, was the last ancestor shared by all of today's life forms, said James Lake, professor of molecular biology at the University of California, Los Angeles.
NEW YORK — Every living thing now on Earth descended from bacteria that probably thrived in nearboiling water and raised a stench like rotten eggs, a new study suggests.
While the organism was not the origin of life, he said, "it's as far back as we've been able to get. Everything is related to it."
"What we've been able to do is get at the very bottom of the evolutionary tree that relates all known organisms," Lake said.
His conclusions come from analyzing evolutionary changes in material found in every living cell. The effort required more than 1 million comparisons of material from different organisms.
The research, which produced a new evolutionary family tree, is reported in Thursday's issue of the British journal Nature.
Scientists debating whether ancient ancestor 'liked it hot'
"It just gives us a new picture of the deepest branches in the tree of life and how they're related to one another," said Allan Wilson, biochemistry professor at the University of California, Berkeley, who has used methods like Lake's to trace human lineage.
Lake said the ancient ancestors probably resembled today's one-celled organisms called eocytes, which live in geothermal hot springs.
Likeocytes, the organism probably lived in very hot water and got energy by processing sulfur, Lake said. That would produce hydrogen sulfide gas, giving a rotten-egg smell to the swings, he said.
The work also suggests life may have begun in similarly high temperatures, he said.
Southern California, said he suspected life began in cooler temperatures instead because at high temperatures, key materials of today's living things tend to degrade faster.
Nobody knows when the ancestor organism appeared, but it is probably at least as old as bacteria that left fossils 3.5 billion years ago, he said.
Lake said "oecyte" meant "dawn cell," reflecting the suspected primitiveness of getting energy from sulfur.
Eukaryotes include humans and other animals, typical plants and some microscopic creatures such as
Lake's proposed family tree contains a two-way split after the ancestor organism. One branch leads to modern eocytes and to the eukaryotes, which are organisms that have a nucleus as sort of a central control room for the cell.
amoebas.
The other branch leads to methanogens, organisms that get energy by processing methane, eubacteria, which are common bacteria, and halobacteria, which are found in salty environments.
To construct the tree, Lake focused on cell structures called ribosomes, which make proteins under instructions from the cell's genes. Part of a ribosome is ribonucleic acid, composed of a long string of substances called nucleotides.
All ribosomes came from a common ancestor. But as various kinds of organisms started to evolve independently, the sequence of nucleotides in their ribonucleic acid began to differ.
Lake compared sequences from 32 diverse modern organisms to look for similarities and differences that would hint at how the organisms are related.
He used a computer to make 1.4 million comparisons, analyzing four sequences each time, and concluded that the present-day necropsy was the ancestor.
Berkeley's Wilson called Lake's technique "an advance in the method of tree-building."
Man sentenced to prison for stealing oreos
SAN ANTONIO, Texas — A transient has been sentenced to three years in prison after pleading guilty to breaking into a church nursery, school and eating Oreo cookies and drinking Kool-Aid, officials said.
The Associated Press
David Deskin, 25, drew the sentence because he already was on probation for another burglary.
before church officials filed charges.
The Rev. Mike Sutton of the Pearsall Road Baptist Church, angered by repeated break-ins, told prosecutors he was unable to turn the other cheek
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Deskin was accused of breaking into the school nursery and stealing a package of Oreo cookies and a loaf of bread in August.
Bexar County Assistant District Attorney Anne Kelly said Deskin had been suspected in the other break-ins
Deskin was on trial for burglary, which could have landed him in jail for 20 years. On Tuesday, two days into the trial, he pleaded guilty to a reduced burglary charge in return for the three-year sentence.
Kansan Fact:
Every weekday over 65% of KU students read the Kansan.
Jennifer Rowland planning editor
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Type A heart patients more likely to survive
The Associated Press
The research also casts new doubt on the theory that Type A behavior puts people at higher risk of getting heart disease in the first place. That idea has already been questioned by several other researchers in recent years.
BOSTON - Men with aggressive, Type A personalities are almost twice as likely as calm people to survive heart disease, according to a study that challenges the advice that heart attack victims should slow down and relax.
1 am coming more to the opinion that Type A behavior may not have much to do with coronary heart disease in the final analysis," said Dr. David R. Raagland, who directed the latest study.
In the 1960s, a large research project called the Western Collaborative Group Study concluded that men with Type A personalities were twice as likely to suffer heart attacks, parts, the Type B's, to suffer heart attacks and heart pain called angina.
That study, based on $8_{1/2}$ years of follow-up, was the first major evidence of a link between Type A behavior and heart disease. It is still the only study of its kind to find such an association.
According to the theory, Type A's are ambitious, irritable and competitive people who are always in a hurry. Type B's are more self-secure and patient, and they do not let small aggravations bother them.
In the latest research, Ragland and Richard J. Brand, both of the University of California at Berkeley, returned to the Western Collaborative study to see what happened to the same people years later. They studied 257 men, both Type A and Type B, who were identified as having heart disease.
To their surprise, Ragland and Brand found that during the next 13
years, the Type A's were only 58 percent as likely as the Type B's to die of heart problems.
But Meyer W. Friedman, co-author of the Western Collaborative research and a leading proponent of the Type A theory, questioned the new study.
"This study is flawed," he said, because it misclassifies Type A's as Type B's. Friedman said he had changed his definition of Type A personality and now contends that virtually everyone who has a heart attack under age 65 is Type A.
Ragland's study was published in Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine, along with an editorial by Joel E. Dimsale of the University of California, San Diego.
Dimsdale wrote that the new data cast a shadow over the Type A theory.
"It is clear that the simple model linking Type A behavior to coronary heart disease is no longer tenable," he said. "If there is a link, it applies only to certain persons and to certain end points of coronary heart disease."
Friedman believes he can help Type A's live longer by teaching them to overcome their aggressive tendencies. The new study contradicts this, concluding that such an effort "is not justified."
Some researchers believe that if Type A's do have more heart attacks, it is because of smoking and poor living habits that contribute to high cholesterol and blood pressure. Others say there may be a link between personality and heart disease, but hostility and anger, not competitiveness, are the key traits.
The Berkeley researchers are unsure why the Type A men were more likely to survive once they got heart disease. One theory is that the aggressive men are less likely to accept their disease and give in to it.
Good News.
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TEXAS INSTRUMENTS
8B
Friday, January 15, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
New talk show to teach women Daytime program will offer variety of down-to-earth advice
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — Producer Woody Fraser doesn't want anyone to think that ABC's new daytime show "Home" is just another magazine show.
w
The fact is, it's not a magazine show at all. "It's a how-to talk show for women," he said.
We don't want ideas that come out of magazines. We want the ideas that come out of people's lives.'
The half-hour show, which makes its debut Monday, will offer viewers down-to-earth advice on a variety of topics, from how to prepare salt-free meals to how to detect breast cancer to tips for packing for a move.
"We're not going to do something on cancer unless it's hopeful," Fraser said. "That positive approach will be more effective than we do." We're not going to scare people.
— Woody Fraser producer
"The execution of the show is also very important. Most shows bring up a new subject, but don't show you how it works or how it will affect your life. That's going to be a very important part of what we do."
Each day will deal with only three
examples can each explore at some
depth.
Robb Weller and Sandy Hill will host the new show. Weller will continue as co-anchor of "Entertainment This Week." Fraser hired him as a co-host when he was putting together ABC's "Good Morning America." She stayed for five years.
The new show has the same name as one of televisions' pioneering shows, NBC's "Home." That show, starring Arlene Francis, ran from 1954 to 1959. It was considered a companion show to "Today."
Fraser said he is also looking for ordinary people who are experts in certain fields. "We don't want ideas that come out of magazines," he said. "We want the ideas that come out of people's lives. That gives you a whole frame of reference that's entirely different. We've run into people who are experts at bulk buying. We found people who set up a 'blood-letting party' to give blood to a cancer victim.
"This will probably evolve. These experts will be people you've never heard of. The people experts."
"Home" is the result of a year's research in which ABC asked viewers what kind of a show they wanted to see. The network held several discussions with groups of women who were regular viewers of
morning television.
"We found that women were looking for something that would be stimulating and that would be a productive use of their time," said Mary Alice Dwyer-Dobbin, ABC vice president, daytime programs, East Coast. "They were looking for something that would help them learn new skills."
The show will air at 11:30 a.m., just before the network begins its after- noon soap operas. Its competitors on CBS and NBC will be game shows.
Fraser, who has produced such programs as "The Mike Douglas Show," "The Dick Cavett Show," "The Steve Allen Show," "Good Morning America" and "That's Incredible!." was working on an idea similar to ABC's.
"I was thinking about a show that would be motivational," he said. "I like things that are positive. I don't buy the argument that there are people sitting at home who don't know what to do. They're merely
waiting for someone to light the fire."
The show's set is a replica of a Connecticut farm house, which will be used for demonstrating the various ideas brought in by the "people experts." In addition, the show will buy a home in a Los Angeles suburb and take the audience through the steps of buying a house, decorating, remodeling, maintaining and selling the house.
Elsewhere in television;
- Producer-actress Shelley Dvall has organized a new company called Think Entertainment to produce programs exclusively for cable television. Dvall is the award-winning producer of "Faerie Tale Theatre" and "Tail Tales" for the Showtime pay-cable channel. Cable companies that have agreed in principle to finance the venture are United Cable, Tele-Communications Inc., United Artists Communications and Newhouse Broadcasting.
The most ambitious production ever attempted for the ABC Sunday Disney movie is "Earth-Star Voyager," a two-part, four-hour miniseries. The first part will be shown Sunday, the second part Jan. 24. The show, set 100 years in the future, tells of a voyage by young people seeking a new planet as the Earth's ecological system deteriorates.
Audiences are 'Moonstruck'by film
The Associated Press
CULVER CITY, Calif. — An ethnic comedy-romance called "Moonstruck" has emerged as a surprise hit of the holiday season, with hints of Academy Award nominations for members of the cast and renewed respect for the director, Norman Jewison.
Critics had assumed that Jewison had gone super-serious. After all, his recent films have dealt with legal inequity ("...And Justice for All"), racial briety ("The Soldier's Story") and religious zeal ("Agnes of God"). So what happens? He follows with a delightful comedy about an Italian family in Brooklyn.
"After doing some serious dramas, I was in the mood for a romantic comedy," he said recently during an interview in his office at the MGMUA headquarters in Filmland Center.
"I've always made the kind of
reason I don't think I've been, typed
reason I don't think I've been, typed
as a director," he said. "I've done comedies, dating back to the Doris Day movies ('The Thrill of It All,' 'Send Me No Flowers'),' 'The Russians Are Coming,' The Russians Are Coming' was almost a farce. I do dreams like 'In the Heat of the Night.'
"My background is in music, starting in live television with shows like 'Your Hit Parade,' 'The Andy Williams Show' and the Judy Garland specials. So I've made musicals like 'Fiddler on the Roof' and 'Jesus Christ Superstar,'" said Jewison.
Jewison's versatility may account for his not receiving his due from film historians and his peers. He won three Emmys in his early career but bary an Oscar in three nominations, though "In the Heat of the Night" won the Academy Award for best picture in 1967.
"Moonsuck" emerged from an original screenplay by playwright John Patrick Shanley, whom jonissem terms "the Bard of the Bronx." The
story centers on two generations of an Italian-American family. While the parents' marriage is crumbling, the widowed daughter causes a furor by falling in love with the brother of her prospective husband.
The widow is played by Cher in what some reviewers have termed her best performance. She and Olympia Dukakis, who plays her mother, have been mentioned for Oscar nominations.
"Cher was my first choice to play Loretta," Jewison said. "For me, there has always been something 'streety' about Cher, a lacking in pretension. She's a very honest person, in person and on the screen. She looks Italian, although she's part Cherokee Indian and part Armenian.
"In the beginning I thought perhaps Nicolas Cage was too young to play her lover. After all, Cher was playing a 37-year-old widow — she's actually 40 — and I think Cage is about 24. But I saw him in 'Birdie,' and I thought that he was so mature.
He looks much older and behaves much older than he is," said Jewison.
Jewison immersed himself in the Italian culture of Brooklyn and shot the exteriories there. The interiories were filmed in Toronto. The reason was partly economic.
"The American dollar is suffering in most countries of the world, but not in Canada," the filmmaker said. "Your dollar still buys around $1.30 in Canada. So it's very advantageous for films to be shot up there."
"On the other hand, I also live there, so I wanted to do my editing and my post-production there," he said.
The Toronto-born Jewison, 61, retains his homeland roots and cites this advantage: "We Canadians like to think that we're forever interpreting America to the rest of the world. I am so happy to like you, we share the same continent."
"I think we have a great gift for satirical humor." he said.
News Data The fall of Sony's Beta
100%
0% VHS
1% Beta
100% Beta
99% VHS
1975
1987
Beta vs. VHS market share
Sony's share of the home VCR market has declined from 100% of 30,000 sold in 1975 to 3.1% of almost 12 million sold in 1986 – and Beta format VCRs dropped to just 1% of the total home VCR market in 1987.
SOURCE: Television Digest, NYC
Sony market share of total home VCRs
3.1%
1975 '81 '82 '83 '84 '85 '86
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Kansan Fact:
Every weekday over 65% of KU students read the Kansan.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, January 15, 1988
9B
Sports Extra
Jayhawk gridder goes to the hoop
By Elaine Sung
Kansan sports writer
Clint Normore doesn't mind being compared to a modified version of Bo Jackson.
"Yeah, I just don't get paid," he said, grinning.
AMC
Normore, like Jackson, has the talent for two sports. He was the fifth-leading tackler last season for the Jayhawk football team with 62 tackles, two interceptions and two recovered fumbles.
Normore joined the team Dec. 14, after Coach Larry Brown asked him last spring to consider playing basketball for Kansas.
Now, he is trying to become a force as a point guard for the Kansas basketball team.
"I had said 'no' before. I only planned on football. Then I told him I'd think about it only after the football season." Normore said.
"I've always wanted to play under Coach Brown," said Normore. "He's got a great style. He coaches the way we do in football, of the break, aggressively and fast."
Two things changed his mind:
Brown, and winning.
"And he has the winning attitude we need around him. I want to win. Winning had a part in my decision to join. I consider myself a winner and it's great to know that I'm on a mission and that I had a part of it." he said.
Brown was not unfamiliar with Normore's talent. In fact, the Wichita junior was one of many Brown tried to recruit four years ago in the same class as Mark Turgeon and Cedric Hunter.
Brown wanted an early answer
from Normore, but Normore delayed his decision, and thus, Turgeon and Hunter were signed instead.
In fall 1986, he switched to football, and started all 11 games that season, finishing second on the team with 114 tackles. 59 of them unassisted.
Normore went to Wichita State, playing only basketball his first two years there. He averaged 3.3 points and 12.4 minutes a game.
Clint Normore scrambles for a loose ball against American University.
The Shockers suspended their football program after that season, so Normone transferred to Kansas to continue playing football.
Brown approached him with the idea of playing basketball again as soon as Normore arrived.
"I wanted him to come and try out if it was possible, but I knew football was first on his mind." Brown said. "I know he loves to play and he's a great competitor. I have a lot of respect for him and even when he was a high school player, I always felt he had the ability."
Normore made his first appearance for the basketball team when Brown put him in the Kansas-North Carolina State game at Reynolds Coliseum, just five days after he officially joined the team.
He played only three minutes, during which he made one field goal, but he said just being allowed to play was the most important so soon was a welcome surprise.
"At first, I didn't expect to play. I was pumped up just to be there. He's testing me out really early, and I'm glad he is," Normore said. "I'm not one to come to a team and sit on the bench all the time."
The physical demands on him are a little different as a basketball player. He is easy to spot on the court, with
the wide build of a football player.
"In basketball, you have to be in better condition than in football, because you have to run up and down
the court, but in football you go in to play for a while, and you get your wind back." he said.
Normore will go straight into
JUST MELL GOOD
SUNDAY 20TH APRIL 1987
Swimming couple receive Big 8 honors
"When we played Missouri, I was coming out to shoot in warm-ups, and everyone stood up to clap. I said, 'Wow, I like this,'" he said.
spring football once basketball season is over. But for now, he's enjoying the feeling of being part of a nationally-ranked basketball team
Kansas swimmers Glenn Trammel and Barbara Ann Smith, winners of the men's and women's Big Eight Swimmer of the Month awards for December, spend time with each other after practice.
Sue Schellie/KANSAN
Bv Tom Stinson
Kansan sports writer
In some relationships people end up feeling inferior. For Kansas swimmers Glenn Trammel and Barbara Ann Smith, who have been dating for about a year and a half, this doesn't seem to be a problem
They were both recently named Big Eight Swimmers of the Month for December. The award is given in recognition from the Big Eight coaches.
According to Coach Gary Kempf, Smith is one of the nation's top distance swimmers and is the owner of the nation in the 1000-vard freestyle.
"I was really shocked," said Smith, Mequon, Wis., junior. "I couldn't figure out why I got it. It was really neat though, considering Glenn won it also."
"She has just been fantastic this year." Kemnf said.
Trammel is currently ranked second in the nation in the 100-yard backstroke and has already qualified for the NCAA Championships in Indianapolis scheduled later this year.
"I'm really honored by this because there are some outstanding swimmers in the conference," said Trammel, Topeka junior. "I didn't expect it but I'm very happy for receiving it."
The only competition the Jayhawks saw during the vacation was in the U.S. Open Invitational Meet in Orlando, Fla., on December 20-22. Kempf said Kansas finished 10th out of about 30 college teams in the collegiate competition.
Trrammel placed fourth in the 100-yard backstroke and 14th in the 200-yard backstroke at Orlando. Kempf also said the women's 400-yard medley relay and the men's 500-yard medley relay also scored in the meet.
"It was a real incentive boost to see that kind of competition," said Smith, who planned on competing with the others later that the event wasn't offered.
"We took nine swimmers and
finished really well." Kempf said. "Our showing was good, and the exposure to international competition was excellent."
The Jayhawk's next meet is Saturday against Arkansas at Robinson Natatorium. In November the men lost at Arkansas by one point, and the women have split the two meetings between the squads this year.
Kempf said the Jayhawks were focusing toward the Big Eight Conference Championships in Lincoln, Neb., March 3-5. Last year both teams finished runner-up in the Big Eight to Nebraska, who Kempf was once again the favorite this season.
Ex-assistant to coach women's golf squad
Bv Tom Stinson
Brad Demo, assistant golf pro at Alvamar Golf & Country Club, was named the new women's golf coach Wednesday. Demo replaces Kent Weiser who left the position to enter private business.
Demo spent two years at Coffeville Junior College before attending the University of Kansas and was a two-year letterwinner for the Jayhawk golf team in 1982 and 1983. He then served as an assistant coach with the Jayhawk program from 1984 to 1986.
Dave Niebergall/KANSAN
"I traveled with the girls for three years," said the Arkansas City native. "But then I didn't help out last year. I've wanted to get into coaching for a long time so when the job oopened, I applied."
ZUMBA
The women, whose spring season begins with the Peggy Kirk Bell Invitational Tournament, March 17-20 in Orlando. Fla., are currently a strong squad, according to Demo.
"We've got a good base to start with," Demo said. "The girls are all competitors, which is very important." We know, we can do nothing but get better."
The Jayhawks finished fourth in last season's Big Eight Championship, which was won by Oklahoma State University. Oklahoma State is again the favorite in this year's tournament, April 23-26.
Dave NieberghalKANSA
Brad Demo, new KU women's golf coach.
"One of these years we'll get them," Demo said referring to the Cowboys. "I want to get some strong
walk-onts to go along with the blue-chip recruits. I'll have to match the talent we lose this year or get better talent to compete well."
Demo said recruiting will be a key for the Jayhawks. He said he planned to increase the number of walk-ons in the program while maintaining a consistent level of top-caliber players.
He also said he was striving for a squad of six blue-chip players and three to five strong walk-ons.
Pless returns to Kansas after a standout season
By Craig Anderson
Assistant sports editor
The numbers indicated that Toronto to Argonaut linebacker Willie Pless should have received honors for a standout 1987 season in the Canadian Football League.
Pless wasn't voted to any division or league all-star teams despite finishing third in the league in tackles. The former Kansas star also had five interceptions and five fumble recoveries by Packers tacklers in both categories in the CFL.
Unfortunately, the media that cover the CFL thought otherwise.
The only nomination for an award Pless did receive was voted on by his Toronto teammates. The Argonauts chose Pless as their candidate for defensive player of the year.
Now try to figure why Pless wasn't notied to any of the league's all-star team.
Jim Fender, who serves as Pless' agent, has a theory on the snubbing the former CFL rookie-of-the-year received from the Canadian Media.
"The guys that were chosen in front of him were great interviews," he said. "They were the Brian Bosworth-type of guy with the media. They always had great stories or great lines.
For the record, Pless said he was only slightly disappointed with his lack of recognition. Kansas' all-time leading tacker said it would only serve to make him work harder in the future.
Frustration probably followed along with the disappointment of being an unrecognized man in a highly-visible sport. Fender estimated the lack of awards cost Pless $30,000 in potential bonus money.
"Willie's laid back and as a consequence he was sometimes ignored."
"He's not the kind of man that would say it hurt him, but I know it hurt him," Fender said. "He was disappointed."
At the present time, though, Fender said he thought Pless was deeply hurt.
For now, Pless is living for the future and not dwelling on the past. Pless recently purchased a house in northwest Lawrence and plans to make it his off-season home. The
Anniston, Ala., native will also attend classes at Kansas in the spring to finish his degree in education. Pless is 18 hours short of graduation.
Since becoming a professional football player, Pless has enjoyed playing the game more than when he was at Kansas. It has been more of a mental adjustment than anything else.
Besides going to school, Pless would like to help coach the Jayhawks during spring football drills. Pless would also like to become a football coach.
"I enjoyed playing in college, but I'd just get so uptight before games," he said. "I didn't want to talk to anyone or look at anyone, and this was 12 hours before a game would start.
"I want to get a taste of it this spring," he said. "I'll do anything to help KU football. The program can be successful again."
"In the past two years, though, I've been able to relax more. I'm better able to control any tenseness that I have before games."
Football isn't the only career Pless
would like to pursue. He recently recorded a song, "I Wait for Love," with the help of a CBS Record executive. The record was written as a ballad to Pless' girlfriend.
"It was something I did for fun." Pless said of the recording session. "It's something I've always enjoyed doing."
Pless will return to Toronto in late January to work on another song in hopes of being able to press it into a record. While Pless' first song was a slow love melody, he said the next production would be a more upbeat recording.
I'd need to work a little bit with (KU band director Ron McCurdy), but I think it would be fun to do it," he said. "It's a possibility."
Earlier in the football season, Pless was faced with the possibility of missing several games because of a broken toe. Fender said the injury
Rumor has it that Pless might sing the national anthem before a Kansas basketball game in Allen Field House. He said he would welcome the chance to sing in front of the home-town crowd.
made Pless more restless than ever.
Pless missed two games, but would
have no more of being just a spectator.
For now, Pless is just trying to get the best out of his ability to play football. Those who omitted him from any post-season laurels were the same type of people who questioned whether he even had the ability to be a major-college football player six years ago. Pless has a tackling trophy named after him for his efforts in college.
"It's the same kind of thing I've had to overcome all my life," he said. "If I keep improving and giving it all I have, then, the good Lord willing, I will be able to look back and be satisfied with my career — in football and in everything else."
"I was talking to Toronto's coach and he said Willie was like a caged lion when he wasn't able to play." Fender said. "Finally the trainer had to hide Willie's practice gear so he wouldn't suit up and practice. They said Willie would miss at least five weeks, probably more, but he missed only two games."
Big Eight Conference standings
The Associated Press
| Conference | All Games |
|---|
| W | L | Pct. | W | L | Pct. |
|---|
| Oklahoma | 1 | 0 | 1.000 | 14 | 1 | .933 |
| Iowa St. | 1 | 0 | 1.000 | 14 | 1 | .875 |
| Kansas | 1 | 1 | .500 | 11 | 4 | .733 |
| Kansas St. O | 0 | 0 | .000 | 11 | 4 | .636 |
| Nebraska | 0 | 0 | .000 | 8 | 7 | .533 |
| Colorado | 0 | 0 | .000 | 4 | 9 | .308 |
| Missouri | 0 | 1 | .000 | 9 | 3 | .750 |
| Okla. St. | 0 | 1 | .000 | 7 | 6 | .538 |
BIG8 CONFERENCE
10B
Friday, January 15. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Many overlook Oklahoma's defense, says Sooner coach
The Associated Press
When people look at Oklahoma basketball, Billy Tubbs wants them to see a team that has respect for everybody they play.
"We're not out to embarrass anybody but we are out to make people look bad, because if we make ourselves look good by making them look bad, that's the name of the game," the Oklahoma coach said. "If that wasn't the rule of the game, you'd be trying to play to get beat."
"We have respect and compassion, but when the game starts, it's war and we don't take prisoners. We start pressing and should end pressing. Sometimes we'll pull it off if we hit the numbers, but we shouldn't because the guys in there then have
to learn the full-court defense. And the reason they're playing at that time is because they have problems playing it," he said.
"It's all the full-court pressure," senior forward Dale Sieger offered as the key to success. "We just have so many people. If somebody gets tired, someone else comes in and the other team doesn't have that option. We come in with fresh guys and they have the same guys.
"Anytime you score a lot of points, people are going to say you're an offensive-structured team, and we are an offensive-structured team," Sieger said. "But the majority of our points are coming from our defense, the full-court pressure, things like that. But people kind of look past that."
and just look at the final score and see the other team in the 80s. But they still lost by 40, 50 points, so we can't be that bad of a defensive team."
Before the LSU game, which Oklahoma lost 84-77, the Sooners forced an average of 37 turnovers per game.
"When people pick up a gaze and see we scored 150 points, they think that, 'Wow, that's a great offensive machine.' But if you really watch us, we get a lot of points off our steals and that's forced by the defense," senior guard Ricky Grace said.
Junior guard Mookie Blaylock has 75 of the 222 steals, just 15 short of the school record for a season.
Grace and Blaylock played a year together at Midland Junior College.
"Blaylock puts a lot of pressure on the point guard and causes him a lot of trouble and that enables us to gamble a lot," Grace said.
and Tubbs said it didn't take any time for the players to get adjusted to each other or anything.
Tubbs will be as happy as Blaylock when the steals record falls.
"I love records. I'm intrigued by them and I love to set records," Tubbs said. "One game this year we had 76 points in the first half and that's a Big Eight record. But of course all the records we break are our own records. But we tied that record in the second half. I like that, but it would have been better if we broke it.
"My team at Lamar shared the
NCA4 score for points in a half with Artis (Gilmore) and that bunch from Jacksonville at 86. That's why I want 90 in a half now. I want that record. If somebody is sitting on a record, I don't care what the score is, they're going to play," he said.
On Saturday against Oklahoma State, Sieger tied his own conference and school record with eight 3-point goals, but picked up his fourth foul with nine minutes to play and left the game. Yet, with the game secure — the Sooners led 104-70 — Tubbs put him back in for 2:56 left. Sieger didn't get the record — he missed two 3-pointers — but it wasn't because Tubbs didn't give him a chance.
Oklahoma's big men are thrilled with the Grace-Blacklock backcourt.
"I think if not the best backcourt in the nation, they are number two or three," said forward Harvey Grant, the team's leading scorer and rebounder. "The things they have accomplished have helped myself, Stacy and Dave to get open shots inside. If they couldn't hit the outside shot, people would just collapse around us. Either one of them could score 20, 30 points a night and people are starting to realize that."
"When we said that guard do we want, we said Blaylock." Tubbs said. "If there was a draft, that's the guy we would have taken."
The NBA draft is definitely ahead for Grant, whose twin brother, Horace, was a first-round draft choice of the Chicago Bulls last year.
NFL replacements get pay but no play for Super Bowl
The Associated Press
MINNEAPOLIS — Tony Adams, Pete Najarian and Jim Dick were members of the Minnesota Vikings replacement team which did not win a game during the strike. But if the Vikings continue winning, they and their former teammates will be in line for a $27,000 Super Bowl bonanza.
"I don't feel guilty. We didn't have a good team, but we worked hard," said Dick, 23, a former North Dakota State University linebacker. "We just didn't have a good enough team to win."
The 35 Vikings replacement players, along with members of the other playoff teams' replacement squads, will be paid half what the active players receive under terms of the 1982 collective bargaining agreement.
The replacement players won't get NFC championship or Super Bowl rings for watching the games on TV, but they will be Vikings director of public relations.
"You have to be with the club at the time the games are played," Swanson said from Tampa, Fla., where
the Vikings were preparing for Sunday's title game against the Washington Redskins.
So far, the replacements are assured of $9,000 — half of what the active players get for playing in the conference finals. Replacement players for the team that wins the SuperBowl will get an additional $18,000. Replacements on the losers will receive $9,000.
In order to be eligible for the Super Bowl paychecks, which are paid by the NFL, the replacements must have been on the roster for at least three games, said John Jones, spokesman for the NFL Management Council. The payments do not affect the money the actual team members receive, he added.
Dick, 23, who was working on a loading dock when the Vikings called him up, said he planned to save the money. "I'm not going out to buy anything big," said Dick, who started playing games as a middle linenbacket
The payment to the players is not without controversy.
"we resent it," said Steve Jordan,
player representative for the Vikings. "They came in and did everything possible to put us out of the playoffs and now they're getting paid for everything we did to get into the playoffs."
Najarian, who led the University of Minnesota in tackles three times, said the replacements deserve the money.
"The regular team lost to two of the three teams we lost to, so we can't hang our heads," said Najarian, a 24-year-old linebacker who plans to attend medical school. "All of us went out there and did the best we could."
The replacement Vikings posted an 0-3 record, losing to Tampa Bay, Chicago, and Green Bay by a combined score of 70-13. Their record was the worst of the four teams still in the playoffs. The Redskins were 3-0 during the strike, while the Denver Broncos and Cleveland Browns were both 2-1.
"We weren't blown out in any of the games," said Dick, who is returning to school this spring. "We could have won any of the games."
Browns ready to face Denver after 1987 defeat, owner says
The Associated Press
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M.-Art Modell, who threatened last spring to sell the Cleveland Brown's for NFL players went on strike, says he's having far too much fun to consider selling the team now.
"Right now, I have no plans other than to continue as we are doing," Modell said as the Brown's prepared for Sunday's AFC championship game in Denver.
Modell, 62, bought the Browns in 1961 and has since become one of the most powerful owners in the league, serving as the NFL's chief negotiator in contract talks with the television networks.
He is very much a hands-on owner, frequently visiting practices and consulting with coaches and team executives about such things as roster moves and game plans. Yet, he gives Coach Marty Schottenheimer the freedom and responsibility to make final decisions on most matters.
Modell is with the team in New Mexico this week, walking among the players as they practice at the
University of New Mexico's stadium.
It is that kind of close involvement that Modell says he is unable to give up.
"I did make a statement on John Madden's television program last March that I would seriously consider selling the club if we had another strike," Modell said. "That was maybe a little rash at the time. I'm enjoying being in the playoffs, and frankly I won't be satisfied until we win the Super Bowl. It's imperative to my own sense of well-being and accomplishment."
Modell's Brownis, led by running back Jim Brown, won the NFL championship in 1964 but have never been in a Super Bowl.
"I still have not won the big prize," Modell said. "We've won so many division titles and so many playoff games and still have not gotten to the crest."
That's not to imply that Modell would sell the team or turn it over to his son David, the Brown's.
marketing director, if Cleveland won the Super Bowl this year.
when I win a Super Bowl, I'm sure I'm going to come back and try to do like Pittsburgh and win two in a row," Modell said.
Modell surprised the Cleveland community at the end of this season's players' strike when he indicated that he thought David, 26, would become an excellent NFL owner someday.
since 2012, I always would say in an interview this week. "He's got a lot to learn and he's learning fast. But I could not become inactive and stay in the game. My nature doesn't allow me to play golf and go to the beach and watch the stock ticker. I would have to be active if I stay in the game. I would give more responsibility to David as he learned more.
"He loves the game passionately. But he realizes that I cannot be inactive. I kid him that with him around, I'll have to hire a food taster," he said.
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11B
University Daily Kansan / Friday, January 15. 1988
Message in a bottle found by schoolboys in England Note makes transatlantic trip in one month
The Associated Press
LONDON — A month after New York schoolgirl Kimberly Corbisiero stuffed a message in a bottle and tossed it in the Atlantic, three British schoolboys found it on the southern coast of England, the boys' teacher said Wednesday.
"That's a distance of roughly 3,000 miles," Darrant said, whose pupils found the bottle Sunday during a fossil-hunting expedition near Weymouth. "The bottle must have traveled 100 miles a day."
"It came over in record time," said science teacher Brian Darton of St. Edwards' school near Southampton.
Kimberly, 7, a third grader at P.S. 32 on Staten Island in New York City, threw the bottle into the ocean Dec. 10.
She kept the package light, and Darnton speculated the tar-covered plastic bottle rode high
- Kimberly Corbisiero New York third grader
If you find this letter please mail it back to me and you can keep the dollar. '
St. Edwards' pupils Michael Long, 11, Adriane Strange, 14, and Chris Head, 11, opened it to find a bitter, an envelope and a dollar bill.
enough in the waves to be carried by the westerly storms that blew across the Atlantic last month.
The letter was addressed "Dear Friend."
"If you find this letter please mail it back to me and you can keep the dollar," it said. "I am in a
contest to see if someone can find this letter. Please help me and tell me where you found my letter."
Darnton said the bottle's contents were bone-dry. He said the envelope carried a domestic U.S. Christmas stamp, possibly indicating Kimberly didn't expect a reply from overseas.
But the pupils at St. Edward's, a boarding school for 80 boys, sent her one through the regular mail.
"One of the boys expressed an interest in going to visit her," Darton said. "They've been very excited by this. The boys who found the bottle are little heroes."
But Kimberly won't get her letter back. It and the accompanying dollar were framed and hung in the school library "along with the fossils and everything else we gather in our travels." Darnton said.
The Associated Press
PARIS — The first French edition of the rock magazine Rolling Stone went on sale Wednesday, featuring a cover story looking back at the last 20 years — "From the Summer of Love to the Purple Decade."
Rolling Stone hits French stands
Publishers of Rolling Stone France said 60 percent of the new monthly was translated from the U.S. edition,
while 40 percent was original copy treating French music and culture
The title of the magazine is left in English, although the translation into French is used for an introductory section of notes and short news items.
The introduction of the magazine was eagerly awaited in France.
monthly, the newspaper Liberation described it as a magazine "that one
will look for on the newstand with the same curiosity as if one were greeting at the station a twin brother one had never met."
In a story Wednesday on the new
The first edition press run was 180,000, and the publishers said they hoped for steady sales of about 100,000.
USSR allows publication of 'Zhivago'
in the book, Pasternak recounts the experiences of a young doctor, Yuri Zhivago, during the turmoil of the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution and the repression and privations of the civil war that followed.
MOSCOW — A Soviet monthly has begun publishing in installments Boris Pasternik's masterwork "Doctor Zhivago," which had been banned since it won the 1958 Nobel Prize for literature.
The Associated Press
The literary monthly Novi Mir printed the first 102-page excerpt from the novel in its January edition, and is published by Soviet historian, Pritam S. Shachy.
Pasternak was forced by Soviet authorities to renounce the literary Nobel for "Doctor Zhivago," and was expelled from the official Writers Union.
In his commentary, Likhachew wrote that "Doctor Zhivago" is a "kind of autobiography" by Pasternak whose language and style harken back to the traditions of 19th-century Russian fiction.
He is one of the authors whose previously unpublished works are being released now under Mikhail S. Gorbachev's policy of glasnost.
Other long-banned books that have been published or soon will be published in the Soviet Union are Mikhail Bulgakov's "Heart of a Dog," Yevgeny Zamatyin's "We," and "Children of the Arbat" by Anatoly Rybakov.
In December, the weekly magazine Ogonygok gave its readers a sneak preview of "Doctor Zhivago" by printing four pages of excerpts recounting Zhivago's experiences on the war front during World War I.
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Friday, January 15, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
New plates less costly, officials say
By Julie Adam
By Julie Adam
Kansan staff writer
Three times in the last 10 years, Kansas has changed the design of its license plates. Now, the state has changed its system of identifying motor vehicles.
A bill passed by the Kansas Legislature in 1984 went into effect Jan. 1 when Kansas joined nearly 40 states that have the "SAM 123" system of license plate classification.
The SAM 123 system displays three random letters and three numbers instead of the old Kansas system of county abbreviations, a last-name initial and a number series.
Along with the new system, the Kansas license plates have a new look. The new plates have blue embossed letters and numbers against an off-white background. At the top, "KANSAS" is displayed in stencil-type letters. A decal in the upper left-hand corner designates the county, and the year of the tag's expiration appears in the upper right-hand corner. A brown sock of wheat separates the three letters and three numbers.
DG KANSAS 89
ABR 833
Dale Fulkerson/KANSAN
Decal stickers will be added to the plates
The new Kansas license plate.
The change was made primarily for
economic reasons, said Ken Clark, spokesman for the Division of Motor Vehicles.
The SAM 123 system will save the state money because the license plates are not as specialized as the old ones. The new plates can be issued on a statewide basis rather than by counties. And, because the new plates are now transferrable to any county in the state, inventories and surpluses are decreased, Clark said.
He said that by using the new plates, Kansas would be able to combine some vehicle classifications and cut those different classes from 17 to seven or eight. A decal will be used to distinguish between different classifications.
Under the old system, the 17 classifications included such things as personalized
tags and tags for disabled veterans, handicapped persons, and ex-prisoners of war.
Another reason for the change is that the letter and number combinations are easier for people to read and remember, which is especially important for law enforcement officials, Clark said.
Clark said that Kansas had obtained lists from other states that contain three-letter license plate combinations that might be offensive, undesirable or derogatory. The state will not issue word formations that appear on the "delete users."
"We have deleted anything that could possibly have a meaning relating to ethnic origins, animals or derogatory titles. We have taken great pains to avoid that.
Snow Hall renovation should be done by July
Phase one of the $7.23 million renovation of Snow Hall is on schedule and expected to be finished in July, said Larry Kietzman, owner of Kietzman Co. construction of Topeka.
By a Kansan reporter
Kietzman Co. is working on phase one of the project, which has a $1.2 million budget.
Keitzmian said the project would be finished during the first week in July, despite a two-week delay last fall. Before the construction company could start demolition, it had to remove asbestos from Snow.
Phase one of the two-phase plan involves installing a new elevator shaft and entry on the southwest side of the building and con- trols in the turbofan airwell and fire escape on the northeast side.
on rebuilding Snow's newer wing, which was built in 1961. The demolition and remodeling of the old wing, which was built in 1929, will take place in phase two.
That phase of the renovation concentrates
The renovations will allow Snow to house the mathematics and computer science departments. The biological sciences division, which now has some departments in Snow, will be moved to Haworth Hall.
Bidding for phase two of the project will begin early next fall, said Jim Modig, KU director of facilities planning.
"Funding has not changed." Modig said.
"We are still on a five-year, financial plan."
Phase two will involve demolition and remodeling of the first three floors in Snow,
Kietzmansaid his company planned to bid on phase two
Gift to boost geography studies
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The National Geographic Society celebrated its 100th birthday Wednesday by announcing its centennial gift to the nation: $20 million to help teach children about the planet Earth.
"Our kids don't know where they are. And if you don't know where you are, you're nowhere," said Gilbert M. Grosvenor, the society's president.
The money will go into a new foundation, and the society promised to kick in another $20 million if it can raise an equal amount in outside contributions for its cause of combating geographic illiteracy.
The president of the 10.5 million-member society said, "There is no more fitting way to begin our second century than by providing a permanent base of support for our geography activities.
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Street 1
2040 Heatherwood Dr. No. 203 Phone 913-843-4754
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Tuesday January 19, 1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 77 (USPS 650-640)
Enrollment jumps again
By Ric Brack
Kansan staff writer
Spring semester first-day enrollment is up 683 students from the same time last year, University officials said Friday.
"I'm not rejoicing over these numbers," said Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor. "We have been trying to control them to keep it within manageable bounds."
Total University enrollment is 25,246, which reflects an increase of 932 students at the Lawrence campus and a decline of 249 students at the College of Health Sciences and in off-campus courses. Total enrollment in spring 1987 was 24,563.
Enrollment on the Lawrence campus is 21,797, compared with 20,865 last year. Off-campus courses reported 53 fewer students - 1,290 compared with 1,343 last year.
The Med Center reported an opening enrollment of 2,159 students, compared with 2.355 last year.
But first-day enrollment statistics provide only a clue to what 20th-day enrollment will be. Bruce Lindvall, director of admissions, said the final figures could be as much as 20 percent higher than first-day figures. The final figures will be compiled Feb. 10.
"We continue to increase," said W. Wes Williams, dean of educational services. "We're getting pretty close to peak."
KU enrollment has been increasing for the past four years. Although the rate of increase has slowed, Ramaley and other administrators continue to look for solutions to problems caused by recent growth.
Long lines at enrollment, closed sections and crowded classes prompted the creation of an enrollment planning committee last spring. The committee recommended imposing admission application deadlines and stricter out-of-state requirements.
Ramaley said she reactivated that committee in December to look for solutions to problems caused by the growing enrollment.
Linda Monson, assistant director of admissions, said the new application deadlines were announced too late last year for many students and high school counselors to know about them. Consequently, enforcement then wasn't as strict as it will be this year, so it's hard to assess what
M,
We continue to increase.
We continue to increase. We're getting pretty close to peak.'
- W. Wes Williams dean of educational services
effect the measure will ultimately have.
Applicants from Kansas high schools who meet an April 1 application deadline are automatically accepted.
Entering freshmen from out-of-state must apply for fall admission by Feb. 1. They also must have a 3.0 grade point average, or a 2.0 GPA with a score of 23 or better on the ACT, or a 2.0 GPA and successful completion of the Kansas Board of Regents recommended courses.
Monson said it was possible that University officials would eventually impose ceilings on the numbers of students admitted to KU.
"I wouldn't be surprised if it came down to them giving us a number," Monson said.
Some consider the Regents' proposed qualified admissions plan to another solution. Under that plan, Regents schools would operate under rules similar to those implemented last fall for KU's out-of-state applicants.
The measure, which must be approved by the Legislature, was designed to confront the issues of uncontrolled enrollment and high school graduates who are unprepared for college. If passed, the policy would take effect in 1992.
Ramaley said she didn't think qualified admissions would be a quick fix for KU's enrollment woes.
But she said that she supported qualified admissions and that she thought the measure had a 50-50 chance of passing.
Williams said he doubted the Legislature would approve the proposed changes in admissions policies.
changes in admission.
"People are coming and not finding everything they hoped to find."
Williams said. He said he hoped enrollment would decrease without changing admission policies.
THE RADIO MUSEUM OF SOUTH AFRICA
Liz Tolbert, president of Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas, and James Mullins of the Alliance of Citizens for Traditional Values answer calls on a proposed amendment to the Lawrence civil rights ordinance on KJHK-FM's Jay-Talk 91.
KJHK airs gay rights discussion
By Joel Zeff
Kansan staff writer
On the day reserved for remembering Martin Luther King Jr. and his battles, victories and defeats, Liz Tolbert nervously tightened
See related story p. 5.
her grip on her papers, took a breath, and began to fight a battle of her own.
"There is a lot of empirical evidence that homophobia, which is the irrational fear of gay and lesbian people, is ever present in American society," Tolbert said.
"Yes, this is a problem, and yes, we need to change this." she said.
The ordinance now prohibits discrimination on race, sex, color, nationality, age, religion, ancestry or handicap.
Tolbert, president of Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas, was a guest on last night's KJHK broadcast of Jay-Talk 91. Tolbert and Jim Mullins, president of the Alliance of Citizens for Traditional Values, debated the city proposal to amend the Lawrence civil rights ordinance to prohibit discrimination against homosexuals.
debate. This is the last opportunity for public debate on the issue," said Russ Pitack, host of the show.
sarahs.
Prairie said last night's show received more callers than any other broadcast. Topics of caller's questions ranged from AIDS to what other cities has an ordinance similar to the Lawrence proposal.
"We're talking about basic rights." Mullins said. "Should moral characteristics decide who is going to teach your children? Should it decide who you're going to employ? I think it should."
Mullins said that people should not discriminate against
homosexuals, but that the law was not needed because there was no proof that discrimination against homosexuals existed in Lawrence.
"Homosexuality is a destructive lifestyle. They need a lot of help." Mullins said. "The Bible says in many, many places that homosexuality is a sin."
Tolbert, however, said the ordinance was a civil rights issue, not an issue of a special-interest group.
"Enough is enough," she said after the broadcast. "We are citizens too. We deserve the same rights that everybody else has."
Bill would pay student loans for teachers who stay in state
By Dayana Yochim
Kansan staff writer
Some education majors who go on to teach in Kansas would not have to pay back their student loans under a bill introduced in the Legislature last week.
week.
The bill, which was introduced by the legislative Educational Planning Committee on Jan. 11, would make the state pay for one-seventh of a student's loan for every year after graduation the student taught in Kansas.
However, the bill would not benefit all education majors. Only those who teach in "critically underserved fields" would be eligible for the loan program.
program.
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-
Lawrence and a member of the
House Committee on Education, said
For example, if a teacher who received the loan under the proposed program were to stay in Kansas and teach for three years, then he would be required to repay four-sevenths of the loan.
the committee decided that the state Board of Education would determine what those fields were. Science and math often are considered areas where there is a high demand for teachers, Branson said.
She said that if passed, the bill would be an ideal program to attract potential teachers.
"The committee has been struggling for several years trying to legislate an incentive program for teachers. In my opinion, teachers aren't paid well enough to keep them
in the teaching profession," Branson said. "Education is the most important part of economic development, and we want to attract the best and the brightest."
Jerry Bailey, associate dean of education, said the bill would help improve the education of students in underserved areas.
add yet more "if the state wants warm bodies in classrooms, there are enough." Bailey said. "School improvement is the key to quality education. This bill would lead to the improvement of the
quality of education in some districts, and the quality of our school."
Branson said that the committee had not yet determined whether the state or the student would pay the interest on the loans. Overall, she said she supported the plan.
"In my opinion, it's a good bill. It is palatable, something to provide incentive to prospective teachers," she said.
But Branson said she was skeptica
Sarah Folsom, a Hays junior and an education major, said that if the bill passed, it would help her financially because she planned to start her teaching career in Kansas.
about the number of years the bill would require students to teach in the state in order to pay off their loans.
I probably wouldn't consider it if I had my heart set on teaching in another state." Folsom said of the loan program. "Seven years is a long time."
Hart revisits hometown Ottawa; speaks at school, chamber dinner
By Brenda Finnell
Kansan staff writer
OTTAWA — Even though Gary Hart was not scheduled to arrive at Ottawa Middle School until 5 p.m., Irene Davis and Alice Woodsum came early. By 3:45 p.m., they had found two seats in the school's multi-purpose room.
per pal. Hart, candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination and former Colorado senator, was in Ottawa to meet the public at the school and to speak at the Chamber of Commerce annual banquet at Ottawa University's Mowbray Union.
By 5:15, about 400 others had joined Davis and Woodsum, Ottawa residents, when Hart and his wife, Lee, arrived. The crowd included about 100 reporters and photographers.
Before passing through the crowd to shake hands, sign autographs and greet people, Hart praised the audience members for coming to see him.
It is a tribute to the generosity and understanding, the basic decency of the American people," he said during his 30-second greeting at the
Hart withdrew from the race in May following publicity about a boat
trip in the Bahamas with Miami model Donna Rice. He re-entered the race Dec. 15.
At the Chamber of Commerce dinner later in the evening, Hart referred to his wife as someone who has "probably demonstrated more courage in the last few months than most people do in a lifetime."
Hart's aunt, Lucille Kristenson, an Ottawa resident, squeezed through the crowd to give her nephew a bug. Before Hart arrived at the school, Kristenson said people were broadminded enough to understand the Rice affair.
Hart said he and his family had their commitment to public service tested in recent months.
Although most of the crowd came because of enthusiasm for Hart's campaign, others came because of curiosity.
Hart was born and raised in Ottawa, a town 20 miles south of Lawrence with a population of about 11,000.
"He's going to win," she said.
carloy.
Bill Lewin, Mission graduate student,
said he came to see a political "happening."
happening. "It's exciting to see a presidential
election come to Kansas," he said.
But not everyone in Ottawa on Saturday supported Hart. Visible across the street from the middle school was a Bob Dole campaign office. Blue and yellow signs and bumper stickers supporting the Republican Kansas senator were dislawned on the windows and door.
In his banquet speech, Hart said he and Dole had spoken about the possibility of an all-Kansas election if they each won their party's nomination.
"I'd be glad to settle for that right now," Hart said. "Just so long as the winner was the one farthest east in Kansas."
Speaking to about 500 people at the banquet, Hart said U.S. government officials should recognize the needs of young people when preparing a budget.
"It is better to pay now for what we need than to borrow from our children." he said.
Hart's budget plan includes a "strategic investment initiative." This program would add spending to areas that aid the development of the human mind, which Hart called the United States' most vital asset.
See HART, p. 5, col.1
Contributions
Friends of
GARY HART
Joe Wilkins III/KANSAN
Presidential candidate Gary Hart signs autographs and talks with supporters in Ottawa.
2
Tuesday, January 19, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
REGIONAL
North Platea
49/19
Snow
Omaha
02/32
Snow
Rain
T-Storms
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Goodland
25/19
Snow
Hays
29/24
Snow
Salina
32/31
Ice
Topeka
37/38
Rain
Kansas City
42/40
Rain
Columbia
49/41
Rain
St Louis
46/43
Rain
Dodge City
29/21
Snow
Wichita
39/27
Rain
Chapman
42/38
Rain
Springfield
48/44
Thunderstorm
Forecast by Edward Levy
Temperatures are today's high and tonight's low.
Tulsa
38/38
Thunderstorm
WINTER FORECAST
From the KU Weather Service
Winter returns
HIGH: 39°
LOW: 37°
Cloudy today with rain likely and a high of
39. Rain changing to snow by midafternoon and continuing through Tuesday night. Lows around 22.
KEY
Rain T-Storms Snow Flurries Ice
REGIONAL
North Platte
49/19 Snow
Osmala
32/32 Snow
Goodland
25/19 Snow
Hayes
29/24 Snow
Salina
33/31 Rain
Topeka
37/36 Rain
Kansas City
42/40 Rain
Columbia
49/41 Rain
St Louis
46/43 Rain
Dodge City
28/21 Snow
Wichita
36/27 Rain
Charlotte
38/36 Rain
Jamestown
48/44 Thunderstorms
Forecast by Robert Lea
Temperatures are today's high and tonight's low.
6-DAY
TUE
Snow
29/22
HIGH LOW
WED
Cloudy
37/19
FRI
Cloudy
35/21
SAT
Sunny
29/12
SUN
Sunny
31/18
Amnesty International will meet at 7 p.m. today in the Browsing Room at the Kansas Union.
A study skills workshop is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. today in 300 Strong Hall. No registration is required.
■ KU Students Against Hunger will meet at 7 p.m. today in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union.
University Forum will be at 11:40 a.m. tomorrow at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. Tom Eblen, general manager and news adviser to the Kansan, will speak on "Ad Astra per Aspera. The Student Newspaper as Paradox." Call 843-4933 before noon today to make a luncheon reservation.
Correction
On Campus
Because of a reporter's error, Belva Wilson was incorrectly identified in Friday's Kansan.
Storm expected over Plains
A potent storm dumped up to 2 feet of snow in mountains in the West yesterday after hammering California's coast with 12-foot waves that destroyed a restaurant and washed away part of a hotel.
The Associated Press
Seven deaths in California were blamed on the storm, which set off on a track expected to send it over the Plains today.
More than 20 inches of snow fell at Monticello in southern Utah, with 18.8 inches at Durango, Colo., and 17 inches at Flagstaff, Ariz., the National Weather Service said. Up to 2 feet of snow fell in the Sierra Nevada in Northern California.
The heart of the storm was a low pressure system so strong that it sent barometers plunging to a reading of 29.25, the lowest level measured at Los Angeles in 100 years of recordkeeping, forecasters said. It created a series of hurricanes that coincided with a 7-foot high tide yesterday morning.
"This is the strongest storm so far this winter," said weather service meteorologist Larry Riggs at Flat-
Dense fog kept planes from landing or taking off from Chicago's O'Hare airport during the morning, and at least one person was killed when a private jet crashed in dense fog near Boston's Hobby Airport, authorities said.
Snow kept students from reaching class in some rural areas outside Flagstaff and in parts of southwestern Colorado and central Utah. Schools at Durango, Colo., closed because of snow for the first time in 20 years.
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THE PAUL TAYLOR DANCE COMPANY
Dazzling to the Eye... . . Humor and Dance to Delight All Your Senses
Presented by The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts
Concert Series
January 26, 1988
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reserved For reservations, call 913/864-3982
Public: $14 & $12; KU & K-12 Students: $7 & $6; Senior Citizens & Other Students: $13 & $11
Funded, in part, by the Kansas Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts through their affiliation with the Mid-America Arts Alliance, a regional arts organization; additional support provided by the KU Student
Funded, in part, by the Kansas Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts through their affiliation with the Mid-America Arts Alliance, a regional arts organization; additional support provided by the KU Student Activity Fee, Swarthout Society, and the KU Endowment Association; a University Arts Festival event.
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Kansan Fact: KU students spend over $4 million a month on discretionary items.
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This Plan of Accident and Health has been especially designed by the Administrator of the Plan for the University of Kansas. This is the Student Senate endorsed Insurance Program for all Kansas University students. Brochures and Enrollment Materials will be available at Spring Registration and at the Student Health Center.
Low Group Rates Spring Semester And The Remainder Of The Policy Year
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Student & Spouse ... $345.00
Student & Child(ren) ... $421.25
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It is still not too late to enroll for affordable comprehensive Health Insurance today!
The University of Kansas strongly encourages all students to have adequate health insurance coverage. Adequate insurance coverage will help to assure success in the academic community even though a student may have unexpected medical expense. The student insurance plan is designed to be mutually complimentary with the Student Health Center to assure the availability of good health care at the least possible cost.
Insurance Benefits for Sickness and Injury
★ This plan has a per insured, per policy year deductible of $100.00
★ All benefits become payable 80/20 up to the insured out-of-pocket maximum of $1,100, where by all eligible benefits become payable at 100% to the policy maximum of $1,000,000.00
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Important: Continuous Coverage
Students wishing to join the Plan, beginning with the Spring Semester, will have will January 30, 1988 to remit their premium and application card to G-M Underwriters, Inc. Students currently enrolled in the Fall Semester wishing to renew their coverage, will also have until January 30, 1988. Finally those students paying monthly will also have until January 30, 1988 to remit their premium and have continuous coverage beginnin January 1, 1988.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, January 19, 1988
Campus/Area
3
Policy will add hours for RAs Pay raises not part of plan
By Julie Adam Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
KU resident assistants will have to work three to five extra hours a week next semester because of a new policy enacted by the office of residential programs.
But despite the extra hours, RAs will not receive pay raises in their 10-month stipends of $825.
Jean Morrow, assistant director of residential programs, said the extra hours were added because of reevaluations of job descriptions done by her department last year. The results of the reevaluation were to add five RAs to McCollium Hall and to give RAs in each of the halls extra work hours in either the academic resource center or the front desks in the halls.
Another reason for the change, Morrow said, was that the department was trying to cut back on the number of hourly-wage employees and to make more traumatic resource centers in the residence halls.
In the smaller halls, Templin, Lewis, Hashinger and Joseph R. Pearson, RAS will be working three more hours a week than last semester. In the medium-sized halls, Ellsworth and Oliver, RAS will work four extra hours, and in the larger halls, McColm and Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin, RAS will work five extra hours a week.
Morrow said the extra hours were a balancing system, so that RAs in the smaller halls, the medium-sized halls and the larger halls would be working about the same number of hours and representing about the same number of residents.
"I want it to be fair in all the buildings. If you are an RA in McColum, what you do should be more similar than different than what you would do in other buildings," she
Mike White, resident hall director at McCollum, said the RAs weren't upset with the change after they understood how it worked.
White said that under the new policy, RAs in McCollim might have to work more desk or library time, but that it was fair because RAs in the smaller halls would work less library time but more duty time.
Morrow said adding staff to McColum also evened up the number of residents each RA had to represent in each hall. By adding the extra RAs, McColum's RAs represent about the same number of residents that RAs in other halls represent.
In the small halts, RAs now represent in about 60 residents each. In the medium-sized halls, they represent about 72 residents each. In GSP-Corbin, an RA represents about 44 residents, and in McCollum an RA represents about 56 residents. Before the addition of the five RAs to McCollum, an RA represented about 73 residents there.
The smaller halls have six RAs each, the medium-sized halls have nine RAs each, and the larger halls have 17 RAs each.
Morrow said she thought that most RAs didn't eem to mind the extra workload.
"No RAs have come to my office and placed a serious complaint or taken it up as an issue." she said.
Rod Lehnert, an RA at Templin, said he didn't think the extra hours bothered RAs in Templin.
"All RAS grumbled at first, but it has not been an inconvenience," he said
He said he thought the new policy worked well and was flexible because the RAS could choose times that would best fit into their schedules. Also, by working at the front desk and academic resource center, RAS would be able to meet more residents, Lehbertz said.
In Big Eight schools, KU is second to only Missouri in the amount of money RAS are paid for a 10-month period. Missouri pays its RAS an $853 stipend,
Morrow said that the added hours without extra pay was not unreasonable because KU RAs were well-paid compared to RAs at other universities.
Fred McEhleneh, director of residential programs, said even though RAs were not receiving cash for the extra hours worked, one must take into account that the price of living in the residence halls will increase $104 a year next semester. Since RAs receive room and board free, they are getting extra benefits that way, he said.
THE DREAM - MARTIN LUTHER K
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS JAN. 15, 1988
KU students and faculty march from the Chi Omega fountain to the Kansas Union in celebration of Martin Luther King Day. About 75 people, many singing "We Shall Overcome," participated in the march Friday.
Students celebrate King Day
By Stacy Foster
Kansan staff writer
For those who participated, Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday celebration was a success.
Webb carried the banner for the march from the Chi Omega fountain to the Kansas Union. About 75 people participated.
M. Wayne Webb, Black Student Union president, said he was glad to be involved in the events on campus Friday, which included a campus march and speeches at the Kansas Union.
See related story
"It was a true honor to be able to patient at this program for King," Webb said.
p. 9.
Del-Metri Bynum, Topeka senior, has participated in the campus march for the past four years.
Webb also played the piano for the Inspirational Gospel Voices, who sang at the program.
"I thought the march had a pretty good turnout," she said. "But a lot of people still don't understand the importance of it."
Bynum said she was thankful for King because his fight allowed her the opportunity to attend a school like the University of Kansas.
For the first time, classes at KU were canceled to honor King's birthday.
Vernell Spearman, director of minority affairs, said she was glad the holiday received so much attention and that so many people participated in activities.
Alderson Auditorium was almost full for the program Friday. Spearman also attended a program yesterday at the First Regular Missionary Baptist Church, 416 Lincoln St., which she said had a near-capacity crowd.
Spearman said she thought many people honored King's birthday and took time out to reflect on the things he espoused.
"I am absolutely jubilant that the state of Kansas made this a holiday, but I would like to see the holiday honored by all the schools: elementary, secondary and post-secondary." Spearman said.
Webb said he used his day off to attend a black history program in honor of King at his former high school. He said he thought the program was significant because Shawnee Mission Northwest High was a predominately white school. He said that about 10 students out of 475 in his 1985 graduating class were black.
"I really admire the school's effort because most of the white students are grossly uneducated about black history. If more people were educated there would be less racial tension," Webb said.
Program offers aid alternative
Higher wages, career experience waiting for studen
Kansan staff writer
By David Sodamann
There's gold lodged in the rocks atop Oread, and it's waiting for students who are willing to work for it.
The ore is the Kansas Career-Work Study program, a state-funded program designed to help students pay for their education by placing them in off-campus jobs. Students attending Board of Regents schools and Washburn University in Topeka are eligible to take part in the program, even if they don't qualify for other types of financial aid.
Julie Cooper, assistant director of financial aid, said that as many as 300 KU students could earn money for school through the program.
However, only 79 students now participate in the program, and some businesses have dropped out of the program because they haven't been able to find the student-workers
55 businesses
Cooper said that about 55 businesses employed KU students through the program and that five had dropped out since July.
Chris Donald, graduate student in charge of the program, said lack of publicity could be one reason why few students took advantage of the program. The program was established in 1984, but it hasn't received the
H
However, only 79 students now participate in the program,and some businesses have dropped out of the program because they haven't been able to find the student-workers they need.
attention it deserves until now, he said.
Also, potential participants may be intimidated because of the process of determining eligibility, Donald said.
Oualifications
To qualify for the program, a student must be a legal Kansas resident, be enrolled as a full-time student, have a 2.0 grade point average and show financial need. Both undergraduate and graduate students may participate.
To determine need, the amount of aid a student receives is subtracted from the average cost of attending KU. The less aid that is subtracted from the cost, the higher a student's need for aid is under the state program. Donald said.
incomes may prevent them from being eligible for traditional aid programs are the students most likely to qualify for the Kansas Career-Work-Study program.
Students participating in the Career-Work-Study program must first find a job, either with an employer who already has agreed to take part in the program, or one willing to join. The employer must be based in Kansas and abide by federal nondiscrimination requirements.
Therefore, students whose parents' high
State reimburses
Once the student has a job with a participating employer, the state reimburses the employer 50 percent of the student's wages. For example, an employer paying a student $6.70 an hour gets back $3.35 for each hour the student works.
By reimbursing employers, the state makes it possible for students to earn significantly larger amounts than they may otherwise be able to do. Also, it makes it possible for employees who can't afford high wages to attract good help.
In addition to earning money, students taking part in the program can gain experience that may help them after graduation. Donald said some architecture and engineering students, for example, were getting experience with computer-aided design, something that isn't taught on campus.
Student lobbyists planning to press lawmakers today
By Jill Jess
Kansan staff writer
A mass of students should impress Kansas legislators today. Martie Aaron says.
Aaron, director of the KU chapter of Associated Students of Kansas, said she expected about 250 students from the University of Kansas and other Board of Regents schools today at lobby sessions with the 165 legislators to promote the Margin of Excellence proposal.
"Many of them in 20 years as state legislators have never seen a student." Aaron said last night at a training session for the student lobbyists, most of whom are members of the Higher Education Rescue Operation. "We're going to see all of them."
Margin of Excellence is the Regents' three-year proposal to add $47 million to the RBC fund.
The training session included instructions from Aaron on how to lobby, what to say and how to answer potential questions. State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, also spoke to the students and posed as a representative in Western Kansas for a mock lobby session.
Winter also said that the number of student lobbists should be an effective tool.
"Students are the consumers. If everything's fine, the consumer doesn't say anything. If the consumer is raising a noise,
there must be something wrong," he said.
The lobbyists have split into groups of three to five people. Ideally, Aaron said, students from Kansas will meet with the senator or representative from their hometown, and those who are unable to meet with their legislator should write a note to their senator and representative expressing their support for Margin of Excellence. Appointments have been scheduled with every legislator, beginning at 8 a.m.
Gov. Mike Hayden will address the student lobbyists at 11 a.m.
"There are going to be about 50 chairs and about 250 students," Aaron said. "It's going to be great."
She said that before Hayden arrived the lobbyists should be quiet and cheer loudly when the governor came out.
"When he walks out there we want him to think he's at a pep rally and he's the home team." Aaron said. "We want him to call up his top budget analyst and say, 'We've got to find more money for these kids. They love me!'"
Hayden's budget proposal includes a 5 percent increase for faculty salaries and a 4 percent increase for student and classified employees, but does not include Margin of Excellence requests for program enhancements, such as more money for KU libraries.
Art museum gets new technologies for its anniversary
BAYLEY EDUCATIONAL CENTER
Bv Michael Carolan
The laser light show, orchestrated to the music of classical greats such as Mozart, Copland and Stravinsky, kicked off the 10th anniversary celebration of the Helen Foresmanuseum of Art on Saturday afternoon.
Kansan staff writer
Piercing beams of emerald light dance wildly above the audience. Blue, green, red and yellow prisms of light spin at speeds no human eye can detect, and 250 people applaud the vibrant ending of Beethoven's "Fifth Symphony."
About 3,000 people celebrated from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. with cake, clowns, laser shows, computer-animated films, computer graphics presentations and a comprehensive display of the museum's art, said Ann El-Omiami, curator of education at the art museum.
Curtis Barnehill, Topeka resident, and his children, Jenny and David, ages 9 and 6, look at a computer exhibit at Spencer Museum of Art's 10th anniversary celebration.
Also, almost 2,000 people participated in the evening's events, which reopened at 9 p.m. and included live music by the Homestead Greys, bringing total attendance to about 5,000.
El-Omami said the museum
expected only 1,600 people to attend. She said that she and the museum's staff were surprised at the turnout and that several hundred more schedule fliers had to be conjoined.
The $4.6 million art building, designed by Kansas City architect Robert Jenks, opened January 15, 1978 and soon became one of the top university art museums in the country. El-Omami said.
"We wanted to bring in new technologies in art," she said. "We wanted to have a theme which was educational." She considers these new technologies art?"
Swirling patterns of spheres, cubes and other three-dimensional shapes filled the screen in colors transforming from yellows to blues to greens. As the music rose to the end, a flash of light flooded the auditorium and green streams of light raced overhead.
Another laser light show, set to the British rock group Pink Floyd's "Dark Side of the Moon," had four shows. Lines formed outside the museum's auditorium 40 minutes before each show.
"It was illuminating, enlightening," said Dan Long, Lawrence graduate student. "I really liked all of the colors and the varying designs on the screen."
At one point during the 45-minute show, a figure of a woman appeared and flowed across the screen, synchronized with the music.
The laser show titled "Son of a Well Tempered Laser," which was set to classical music, drew positive reaction to the music and the laser art.
That figure was created by rapidly moving one thin beam of light around the form of the figure on the screen, said Donna Webster, laser artist for Laser Systems Development Corp. of Colorado. Although the figure of the woman was prerecorded on special video tape, Webster said she designed most of the show.
"There's an aesthetic to it," she said. "It's new technology as an art form because everything we do, we create."
About 10 animated films using computer-generated images, hand-drawn figures and a process using clay figures were shown throughout the afternoon and evening.
The films were on loan from Canyon Cinema of San Francisco and the University of California in Los Angeles.
A film titled "Closed Mondays" used claymation, which involves clay figures moved inch by inch in reality but appearing to come to life on the screen. In the film, a drunken clay
man moved about an art museum while the paintings and sculpture transformed into fantastic creatures.
Another film, titled "Swiss Army Knife with Rats and Pigeons," featured the painting "Mona Lisa" cut up and rearranged using both computer-generated animation and hand drawings directly on the surface of the film.
In the Twentieth Century Gallery, Tim Forcade, a graphics application specialist with Designlabs of Lawrence, was taking video images of people, rearranging them and printing them out. High resolution graphics enabled him to create photographic quality images, he said.
---
"I think the computer is just another tool of art," he said.
"Whether you have a paint brush or a stick with an electronic tip, you use it to create."
The computer presentations resumed at 9 p.m., and at 9:30 p.m. the Homestead Greys, a Lawrence band, cranked out dance music in the Spencer Museum Central Court.
4
Tuesday, January 19, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
City should support move to end gay discrimination
It's really just a case of simple justice. An easy choice between banning discrimination or endorsing it.
The Lawrence City Commission tonight will consider amending the city's human rights ordinance to prohibit discrimination against homosexuals. The ordinance presently prohibits housing, job and governmental discrimination based on sex, race, religion, national origin, age, ancestry or handicap.
The city Human Relations Commission, which recommended the amendment, reported at last week's commission meeting that discrimination against homosexuals does occur in Lawrence. Several members of Lawrence's gay community backed that report and also charged that gays in Lawrence had received death threats.
The commission cannot pretend that discrimination against nomosexuals doesn't exist. History, common sense and law have shown that such a conclusion would be unethical evidence.
The commission should pass the amendment. To do otherwise would be a gross act of intolerance and bigotry.
human relations report should be more than enough evidence And the commission cannot ignore the fact that opponents at last week's meeting didn't deny the discrimination reports. Instead, they argued that the amendment should be defeated on a moral and religious basis. In essence, they asked the commission to endorse and impose their religious beliefs on the city of Lawrence.
This is a civil rights issue. The commission must defend the rights of all people — gay, heterosexual, white, black or blue. Everyone has a right to work and live where he wants.
Todd Cohen for the editorial board
New plates need a facelift
The new Kansas license plates are attracting attention for one reason - they are incredibly unly.
These new and "improved" plates with the three-letter three-numeral numbering system are showing up all over Lawrence.
The design of the new plates includes stencil-type lettering of the word "Kansas," designed by the state Department of Commerce, formerly the Kansas Department of Economic Development. The plates also feature a piece of wheat and a dark blue band across the top.
The new SAM 123 numbering system will reduce the number of classifications of license plates and make it easier to distribute the plates between counties. But the trademark county classification will be missed, despite the fact that county initials appear on a microscopic sticker in the upper left corner.
The plates look like a design-by-committee project, trying to get everyone's ideas into the design.
Well, anything to make things easier on the state.
Kansans are sentenced to five years with these license plates. With any luck, the next license plate design committee will work a little harder to give Kansans something they can be proud of.
Jody Dickson for the editorial board
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board
Other Voices
Our own, our native son, a president! Ah, to be close to the heady wine of ultimate power.
The Wichita Eagle-Beacon, usually a model of rationality in its editorial pages, endorsed Bole Dole for president six months ago. Oh, but why not? Think of the invitations to the White House. Isn't Dole more likely to allow chats and interviews with the tamed dogs of the Kansas press than those who growl at him?
Now news has arrived that Steve Rose, publisher of the Sun Newspapers, has been named as one of the initial members of the Johnson County Steering Committee of the Dole for President Campaign.
Should Sun readers worry that their local paper will be objective in its coverage of Bob Dole?
Oh, and Steve Rose is also president this year of the Suburban Newspaper Association. Is it a conflict of interest for him to take official part in trying to get Dole elected? Oh well, that's for the Suburban Newspaper Association to decide. Steve is beyond such a decision because the lure of filing the string of presidential power through the ring in his nose is too strong to resist.
Bob Dole might go on to be a great president. One of his first tests would be to distinguish valued advisers from boot-ly scaphycons.
Olathe Daily News Olathe, Kan
News staff
Alison Young...Editor
Todd Cohen...Managing editor
Rob Knapp...News editor
Alain Player...Editorial editor
Joseph Rebello...Campus editor
Jennifer Rowland...Planning editor
Anne Luscombe...Sports editor
Stephen Wade...Photo editor
Richard Stewart...Graphics editor
Tom Eben...General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Kelly Scherer...Business manager
Clark Massad...Retail sales manager
Brad Lenhart...Campus sales manager
Robert Hughes...Marketing manager
Kurt Messersmith...Production manager
Greg Knipe...National manager
Kris Schorno...Traffic manager
Jennie Brown...Classified manager
Jeanne Hlowe...Sales and marketing adviser
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Letters, guest columns 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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Martin Luther King, Jr.
Jan.15,1929-Apr.4,1968
The only way the dream will die, is if we allow it to.
.
KLINE
Gucci introduces chic to banking
Swans and sunrises might be pretty, but designer checks bounce
A Chicago bank has hired a creature named Gucci to design art new checks and checkbooks.
Gucci, who is famous for designing women's shoes and purses, has created checks with swans, daisies, mist-shrouded trees, rippling water, a sunrise and even a seagull against a lavender background. Gucci is not the hairy-chested type.
The bank thinks this will attract new customers. Maybe it will, but I won't be one of them.
Banks should be serious. My attitude toward them is the same as that of Mrs. Grobnik, who was Slats Grobnik's mother. "A good bank," she always said, "should look like a jail, except the bank's walls should be thicker."
Whenever she made a deposit — and she never made withdrawals — Mrs. Robnik would walk around the lobby to see if they had hired any new guards. If she found one, she would ask him:
"Are you a good shot?"
Are you a good shot?
They always said yes, so she'd ask.
They always said yes, so she'd ask:
They always said yes, so she asks
"How many people have you shot?"
How many people have you met?
If they hadn't shot anybody, she would go to the chief cashier and ask why they were hiring inexperienced people.
Sometimes she would purposely include a half-dollar in her deposit. If the cashier didn't bite it, she would triumphantly report him to the vice president.
Once in a while, she would set the alarm clock for 1 a.m. Then she'd get up and walk to the bank and rap on the door. When the night guard peered out, she'd say: "Remember, no sleeping."
After using the same bank for 24 years, she abruptly closed her account and put her money somewhere else. The reason was that a cashier had grown a mustache.
Mike
Royko
Syndicated Columnist
"The next thing," she said, "is he will take my money and run away to Las Vegas."
I'm sure that Mrs. Grobnik would not have felt comfortable with Gucci's checkbooks. In fact, she never in her life used a checkbook. She thought that anybody who would put their money in a basket or put a nickel writing a check to get some of it, should be put away by his relatives for his own good.
Mrs. Grobnik finally stopped dealing with banks entirely when she found out that they loaned money. She had always thought they just stored it away. It was her opinion that anybody who borrowed money did so because they didn't have enough of their own, which means they were bums. And she didn't want to trust her money to an institution that would loan it out to bums.
I'm not quite as conservative as Mrs. Grobnik about such matters, but the business of the Gucci checks would make me nervous.
For one thing, his name isn't just plain Gucci. No Italian mother is going to send a boy into the world with no more of a handle than "Gucci." An Italian priest baptize a baby as plain "GUCCI."
Yet, when I called the bank and asked them
what Gucci's full name was, they said they didn't know.
Maybe being just Gucci is enough for the fashion circles in New York, but a bank ought to get a guy's first name before they do any kind of business with him. If they hire somebody who goes around saying, "I am Gucci," they might decide to lend money to people who walk in and say, "I am Smith — give me a thou."
I am not opposed to adding a little art to checks. But it should be something serious. When a person writes a check he shouldn't think about daisies, seagulls, ripping waters, sunrises, trees and other pleasant things. He is spending money, and he should think dark thoughts.
If there are going to be daisies on the check, they should be surrounding a gravestone with his name on it. If there are going to be rippling waters, a hand should be sticking out of the water. If there is a tree, it should have a noosed rope attached to a limb.
I'd like to check checkbooks with pictures of a turnip, with a drop or two of blood oozing out of it.
Or maybe a bleak, rickety old building with a sign over the door that says: "Poor House."
Many men would like checks for their wives that would bear a drawing of a widow in black, sitting at a lawyer's desk, with the lawyer saying: "Well you can always sell the furniture."
Married men could use personalized checks with a snappy slogan across the top. Maybe something like: "Bartender: Please don't cash this. Signed, His children."
Mike Royko is on vacation. While he is away, we are reprinting some of his favorite columns. This first appeared June 18, 1970.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
AIDS calls for realism
In the Jan. 13 issue of the Kansan, in an article titled "Condom handouts attract attention," Don Hermesch of the Great Commission Students organization stated that "There are some sincere people in Senate, but there are
homosexuals in Senate and on the task force. What we have is a homosexual response to the AIDS issue."
as a member of Senate, and one who voted in favor of the programs, I would like to respond. In fact, what we have is a responsible program instituted by concerned individuals dealing with the issues it is issue. What Don Hemesch and his group of intellectual midgets are dealing with is unclear.
Father Vince Krische of the St. Lawrence Catholic Center stated that the program "...promotes promiscuity and does not say anyone should be a threat to people about AIDS, not give out condoms."
Vince's point that handing out condoms says
nothing about morals is absolutely correct. There is no link between condoms and intimacy. His statement regarding education is right in line with his church's doctrine, which, in effect, educates people about AIDS but does nothing to deal with it responsibly.
In other words, Don and Vince preach death from their self-righteous little pedestals.
Thank God that there are people, homosexual or not, who are willing to live in the 20th century. If Don and Vince ran the show, we would all be well-informed on but the fast track toward a slow and painful end.
Jon Gregor Leavenworth junior
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, January 19, 1988
5
Local Briefs
PROFESSOR GETS AWARD: Marc Asher, professor of orthopedic surgery at the College of Health Sciences, is the first recipient of the Blount Service Award, given by the Scoliosis Research Society. The award was given for his dedication to community service in the detection and treatment of scoliosis.
Asher earned a medical degree from KU in 1962 and returned to the college in 1972 as an assistant professor of orthopedic surgery. He serves on the editorial board of the Journal of Pediatric Orthopedic Surgery and is a consultant reviewer for the Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery.
VETERANS' HEALTH CLINIC: The Colmery-O'Neil Veterans Administration Medical Center will sponsor a walk-in screening clinic from 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. today at the American Legion, W. Sixth St. The clinic is open to all veterans. A medical team will provide screening for dietary and general health problems and
will be available to answer questions about veterans' benefits and services.
DEMOCRATS TO MEET: The Kansas Young Democrats will hold their first meeting of the spring semester at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Governor's Room in the Kansas Union. For more information, call Joe Orrick at 841-1051.
SKI TRIP COMING: Student Union Activities is sponsoring a spring break ski trip to Winter Park, Colo., from March 12 to 18. The trip costs $335 and includes five nights' lodging, round trip bus transportation and four days of lift tickets. KU faculty, staff and their guests may sign up at the SUA office in the Kansas Union through Jan. 26.
BUSINESS GROUP MEETING: Delta Sigma Pta, a professional business fraternity at KU, will provide information about the organization for business or pre-business majors from 9 a.m. to 5
p. m. today and tomorrow on the first floor of Summerfield He.ll.
The first informational meeting for initiates will be at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Jayhawk Room.
**LIBRARY TOURS START:** Watson Library will conduct orientation tours Jan. 19, 20. The 45-minute tours are sponsored by the Reference Department and will be conducted at 1:30 p.m. Mondays and Wednesdays and at 9:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays.
Printed, self-guided tours are available any time at the Watson Reference Desk. Tours and presentations for classes can be arranged by calling 864-3347.
NEW WESCOE HOURS: Wescoe Cafeteria has changed its hours to 7 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday.
Hart
Continued from p.1
"We build an MX missile, then we can't put that money into our schools," he said. "We build a B-1 bomber, then we can't put that money into our hospitals and our care for the elderly."
Hart said one goal of the United States should be to create the best educational system in the world and make it available to all young people in the next 10 years. He also said he favored giving all workers access to job training.
Monica Kelley, Lawrence High School senior, saw Hart at the middle school and said she was impressed with his concern for young people in the education. She said Hart's ideas could help her succeed in the future.
Hart said his plan would reduce the
federal deficit to less than $41 billion by 1993, a reduction of more than $108 billion.
Hart's budget plan includes an increase in taxes on cigarettes and alcohol, a 1-percent increase in the corporate income tax rate and a proposal to tax capital gains at death, except for family-owned businesses, the would not increase taxes for low- and moderate-income citizens.
Raising revenue through taxes is necessary, Hart said.
"If anybody comes through this town, Democrat or Republican, and tells you they're going to balance the federal budget without raising any revenue, I say you better put your hand on your wallet."
"If the administration only knew what the people of Ottawa understood 50 years ago and today, our would indeed be solvent," he said.
Bridget Jeffery Todd, Lawrence graduate student and a political science teaching assistant, was asking the people of Ottawa on Saturday to sign a petition to make HART a candidate for the March 19 Kansas caucus.
to spend money, Hart said. He said his parents told him, "You have to pay as you go."
Potential candidates either must pay $751 to the state Democratic committee or must submit 1,000 signatures of registered Democrats by Feb. 1 to be considered an official caucus candidate.
Ottawa was where he learned how
formed campus Hart support group that is applying to become an official campus organization.
Todd also is involved in a newly-
Todd Allen, the support group's president, said he would like group members to create student interest in Hart and to get people to campaign for him on campus.
Hart supporters were at the Kansas Union last week to collect voter signatures.
Donald Strole, Kansas coordinator for the Hart campaign, said about 200 signatures had been collected in the Lawrence area by Friday.
Todd said she estimated 75 people signed the petition in Ottawa Saturday.
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"I suspect that if the ordinance is passed, a referendum vote is more likely." Constance said.
"I think the commission has listened very carefully to the issue. We've taken a week to read letters and research more information to make a fair and honest decision," he said.
If you need abortion or birth control services, we can help.
ing would be a discussion session for the commission and would end in a vote.
Constance said that either way the vote went, he wouldn't be surprised if there was eventually a referendum on the issue.
Commissioner Bob Schumm said that as with any controversial issue with large numbers of proponents, he would be very important that the beginnees be well airled.
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Bus, shuttle might replace Secure Cab
Senate seeks cab plan
Next week the Transportation Board will meet with Charles Bryan, coordinator of KU on Wheels; Robert Forbes, president of Corporate Coach of Lawrence Inc.; and Chris Ogle, president of the Lawrence Bus Company, to get estimated costs of replacement services.
Commissioner Dennis Constance said commission members had not discussed the issue or information that was presented at last week's meeting. He said that tonight's meet-
Vote expected on gay discrimination
The proposal, a recommendation from the city's Human Relations Commission, would amend the 1983 human rights ordinance to prohibit discrimination based on sexual orientation. The ordinance currently pro poses the rule based on race, sex, religion, nationality, gender, ancestry or handicap.
"We need to get figures on paper." Kerr said. "Right now we're looking for a contract to get us through the end of the fiscal year."
fare rose from $2.50 to $4.
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Options to replace the canceled Secure Cab program include a plan that would combine a night bus service with a van shuttle from living groups to taverns, said Matthew Kerr, Student Senate treasurer.
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After a heated public debate last week on the proposal to prohibit discrimination against homosexuals, the Lawrence City Commission plans to close tonight's meeting to public forum and vote on the issue.
The Student Senate may provide a bus and van service to replace the Secure Cab program.
Secure Cab was canceled last month because the Union Cab Co.
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6
Tuesday, January 19, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Ohio plant leaks uranium powder
No danger outside plant, officials say
The Associated Press
CINCINNATI — About 200 pounds of a heavy, radioactive powder containing uranium leaked early yesterday from a rooftop vent at a federally owned uranium-processing plant, officials said.
Contamination from the low-level radioactive substance appeared limited to the immediate area of the building from which it leaked, and monitors found no trace of the substance outside the 1,050-acre Feed Materials Production Center, said spokesman Pete Kelley of Westinghouse Materials Co. of Ohio.
The company is under contract to operate the plant for the U.S. Department of Energy. The plant, 18 miles
northwest of Cincinnati, processes uranium for use in nuclear reactors and weapons.
Officials cordoned off the immediate area. There were no injuries, Kelley said.
Plant officials are investigating the cause of the leak.
Westinghouse classified the incident as an unusual event, which means there is a potential plant safety problem, Kelley said. There was no danger of an off-site radioactive or chemical release. he said.
in the chemical refinery building, residues containing uranium are recycled for eventual reprocessing into uranium metal.
Easier parole unlikely
TOPEKA — The state faces a prison overcrowding crisis, but the Legislature probably won't react by liberalizing the parole system, a state official and chairman of the Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee said yesterday.
State Sen. Ed Reilly, R-Leavenworth, said his committee probably would discuss endorsing legislation that would allow the Kansas Parole
tough policy limiting the parole of Class A and B felons.
A Class a felony is a crime punishable by death or life imprisonment; a Class b felony is punishable by a minimum jail sentence of five years, said Patrol Officer Eric Johnson of the Lawrence Police Department.
The Associated Press
Reilly's committee is scheduled to discuss proposals related to the parole board when it meets today.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, January 19, 1988
7
NationWorld
More U.S. aid to contras to be opposed, Ortega says
The Associated Press
MANAGUA, Nicaragua — President Daniel Ortega suggested yesterday his Sandinista government would take tough measures if Congress approved new aid for the contras.
His comments came after the Sandinista government released seven opposition leaders yesterday and he promised over the weekend to restore civil liberties. The Interior Minister said over the weekend, had been accused of plotting actions with the contra rebels.
Ortega, in a rally in Ciudad Dario, 55 miles northeast of Mangua, the capital, said approval of more U.S. aid to the rebels "would give the Nicaraguan government a free hand to take the necessary measures to defend the sovereignty, self-determination and independence of our country."
He did not provide details, but said more aid would be "a historic error by the United States and the American Congress."
The White House said Sunday that President Reagan would request more aid for the rebels despite Ortega's announcements.
The administration had postponed plans to ask Congress for $270 million for an 18-month period for the Contras when congressmen said it would interfere with a regional peace plan.
Airliner crashes in China; 108 dead
BELING — A domestic airliner crashed in southwestern China, killing all 108 people aboard, the official Xinhua news agency reported early today.
The Associated Press
agency said.
Chinese civil aviation officials reported no Americans aboard the plane, said Julian Pendergrass, consul at the U.S. Embassy.
Argentine rebel colonel surrenders
The Ilyushin IL-18 plane, on the way from Beijing to Chongqing in Sichuan province, crashed about five miles from the Chongqing airport at 10:15 p.m. Monday.
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — About 2,000 loyalist soldiers stormed an army compound yesterday and forced the surrender of a rebel colonel who had held the camp for three days with the support of 100 followers, officials reported.
The surrender after a three-hour battle at the Monte Caseros camp in northeastern Argentina ended a military crisis that began when Lt. Col. Aldo Rico, who also led a rebellion last April, escaped from house arrest Friday, shortly before he was to be
The Associated Press
Rico, 43, turned himself over to the loyalist troops of the Third Infantry Brigade, said Gen. Humberto Ferrucci, commander of the Fifth Army Corps.
Jose Ignacio Lopez, spokesman for President Raul Alfonsin, said Rico was put in the custody of Gen. Ramon Talavera and the unit in which he led the rebellion.
The Civil Aviation Administration of China said an engine defect cause the crash of Flight 4146, which carried a crew of 10 and 98 passengers. Four of the dead were foreigners, the
On Saturday, Rico turned up at Monte Caseros, declared himself in rebellion and seized the compound with the aid of 100 other officers. After the seizure, at least six other insurrections were reported in other parts of the country.
In April 1987, Rico led a revolt demanding an end to the prosecution of senior officers accused of human rights abuses during eight years of military rule that ended in 1983.
A lieutenant and a sergeant were reported seriously wounded when a truck taking troops to the battle hit a mine planted by rebels. They were
taken to a military hospital in Buenos Aires. Casualty figures from the battle were not available.
9 125 MILES BRAZIL
Soldiers rush rebel camp
Monte Caseros
ARGENTINA
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KANSAN Knight-Rider Graphic
News Roundup
OFFICIAL LEAKED INFORMATION A U.S. government official leaked secret information about American Telephone & Telegraph Co.'s bids for $55 million in telecommunications contracts to at least two competing phone companies, a Senate committee investigating the procurement said yesterday. The official was reassigned to a government position outside the telecommunications area.
MEESE ACCUSED A third regional Bell phone company said yesterday that top company officials met with Attorney General Edwin Meese III while his financial manager held some $10,000 worth of his telephone stock. Meese's activities in telecommunications matters in 1985 and 1986 when he held stock in the telephone industry are being investigated for possible criminal wrongdoing by an independent counsel as part of a conflict-of-interest probe.
FILIPINO ELECTIONS Early returns today showed Philippines president Corazon Aquino's choices leading several key races in regional elections marred by the killing of 87 people, including 39 candidates, and numerous other violent incidents. About 80 percent of the 27 million eligible voters cast ballots yesterday.
SPACE SHUTTLE DELAYS Senior astronauts at the Johnson Space Center in Houston are worried about flaws found in a solid rocket booster tested last month and are pushing this week for an additional mandatory full-scale test-firing before the space shuttle is cleared to fly again.
EQUAL TIME DISPUTED A bitter dispute between Congress and the Federal Communications Commission over broadcast policy may squuch NBC-TV's request to suspend the equal time law for this year's presidential campaign. NBC had asked Congress to lift the requirements of the equal time law to "encourage broadcasters to provide more coverage of the political year."
WAR CRIMINAL DIES Andrija Artukovic, who was invoking of ordering thousands of prisoners killed in World War II, has died in a Yugoslavia jail at the age of 88. it was reported yesterday. Known as the "Butcher of the Balkans," Artukovic had been sentenced to death by firing squad in May 1986, but his execution had been postponed indefinitely because of his ill health.
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Tuesday, January 19, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Officials halt enrollment in administration major
By Kevin Dilmore
Kansan staff writer
University of Kansas students can no longer declare a major in personal administration because of a moratorium on new enrollment announced by University officials last week.
Mel Dubnick, associate professor of public administration, said that as a result of a Board of Regents program review, the Regents ruled that the personnel administration program, as it is now organized, should be discontinued.
The Regents also told the University to stop accepting new majors in the program by fall 1989.
"Given key retirements and the fact that we have no additional resources to maintain the program, we simply set the moratorium right now." Dubnick said.
"Our first concern is that all of the students currently enrolled in the program be allowed to complete degrees in a timely fashion," he said.
There are about 630 students enrolled as personnel administration majors.
"Our second concern is to see what possible future there is for a course of study."
Carothers said a University task force was considering three options.
'O'
Our first concern is that all of the students currently enrolled in the program be allowed to complete their degrees in a timely fashion.'
sciences
— James B. Carothers associate dean of liberal arts and
The first option would completely revise the major within its present structure.
The second option would establish personnel administration as a secondary major. A secondary major is a major that students can declare only if they are seeking a degree in another field, such as business.
The third option would create within the traditional departments a new program that emphasized the goals of personnel administration classes.
The personnel administration program is an interdisciplinary program offered by the departments of communication studies, political science, psychology, public administration and sociology. The chairmen of the five departments now oversee the University task force.
The Regents have asked the University to present its suggestions for the personnel administration program by fall 1988.
Tall of a team.
"I expect to have the task force's results sometime in the spring," Carothers said.
James Drury, professor of political science and head of the personnel administration program, said the moratorium would help those already enrolled by decreasing the demand for classes.
"We are not going to pull the rug out from under the students we already have in the major," he said.
Dubnick, also a member of the task force, said he could not predict the future of the program.
"The key is resources," he said.
"Right now, we have a 635-major program on the backs of faculty who are hardy even compensated for it."
Drury said he didn't think the Regents should have discontinued the program.
"The poor reputation is in the eye of the beholder. People who criticize because of so-called pud courses ought to do something about the courses themselves, not the program." Drury said. "This way, I think they are throwing the baby out with the bath water."
Michele Holland, Shawnee senior and personnel administration major. said she was disappointed that personnel administration majors had not been notified earlier.
"Supposedly, they are going to send us all letters about what they are doing to the program," she said.
Chancellor among leaders seeking candidates' commitment
BASSOULET
Commission stresses education
As higher education battles are being fought in Kansas political circles, Chancellor Gene A. Budig and other college and business leaders are calling on 1988 presidential candidates to affirm their commitment to higher education on the national level.
Kansan staff writer
The Commission on National Challenges in Higher Education, formed in 1986 by the American Council of Education, released a memorandum last month to the presidential candidates recommending solutions to some of the problems facing higher education, Charlie Saunders, senior vice president of the council, said
but members of the commission were meeting with the individual candidates.
Budig, who is a member of the 33-member commission, met with Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole and Dole's wife, Elizabeth, during winter break. Budig said Dole was receptive to the needs of U.S. education.
Saunders said the commission's report was sent to all the presidential candidates, and the candidates were asked to respond to the report. He said it was too early for a response,
"I believe Senator Dole will be supportive of many of the commission's recommendations," Budig said Thursday.
The commission's memorandum to the next president recommends:
■ Increases in the study of foreign languages and cultures and in student and faculty exchange programs.
■ Initiating programs to recruit more teachers in all levels of education, and to improve training of the teachers. An emphasis is placed on scientific and technological teachers.
Expanding federal support for graduate student assistantships and faculty research. In addition, the commission recommends supporting the construction and renovation of research and teaching facilities through matching grants and low-interest loans by several federal agencies.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, January 19, 1988
9
Civil rights leader lauded Martin Luther King Jr. remembered on holiday
The Associated Press
Arizona marchers called for the restoration of the Martin Luther King Day holiday and Philadelphia's may-or set churchbells pealing with a tap on the Liberty Bell as Americans paid homage yesterday to King's still-unrealized dream of racial harmony.
In Atlanta, Coretta Scott King and her children laid a wreath at the slain civil rights leader's tomb on the third national holiday in his honor. The graveside ceremony was followed by the traditional ecumenical service at Ebenezer Baptist Church, where Kirsten served as co-pastor.
"The disease (of racism) . . . is still among us, and it has global implications," said the church's pastor, the Rev. Joseph Roberts, before he was that included Sen. Sum Num, D-Ga, and Atlanta Mayor Young Andrew.
The Rev. Joseph Lowery, president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, urged the audience to remember the ideals that King stood
"The holiday honors an individual, but also a struggle." he said.
About 5,000 marchers braved a downpour at the state Capitol in Phoenix at a rally to make Martin Luther King Day a state holiday, despite opposition from that state's embattled governor. Evan Mecham.
"T.
"It is time to stop having the rest of the country think of us as the site of a three-ring circus," said Phoenix Mayor Terry Goddard.
he disease (of racism)
... is still among us, and it has global implications.
— the Rev. Joseph Roberts pastor, Ebenezer Baptist Church
Mont.
Idaho
Wyo.
S.D.
N.H.
Ariz.
Hawaii
States not observing
King holiday
Federal offices closed on Monday in observance of Martin Luther King's birthday. All but seven states observed a state holiday in King's honor.
Shortly after noon, Philadelphia Mayor W. Wilson Goode, the great-grandson of a slave, tapped the Liberty Bell with his fist to start the nation's bells ringing in King's honor.
In Oklahoma, more than 1,000 people rallying at the state Capitol in Oklahoma City heard former State Sen. E. Melvin Porter urge a continued fight against racism. Police said there were at least two cross-burnings in the city yesterday as someone tried to mar the holiday.
Officials in Idaho, where the day is not a holiday, laid a wreath at the base of a tree planted several years ago on the Statehouse grounds in honor of King. Marshers braved storms in Colorado and Wyoming.
In New York City, hecklers at a Harlem church prevented Mayor Edward Koch from delivering a speech honoring King, while 3,000 people rallied outside City Hall and tied up traffic throughout lower Manhattan as they marched to the World Trade Center.
43 states honor Dr. Martin Luther King
candlelight march was planned to commemorate "Bloody Sunday," the 1965 demonstration when state troopers confronted civil rights marchers.
King was assassinated in Memphis, Tenn., on April 4, 1968. The Nobel Peace Prize laureate's birthday was Friday.
Many of the nation's schoolchildren got a holiday from classes, but
King's daughter, Bernice King, said on CBS "This Morning" program that she thinks most racist actions today result from ignorance.
Lewiston, Me., youngsters studied King's "I Have A Dream" speech and wrote of their own dreams.
"At one time, I think people knew exactly what they were doing," she said.
Leaders moving to oust Mecham
The Associated Press
PHOENIX, Ariz. — Legislative leaders prepared yesterday for impeachment hearings on Gov. Evan Mecham, while county officials turned in petitions aimed at setting an election to recall him from office.
House Speaker Joe Lane, a fellow Republican, was expected to announce the formation of a select committee to start impeachment hearings, possibly as early as today.
Mecham has denied violating any laws and has rejected repeated calls for his resignation, including one last week by the Republican president, and four GOP members of Arizona's U.S. House delegation.
House special counsel William French reported Friday he had found that Mecham violated the law on several grounds, including failure to report a $350,000 campaign loan and borrowing money for personal business from the governor's protocol fund.
Yesterday also was the deadline for county recorders to forward to the secretary of state the last of the petitions gathered by the Mecham Recall Committee. Recorders already had certified 285,963 valid petition signatures, well over the 21,746 required to force Mecham to face a recal election.
If Secretary of State Rose Mofford officially certifies that there
are enough signatures, on Jan. 25 she is required to give Mecham five days to resign. If he does not resign by Feb. 2, she would order a recall election for mid-May.
Mecham also was indicated on Jan. 8 on six felony charges of perjury, fraud and filing false documents for allegedly concealing the $350,000 loan from Tempe developer Barry Wolfson.
"The governor is facing the triple whammy here," said Senate Minority Leader Alan Stephens. "If it's not recall it's impeachment, if it isn't impeachment or recall it could be criminal conviction."
French said Friday that Mecham deliberately concealed the $350,000 loan by using what French termed a phony receipt and a separate bank account.
French also contended that the governor's protocol fund was state money, and thus an $80,000 loan to Mecham Pontiac was improper. The fund was created with funds raised by inaugural events.
And French said the governor had tried to stop the state Department of Public Safety from cooperating with the state attorney general's investigation of an alleged death threat from a Mecham administration official to another aide who had recently resigned.
Scientists strive to help mining
By James Buckman
Kansan staff writer
The mining industry in Kansas may never be the same. At least, that's what a member of the Kansas Geological Survey is booing.
Ralph Knapp, a scientist with the Survey, said he and his colleagues were perfecting an old process of examining the earth's crust, which may have lasting importance to the state's mining and oil industries.
The process is reflection seismology. The scientists shoot sound waves into the ground. The waves, which echo off the surfaces of the rock layers, come back as bundles of energy and allow scientists to determine the types of rock formations underneath.
With reflection seismology, scientists can take the data from one or two holes and determine the makeup of a large area. Knapp said that with the data, he could find bands of coal as little as a foot thick.
That information can be valuable to companies looking for coal or oil.
Knapp said, "Reflection seismology goes back to the 1920s, and has been applied to oil exploration from then on. We're just applying those principles in a different sense. Other people have done it before. We're doing it today because we don't effort into it and we've been a little bit more successful."
Reflection seismology does not replace drilling for companies mining for natural resources, Knapp said. It helps drilling, and possibly reduces the number of holes needed.
Knapp said the process also could help mining companies avoid abonded underground mines. Companies in Kansas are strip mining deeper now than they have in the past and are running into the mines, which poses hazards for workers, he said.
"For a lot of old mines, the records weren't well kept or they might have been lost, or perhaps private farmers might have been out there mining and didn't write down anything at all." he said.
Finding those old mines can be difficult. Currently, companies drill multiple holes to find the mines. They can easily miss them.
"For safety considerations, they have to stay a certain distance away from these old mine works," Knapp said. "If they know where mine works are, they can get closer than if they don't know.
"If we can give them information as to, 'the mine is right here,' they can mine a little bit closer, recover a lot more coal and make more money from it. All that helps Kansas," he said.
"Engineering and mining efforts tend to be low budget." Knapp said. "What we're trying to do is make reflection seismology economically viable for these people.
"Now, it's probably cheaper to drill a well than run a mile or two of seismic data, so people just poke holes in the ground," he said. "Drilling takes a couple of days. Seismic exploration involves a fair amount of work in the field plus computer processing. It's a big operation."
Don Steeple, another scientist working on the project, concentrates largely on those interests. He said the process already had been used at various sites around the country to determine, among other things, the acceptability of sites as hazardous waste dumps.
Beyond oil and coal mining, reflection seismology is used for environ-
Students grade instructors
By Jeff Suggs Kansan staff writer
Semester-end forms help determine merit pay and tenure
When the semester comes to an end, finals aren't the only thing students have to look forward to.
Teacher evaluation forms give students a chance to either praise a good instructor or criticize one who was horrible in the classroom.
"It's important for the faculty to see how the students see their classes," said Norman Saul, chairman of the history department.
But evaluation forms aren't used just to give the instructor tips to improve his teaching. They also help determine merit salary increases and establish tenure for an instructor.
When an instructor receives many bad evaluations from his students, he usually will discuss the problem with his department chairman to determine if the situation can be corrected.
It's important for the
I
It's important for the faculty to see how the students see their classes.
Norman Saul
chairman of the history department
A series of bad evaluations could endanger an untenured instructor's job.
"If a faculty member is not tenured," said John Tolletson, dean of business, "he might be let go."
But it's difficult to fire an instructor once he has received tenure. The instructor would have to be really negligent for dismissal, said Howard Baumgartel, dean of liberal arts and arts.
sure," said W. Max Lucas, dean of architecture and urban design. "It would be a last resort."
But student evaluations of instructors are only part of the process that determines whether to raise merit pay or establish tenure for an instructor. Peer evaluations, published research in an instructor's field and service on various academic committees also are considered.
"It would be an extreme mea-
James B. Carothers, associate dean of liberal arts and sciences, said student evaluations often didn't tell the whole story.
"Some students don't fill them out, and some don't take them seriously," he said.
"We seem to dwell on that (poor evaluations) somehow and that's unfortunate. Not all criticism is just, and not all praise is just either," he said.
By a Kansan reporter
The bid date for KU's new $12 million human development center is expected to be in March, a KU official said yesterday.
Allen Wiechert, University director of facilities planning, said that the ground-breaking ceremony would take place about 30 days after the bids were received.
Bid date for center in March
The Board of Regents approved the final plans for the building in December. It will be located east of Haworth Hall.
The building will contain the departments of radio-television-film, speech-language-hearing, special education, and human development and family life; and the institutes for learning disabilities, and human development and aging.
KU business law profs among most cited
Kansan staff writer
By Jill Jess
KU business law faculty were ranked in high citation rate and mean of productivity categories. The mean citation rate is the average
The study, conducted by Lynn Ward, professor of legal studies at Bowling Green State University, and George Siegel, professor of business law at the University of Michigan, received in 1973 a professors' research was cited in other studies and in court proceedings between 1973 and 1984.
Business law professors at the University of Kansas are among the most frequently cited professors in their field, an unpublished national study savs.
I had been aware for a number of years that our faculty was one of the most productive in the nation.'
- John Tollefson dean of business
number of times a professor's work is cited by other researchers and by judges.
KU business law professors also ranked high in total citations and productivity.
Siedel said the rankings would not be definite until an article being
During the 12-year period, KU business law professors had their research cited an average of 13.25 times.
written by Ward was finished.
"When you look at that total, Kansas comes out pretty well," Siedel said.
John Tollefson, dean of business,
said he had not been aware that the KU business law faculty was part of
the study until he heard of the high ranking. But he said he wasn't surprised.
"I had been aware for a number of years that our faculty was one of the most productive in the nation," he said.
Siedel said all accredited business schools in the nation, which number about 240, were included in the study. The years 1973-1984 were chosen, he said, to compare to a previous study of the period from 1961 to 1972.
"We wanted to see whether research increased among business law professors," Siebel said.
He said the earlier study did not focus on schools, so he didn't know how KU would have ranked.
Tolleison said the business law faculty was encouraged to do research and was required to do so to receive tenure.
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Tuesday, January 19, 1988 / University Daily Kansar
Sports
KU whips Hampton as fans save loud cheer for K-State
By Elaine Sung
Kansan sports writer
One of the loudest cheers in the Kansas-Hampton game came with about three minutes left in the second half when the final score from the Kansas State-Oklahoma game appeared on the scoreboard.
Kansas State 69. Oklahoma 62.
with that score, the third Allen Field House began stomping, clapping and chanting "K-State, K-State."
The Kansas game, for that moment, became secondary as the Jayhawks built a 30-point lead. The Hampton Pirates never challenged the Jayhawks as Kansas easily won over the NCAA Division II school
The victory extended the Jayhawks home winning streak to 55 and raised their record to 12-4 overall. The Jayhawks remain 1-1 in the Big Eight Conference. Hampton dropped to 6-6.
Led by Danny Manning's 22 points and seven rebounds, the Jayhawks never relinquished the lead. Because of the large lead, the Jayhawks were running game that featured some spectacular alley-oops and slam dunks.
Otis Livingston, who assisted on three slam dunks and had one himself, said the blow-out allowed the players to do a little experimenting.
"I think we have a little more freedom to do stuff, but we still need to concentrate," he said. "But we played good defense which enabled us to do that sort of fun stuff. That's how the basketball is all— having fun."
Rebounding and three-point shots were the only things the Pirates did better than the Jayhawks. Hampton had 40 rebounds to Kansas' 35. Also, Hampton connected for three three-point shots while Kansas went 0-6.
"We're still weak on the boards," Coach Larry Brown said. "We need to get some of the freshmen to step forward. I was disappointed in (Mike) Masucci's rebounding, and that man's not going to think he's going to be all right."
Kansas forced 24 turnovers, stole the ball 14 times and blocked five shots.
Kansas had trouble pulling away from Hampton early in the first half. But the greatest concern in that half was for Milt Newton, who went down at 15:54 in the half with a twisted ankle
When he went down, the field house became quiet as Newton lay on the court, pounding the floor with his hand. The fans, Brown and the team could only stand by and watch tense lv.
"I was just hoping it was nothing serious, guard贝 Gueldner said. Were they not going to go?"
Newton said his ankle only felt sore after the fall.
"I came down the wrong way, but I hoped it was nothing bad," he said. "I want nothing to stop me from playing, and I won't let a strain get in the way."
He did come back five minutes later and finished the game with 12 points.
Newton said his ankles had been giving him trouble for the last four years, and he had just started wearing ankle braces.
Once Brown got over that scare, he said he was surprised by the K-State-Oklahoma score.
"I can't believe they only scored 62 points." Brown said of Oklahoma. "I watched a little of the Missouri game, too, and I thought they were in control. The next thing I knew, they lost."
Kansas, however, was in control for most of the game and led by as much as 32 points in the second half. Brown used the large lead to give everyone on the team some playing time, and each player contributed at least two points.
Brown also took Manning out with more than 12 minutes to play in the game.
"I hope they didn't think we were rubbing it in," Brown said. "I thought we were great. The kids were unselfish and ran the ball well."
Forward Keith Harris had his longest stint in a game this season, playing for 23 minutes and finishing with a season-high 12 points.
Harris, however, said he was dis- appointed in his own play.
"I felt I could have been a lot more agressive," he said. "He played me
a lot tonight, but I'm really out of shape."
The game started with some crowd-pleasing dunks by Newton and guard Kevin Pritchard.
Hampton remained close early in the game with three-point shots by sophomore guard Stacy Clark and junior forward Sylvester Hartfield.
But with less than eight minutes left in the first half, Manning capitalized on several opportunities at the free-throw line, shooting 4-for-5 and increasing the lead 25-16.
Kansas 95 Hampton 69
Kansas
| | M | FG | FT | R | A | T | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Manning | 26 | 6-9 | 10-11 | 7 | 4 | 1 | 22 |
| Piper | 18 | 4-4 | 1-1 | 3 | 0 | 4 | 12 |
| Newton | 18 | 6-15 | 1-0 | 3 | 0 | 4 | 12 |
| Livingston | 19 | 2-2 | 0-0 | 3 | 0 | 2 | 4 |
| Richmond | 19 | 4-5 | 0-0 | 3 | 1 | 4 | 10 |
| Barry | 19 | 4-5 | 2-2 | 0-0 | 3 | 1 | 4 |
| Barry | 16 | 1-1 | 0-0 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 2 |
| Masucci | 16 | 1-5 | 0-0 | 1 | 2 | 6 | 2 |
| Guelder冈 | 16 | 2-4 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 4 |
| Harris | 23 | 4-7 | 4-7 | 0-0 | 3 | 2 | 12 |
| Maddox | 9 | 1-2 | 2-2 | 0-0 | 3 | 2 | 1 |
| Normore | 9 | 1-2 | 2-2 | 0-0 | 3 | 2 | 1 |
| | 40 | 38-6 | 16 | 35 | 23 | 24 | 95 |
Percentages: FG. 576, FT. 826. Three-point goals: 0- Blocked Socks: 5 (Manning 3), Turnovers: 15 (Minor 3). Steals: 14 (Minor 6). Technicals: None.
Hampton
| | M | FG | FT | R | A | F | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Hartfield | 15 | 2-4 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 5 |
| Williams | 24 | 3-4 | 0 | 3 | 1 | 3 | 6 |
| Dunson | 29 | 4-0 | 0 | 2 | 1 | 3 | 2 |
| Lee | 32 | 5-10 | 7-9 | 2 | 1 | 3 | 17 |
| Clark | 32 | 10-20 | 7-9 | 2 | 1 | 3 | 25 |
| Battle | 13 | 0-4 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 4 |
| Lane | 11 | 1-2 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 4 | 2 |
| Woods | 6 | 1-2 | 2-2 | 2 | 0 | 2 | 5 |
| Lewis | 17 | 2-9 | 0-0 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 4 |
| Morley | 3 | 0-2 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 4 | 0 |
| Ford | 12 | 0-4 | 0-0 | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 |
| Draughon | 2 | 1-4 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Blackman | 2 | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| Totals | 40 | 25-64 | 16-25 | 0 | 9 | 22 | 69 |
Percentages: FG, 391, FT, 640. Three-point goals: 3-11 (Hartfield, Clark, Woods) 1. Blocked Shots: 1 (Williams 1). Turnovers: 2 (Clark 5). Steals: 9 (Clark 3). Technicals:
Half: Kansas 43-30. Officials: Schmidt,
Banks, Smith
Nose injury causes player to wear mask
By Keith Stroker
Kansan sports writer
The Kansas Jayhawks women's basketball team has a new player in its starting lineup, or at least fans may think so.
Each time the Jayhawks have taken the court this year, knowledgeable Kansas fans can easily recognize the players on the court, all except one — the lady in the mask.
But she's really not new. She's 5-foot-8 senior forward Lisa Dougherty, a name familiar to Jayhawk fans over the past four years. Dougherty wears a protective nose mask because she suffered a broken nose early in the season.
"We were in a practice drill and I spun around and hit Deborah Richardson's shoulder," Dougherty said. "I broke my nose on the play, and the trainers had to reset it."
Dougherty, a native of Leavenworth, suffered the injury in late October. The mask doesn't hinder her play much, only cutting off a little of her peripheral vision, she said.
"I'll be wearing the mask for the rest of the season," she said. "My nose is completely healed, but I'm wearing it for protective reasons."
The mask has not bothered her shooting ability. In scoring 20 points against the Missouri Tigers on Wednesday, Dougherty became the seventh player in Kansas history, to score 1,000 career points.
Lady
aiacks
Lady
aiacks
Majoring in human biology, emphasizing physical therapy. Dougherty comes from a basket-ball-oriented family. She has an older brother, Neal, who coaches
Forward Lisa Dougherty is recovering from a nose injury.
Dan Ruettimann/KANSAN
at Cameron in Oklahoma, and a twin brother, Larry, who plays for him. Another brother, Mike, was a good player at Leavenworth High School.
50
Ian WILKIN HUVANCAN
Otis Livingston grabs a loose ball during the first half of KU's 95-69 victory over Hampton University. Livington had two steals and seven assists.
Cyclones break Kansas jinx Jayhawks drop to 0-2 in conference play
Rv Keith Stroker
Kansan sports writer
AMES, Iowa — The energy left over from 14,000 screaming fans from the men's game seemed to help boost the Iowa State Cyclones women's basketball team in its game with the Kansas Jayhawks on Saturday.
Though only 590 people remained at the James H. Hilton Coliseum after the Iowa State men's team defeated U.S. International 123-92, the Cyclone women came out ready to make it a clean sweep.
After the first six minutes of the Jayhawks' 75-59 loss, Kansas found itself down 15-2 and that the Cyclones were not going to be a pushover. The Jayhawks were able to pull within four at 17-13, on a driving layup by Cheryl Jackson at the 10:45 mark of the first half, but they never held a lead.
Kansas, 10-5 overall and 0-2 in the conference, had to play without the services of junior Deborah Richardson, who injured a knee in practice last Thursday. The 6-foot-4 junior college transfer from Kilgore Junior College in Bryan, Texas, underwent surgery yesterday afternoon at Lawrence Memorial Hospital to repair cartilage damage in her right knee. Coach Marian Washington said that she would be out at least three weeks, and maybe longer, depending upon the seriousness of the injury.
Iowa State, 9-5 overall and 1-1 in the conference, held a 10-point lead at halftime, 35-25, outscoring the Jayhawks, 11-2 at the free-throw line.
Kansas started out the second half with a press, cutting the lead to four
points on four different occasions, but was never able to take the lead. A 10-10 run, starting at the 13-minute mark by the Cyclones, gave them a 51-37 lead, and they extended it to 17 points with seven minutes left. The Jayhawks were never able to recover from that lead.
Iowa State was lead by center Carmen Jaspers with 14 points and nine rebounds. She said that it was their turn to win against Kansas.
"Last year they beat us three times, and all three of them were close," Jaspers said. "We wanted this game bad. We knew it was our time."
Cyclone guard Tracy Horvath, who contributed 10 points and four assists, said that breakaway layups gave the team a lift.
"We got some big steals in the second half that helped us to pull away." Horvath said. "Those easy baskets helped to pump up the team when we needed it."
Iowa State coach Pam Wettig said that even though they have only won two out of 18 games against the Jayhawks, she wasn't surprised by the outcome.
"We were not going to be denied," Wettig said. "We forced a lot of turnovers and set the tempo early. They have good quickness, and so our short, "risp passes against their press seemed to help when they made a run against us."
Cyclone freshman forward Lynne Lorenzen, the national amateur scoring leader, who scored over 6,700 points in her high school career, contributed 10 points and four rebounds. She was 3-for-3 from the
field and 4-for-4 from the free-throw line
Washington said that the Jayhawks hurried their offense the entire game, partly because they had to play catch up. She said they weren't patient and that the officials needed to be more consistent.
"We had a lot of traveling calls against us and they didn't have many at all," Washington said. "The caliber of officiating in this conference is not as good as others, but it is improving. But, Iowa State deserves a lot of credit. They played well and were ready for us."
Washington also said that Kansas played good defense, particularly at half court.
She said it was much improved, but the team needed to get more aggressive on both ends of the court.
Sophomore center Lynn Page turned in a fine performance for the Jayhawks, coming off the bench and scoring 10 points and grabbing 10 rebounds to lead Kansas. Washington said Played well, but she needed to get as aggressive as she was in practice.
The Jayhawks next game is tomorrow night in Boulder, Colo., against the Colorado Lady Buffs.
iowa State 75, Kansas 59
2. 8-2. 9-2, Coyle 2-6-10, Japman 5-4-4, 14-8
2. 8-10 1-12, Morvath 5-0-10, Planbeamer 0-4-5
4. 8-10 1-5, Dekker 2-6-1, Beach 0-2, Jennings 0-4
4. 8-10 1-0, Beach 0-2, Jennings 3-4
Totals 29-38. 75
3.2-9 2.9 Struktur 4.0-0.8 Bare 0.1-0.2 Bradda
3.2-9 2.9 Struktur 4.0-0.8 Bare 0.1-0.2 Bradda
10, 140 Armadillo 2, 0-4, Page 4-210
10, 240 Armadillo 2, 0-4, Page 4-210
Totals 140
'Greek' meets with Jackson and apologizes for racial remarks
WASHINGTON — Presidential candidate Jessie Jackson praised fired CBS sports analyst Jimmy "The Greek" Snyder after Snyder apologized for saying that black athletes were superior to whites because they were "bred to be that way."
The Associated Press
Snyder also said he would send letters of apology to black athletes and others.
Jackson, who is running for the Democratic presidential nomination, called Snyder's apology and letter-writing plan "admirable and the
Snyder was fired Saturday, one day after saying that during the days of slavery blacks were bred to be better athletes. Jackson said the odds-maker and sports commentator also agreed to urge owners to change a pattern which denies blacks significant jobs in professional sports.
right thing to do."
Jackson and Snyder met Sunday for more than an hour in Snyder's Washington hotel room. Snyder had gone to Washington to participate in CB-STV 's broadcast of the Washington Redskins-Minnesota Vikings NFC championship game Sunday. He
was fired the day before the game.
CBS' Brent Musburger mentioned the incident briefly on the network's "NFL Today" pre-game show before the Redskins-Vikings game.
"You know, on Friday afternoon here in Washington, our former colleague, Jimmy the Greek, made some regrettable offensive remarks, for which he has apologized." Musburger said. "Yesterday, CBS issued a statement disassociating itself from those remarks.
"It goes without saying that his comments do not reflect in any way the thinking or attitudes of the rest of
us here at CBS Sports. While we deplore the incident this weekend, we are saddened that our 12-year association with Jimmy had to end this way," he said.
After their meeting, Jackson said he didn't want Snyder to become a scapegoat for sports or for television networks which didn't use enough black talent.
Jackson said the major networks and sports teams "all fall basically on their faces" when it came to athletes or officials, sports announcers or analysts.
On ABC-TV's "This Week With
"But we can't use Jimmy 'The Greek' in that sense as a scapegoat," Jackson said.
Snyder said he was dumfounded by the furor caused by his comments. He said he was not trying to demean black athletes.
"Let's put it this way: I was praising the black athlete," he said. On Friday, Snyder told Ed Hotaling of WRC-TV in Washington the black athletes' superiority over
David Brinkley," Jackson said CBS was "right in making that judgment" that Snyder be fired.
whites "all goes back to the Civil War, when during the slave trading, the slave owner would breed his big black to his big woman so that he would have a big black kid."
Snyder was having lunch at a restaurant when the reporter asked for his comments for a program on the birthday of Martin Luther King Jr., which was celebrated yesterday.
---
Snyder said that blacks "got everything. If they take over coaching like everybody wants them to, there's not going to be anything left for white people."
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, January 19, 1988
11
Performance frustrates Kempf
By Tom Stinson
rs writer
Although he is planning for the future, Gary Kempf is a frustrated man in the present.
Kempf, Kansas swimming coach, watched his men and women lose to a pair of powerful Saturday in Robinson, Natatorium.
The men's team lost to the nationally ranked Razorbacks 63-50, and the women's team was defeated 68-45.
"I'm disappointed that the men lost, but I'm not disappointed in their effort," said Kempf, whose men lost to Arkansas by one point earlier in the season. "Our men are so hungry that it's tremendous. But you can't make mental mistakes against a ranked team.
"I'm really frustrated with the women. I'm not reaching them for some reason. They're good ladies and they work hard, but they're not competing like they should," he said.
The highlight of the meet for the women was the 1-meter diving competition in which senior Lori Spurney set a school record. Spurney scored 433.875 points in the event to break the record previously held by teammate Jill Pierce at 422.50 points. Spurney also won the 3-meter diving event.
"Lori has just been a gift to the program." Kempf said.
The men, who battled to the last event for a victory, were led by seniors Dews Nesmith and Chris Cook and junior Glenn Trammler.
Nesmith swam a career-best in winning the 200-yard breaststroke. His victory kept the Jayhawks within striking distance going into the final race. However, Kansas' 400-yard freestyle relay team was defeated in the race.
Cook won the 200-yard freestyle and finished second in the 500-yard
freestyle as he posted season-best times in both events. Trammel won the 200-yard backstroke and the 200-yard individual medley as well as swimming a leg on the winning 400-yard medley relay. Also on that relay team was junior Dan Mendenhall and sophomores Billings and Pat McCool.
Other Jayhawks who scored were diver Andy花, freshmen Jeff Stout and John Easton; juniors Bobby Kelley, Allan Chaney and Mendenhall; and seniors Nesmith Billings and Chuck Jones
"We haven't shown it yet," Kempf said, "but we are a good team. We're on a schedule for the end of the season, which means we've been working hard lately in order to be successful at the end."
Trammel said, "It's really frustrating to get to the last layer and then lose. But last year the last relay was just for pride and this year we're staying right in it until the end. We could have wrapped it up early but things just didn't go our way."
1975
Also scoring for the women, who split two earlier meetings with Arkansas, was diver Kelley Kauzlarich; junior Erin Easton, Sue Spry; junior Blaise Billen; still freshmen Keiley Seaill, and Jennifer Cummar.
Barbara Ann Smith led the Kansas women with victories in the 500-yard and 1000-yard freestyles and a second-place finish in the 200-yard individual medley. The only other win for the woman was by freshman Gina Brown in the 202-yard butterfly.
"Our depth swimmers for the women are doing good," Kempf said, "but our top girls aren't doing it and we're not a good enough team for that to happen. They do work hard, which will pay off in the end if I can motivate them."
Lori Spurney, Prairie Village senior, attempts a reverse one-and-a-half layout in the three-meter diving competition. Spurney, captain of the diving team, holds the one- and three-meter diving records at the University of Kansas.
Denver coach praises the Browns' offense
The Associated Press
DENVER — After his team's wild 38-33 American Football Conference championship victory over Cleveland, Denver Broncos coach Dan Reeves paid tribute to the losers, saying they moved the ball against his defense in a way perhaps no other team has done.
"I was much more impressed with Cleveland's offense this year than last year." Reeves said Monday. "I don't know that anyone has done to our defense what they did. They scored on four straight possessions in a game, but I think the credit has to go to (Browns quarterback) Bernie Kosar."
Taking advantage of Cleveland turnovers, the Broncos jumped out to a 21-3 halftime lead, then watched almost helplessly as Cleveland drew into a 31-31 tie early in the final period.
Still, Denver needed one more big play to clinch it, and back-up corner-back Jeremiah Castille, cut by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the preseason and claimed by Denver on waivers, provided it. As Earnest Byner appeared about to score on a pass from Byner, his team stripped the ball from Byner and fell on it at the 2-yard line with 1:05 remaining.
But the Broncos surged ahead again on a pair of 26-yard passes from John Elway to rookie Ricky Nattiel that set up Elwey's 20-yard touchdown pass to Sammy Winder with 4:01 left.
Rather than risk having a punt blocked, the Broncos took a safety in the closing seconds.
"Everybody says turnovers will be the difference in a big game, and that turned out to be the case," Reeves said. "We feel fortunate to win the way we did. Jeremiah knocked it loose and recovered. Without question, that was the biggest play of the
game."
Castille declined to talk with reporters after the game, and Reeves jokingly referred to Castille's closed-mouth stance when he said, "He's not talking to you guys? What are you doing to my players? He was a nice guy when he came here."
Reeves said the Broncos became interested in Castile after cornerback Louis Wright's sudden retirement during training camp last summer.
"He had started four or five years for Tampa Bay and had led them one year in interceptions, so we put a claim in for him." Reeves said. "We thought he could play. He's been very unselfish. He's a natural left corner but we've used him at right corner, and he's never complained. He's been very smart. He'll happen at that position. He's a sound player and he's smart, although he doesn't have that much size. He's helped us this year."
Reeves still was trying to come to grips with his relatively emotionless nature.
"I wanted to be excited, but I was kind of numb," Reeves said. "I didn't have much of any kind of feeling. I was just drained by the whole situation."
Reeves said the handful of Broncos who suffered minor injuries in Sunday's game should be recovered for the Super Bowl on Jan. 31 against the Washington Redskins, who defeated Minnesota 17-10 on Sunday.
Larry's kids
Tight end Orson Mobley has a bruised shoulder, but should be able to resume practice by the end of the week.
Reeves remains most concerned about wide receiver Vance Johnson, who was released from the hospital Monday after being treated for internal bleeding — a result of a bruised groin he suffered on Jan. 10 against Houston.
Kansas basketball team spends Sunday afternoon with very special people
Kansan sports writer
By Elaine Sung
Rules just didn't really matter to anyone Sunday, when the University of Kansas basketball team hosted its fourth annual Special Olympics basketball clinic at Allen Field House.
It was a day when no one really cared where one stood at the free throw line. No one bothered to yell when the pass went astray or when the offense was non-existent.
More than 200 Special Olympians, from age 8 up, came from all over the state, and were obviously enjoying the clinic as if it were a Kansas-Oklahoma basketball game.
"They look forward to this all year, and then they talk about it for the rest of the year," said Gary Scott, director of the Lawrence regional group. "They're just in awe, sort of staring in a daze. Coming in here, they may be when they leave, they'll bollering and shaking hands everywhere."
The day started with a warm-up period, everyone on the floor doing stretching exercises. Then the Special Olympians rotated through four stations, getting lessons in free-throw shooting, jump shots, dribbling and passing.
Assistant coach Alvin Gentry and players Danny Manning, Mike Maddox, Lincoln Minor and Mark Rand stand at the free-throw line with a bunch of ecstatic Special Olympians showing them how to "Whoosh," correctly.
On the other side of the court, Jeff Gueldner acted as traffic monitor, lining up half the group on one side for jump shots, while Marvin Branch directed the other half on the opposite side.
Keith Harris and Sean Alvarado stood under the basket, applauding every effort. Suddenly, the 6-foot-9 Alvarado spotted a tiny child in a basketball "Hawks" sweatshirt, crading a basketball and ready to run to the basket
Alvarado went to the boy, lifted him to the height of the basket, and the child promptly tossed in the ball to cheer of everyone in the group.
The loudest cheering of all came from Coach Larry Brown, who initiated the clinic when he arrived at the University in 1983. He visited just about everyone and helped the ones in wheelchairs get to the next station.
Then came game-time, the event all the athletes had been waiting for. Each side had three Special Olympians and substitutions every few minutes.
It was a regular game, with some losided refereeing by Gentry and
some help provided by the Jayhawks. Alvarado stepped in every few minutes to boost undersized children to the basket.
The crowd went into a frenzy when one of the Special Olympians hit a three-point shot, and most of the crowd ran in the opportunity to guard Manning.
Paul Hernandez, 16, from Carbon-dale, had tried out for basketball in high school, but had never expected to play against the All-American forward.
"It was hard enough, he was so tall," he said.
Lisa Taylor, 14, and her sister Becky Taylor, 13, of Quenemo, both decided the best part was shooting free throws.
During and after the game, the Special Olympians lined up to get autographs from the Kansas players, who obliged willingly. Children climbed onto their laps, and Manning was often seen balancing one on each knee, trying to sign basketballs at the same time.
SPURZ
HOMERIK
"Brown makes it a priority, and some teams wanted to bring 40 to 50 people, but that would have made it more of a zoo," said Marty Derda, state director of the Special Olympics. "The best part is to see the Kansas players open up to the athletes and have fun."
Kansas basketball coach Larry Brown finds himself surrounded by autograph seekers during the Special Olympics basketball clinic.
oce
Marine
KANDA
KU basketball player Scooter Barry spends a little time with a few Special Olympians.
Lendl eliminates last American from Australian Open in straight sets
The Associated Press
MELBOURNE, Australia — Top-seeded Ivan Lendl powered his way into the semifinals of the Australian Open Tennis Championships early today, crushing the last surviving American in the men's singles, Todd Wittke.
In the semifinals, Lendl will face either Wimbledon champion Pat Cash of Australia
or michiel Schapers of The Netherlands, who played later Tuesday.
Cash, seeded fourth in the year's first Grand Slam tournament, defeated Lendl in a match on October 1.
"I just hope history doesn't repeat itself," said Lendl, who lost to Cash in the semifinals of last year's Australian Open.
Lendl, 27, the reigning U.S. Open and
French Open champion, took 2 hours, 13 minutes to eliminate Winker. 6.9 6.1 7.6
The 24-year-old former University of Southern California All-American from Carmel, Ind., had upset seventeen-seeded Henri Poirier of France on his way to the quarterfinals.
But Witsken, who also upset Jimmy Connors in the 1986 U.S. Open, had no answer to
Lendl's relentless pressure.
Lendl, seeking his seventh Grand Slam title, his first Australian Open crown and the 71st tournament victory of his career, has yet to lose a set in the tournament.
The American was able to solve Lendl a little in the third set, rallying from 1-3 to force a tiebreaker.
"I played fairly well for two and a half sets,
then I had a concentration breakdown, Todd started playing well and it became tougher," Lendl said.
Despite the ease of his victory, Lendl was involved in a long argument with umpire Rudy Berger midway through the third set over an onerule on a line call.
---
The two remaining men's quarterfinals are scheduled to be held Wednesday.
12
Tuesday, January 19. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
St. Louis wants new team
The Associated Press
ST. LOUIS — Now that William Bidwell has made it official that his NFL team will soon be the Phoenix Cardinals, local efforts will be turned to attracting an expansion franchise.
"Saturday marks the first official day of trying to get an expansion franchise," said former Cardinals lineman Dan Dierdorf, now a broadcaster in St. Louis and a commentator on Monday Night Football. "I'm sure when we look back on the history of St. Louis, this will be a dramatic day."
NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle has tentative plans to appoint an expansion committee at the March league meetings in Phoenix, with hopes of adding two teams by 1990. St. Louis will join a list of at least 25 cities that have expressed interest in applying for an expansion team.
Gov. John Ashcroft, who flew to St. Louis to hold a news conference after the announcement, said political and business leaders need to be unified to secure an expansion franchise.
However, several Missouri legislators said they felt a bill to establish a sports and convention authority in St. Louis that would finance construction of a new stadium might be on hold. The house passed the measure and sent it to the Senate on Thursday.
"It brings it kind of to a screeching
right now," said Sean Edwin L.
Dirick
House Majority Leader Tony Ribaud, sponsor of the bill, said he would continue to push for the bill's passage. Ribaud said St. Louis
would need a new stadium to be able to attract an NFL expansion team.
Ashcroft said the city's final offer was more than reasonable.
"It was a spectacular offer," Ashcroft said "However, the Cardinals chose another path and it is now incumbent upon us to maintain our unified effort in order to prepare for other opportunities."
Ashercroft, St. Louis County Executive Gene McNary and Mayor Vincent C. Schoemehil, along with Charles F. Knight, chairman of Emerson Electric Co., met with Bidwell last week to present the city's final offer.
Knight said the negotiations were frustrating and difficult because Bid-
"Mr. Bidwil really never negotiated any of this," Knight said. "That's his style, I guess. At no time did he sit down and say, 'This is what would take.' Candidly, this was a frustration that we all had to deal with."
McNary, who blamed battles between the city and county for Bidwill's leaving the city after 28 seasons, said at a news conference that nearly everyone involved in negotiations with Bidwil but himself was responsible for the loss.
"The only person who doesn't share in the responsibility for the team's leaving is me," a perturbed McNary told reporters at his office several hours after he received word of the move. "I did everything I could to keep them."
McNary said the city and Schoemehl had worked to block a county plan to build a domed stadium, one of Bidwil's conditions for staying. He said the Missouri Legislature's sports and convention authority bill was too late to help.
Schoeheml, who said he would fight the move, wasn't going to take any of the blame for the loss of the Cardinals.
"Now we can get on with our lives," offensive tackle Luis Sharpe said. "We'll get a lot of support, sell out the stadium, and that will help the team. It's special for any athlete, to perform in front of a large crowd."
Cardinals offensive lineman Joe Bostic said the move was like having all 55 players traded. Because being traded is part of the job, players seemed to take the news in stride.
"He's (Bidwill) the one who is walking away." Schoemehl said at a news conference at his office Friday afternoon. "I'm not going to allow the victim to be turned into the perpetrator here."
Quarterback Neil Lomax said he was excited about the move.
"I don't want to sound too derogatory about St. Louis, but moving is going to be a positive thing for this football team," Lomax said. "I can't help but show my emotions. I'm thrilled to be going to Phoenix."
"There's no question it will make us a better football team," he said.
Cardinals coach Gene Stallings said he hoped the move would not affect the team's performance. The last team to change cities, the Indianapolis Colts, were 7-9 in Baltimore in 1983 and 4-12 in Indianapolis in 1984.
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1988 Collegiate Intramural 3 on 3 Basketball Championship
Dine-in only. Limit one per person, per visit.
Available Monday-Friday, lunch time only.
1988
GODFATHERS
HOT SLICE
PIZZA
Offer
Expires: 2/29/88
KU
Schick
SUPER HOOPS
Saturday, January 23rd
9 a.m. Robinson Gyms
Entry deadline-Jan. 20
Fee-$5.00/team
*Mens and womens divisions
*Prizes awarded by Schick
*Winning Teams can advance to the regional festivals at UMKC
Sign up in 208 Robinson
WE'LL KEEP YOU OUT OF THE GUTTER
BOWLING
SIGN UP FOR SPRING LEAGUES TODAY!
Monday Mixer: 7:00 p.m. Tuesday Mixer: 7:00 p.m. Wednesday Mixer: 7:00 p.m.
Thursday Guys & Dolls: 7:00 p.m. Friday: 1.G.I.F: 4:00 p.m.
864-3545 THE KANSAS UNION JAYBOWL LEVEL ONE
UNLEASH THE POWER OF YOUR IMAGINATION
DUNGEONS &
DRAGONS™
PRESENTING THE NEW DUNGEONS & DRAGONS CLUB WITH THE FULL CLUB CAMPAIGN
Cine World written to be played in by many groups.
2nd meeting Wednesday the 20th, 6:30 pm in the Pioneer Room, Burger Union
A
WELCOME TO ADVENTURE
SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING
20% off
every bicycle in stock!
We need room for our 1988 bikes, so we're blowing out our remaining 1987 inventory. Take advantage of last year's stronger dollar and our biggest discount ever.
From $119.95
1337 Mass.
layaways accepted
749-0636
UPTOWN BICYCLES
NOW PRELEASING FOR FALL NAISMITH PLACE APARTMENTS
APARTMENTS
Jacuzzi In Every Apartment!
Satellite Television
Two Bedroom
Satellite Television Fully Equipped Kitchen
Fully Equipped Kitchen
Park-like Setting
Immediate Openings Available
On-site Management
Immediate Openings Available Walking Distance from KU Bus Route
On-site Management Private Balcony or Patio
Private Balcony or Patio
Furnished or Unfurnished
HOURS: Monday-Friday 1:30-5:30
Ousdahl & 25th Court
Saturday 10 to 4
841-1815
The Evolution of the Party Favor...
...has come a long way. K2 Sportswear has grown with KU. We have the most experienced staff of printers and artists in town. When you need party favor ideas remember the original party favor company in Lawrence
H2 sportswear
wear
t, Suite A
101 Riverfront Rd. Suite A
749-2404
13
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, Januarv 19. 1988
Texas needs help after cutting Howe
The Associated Press
ARLINGTON, Texas — The Texas Rangers searched for bullpen help yesterday after getting rid of pitcher Steve Howe.
Howe's two-year, $1 million contract was terminated Sunday for violation of his after-care program for substance abuse. Howe's attorney, John Lence, said the violation involved a one-time use of alcohol.
"It was not cocaine. It was a one-time use of alcohol," Llewis said. He said Howe would not contest the Rangers' decision.
"It was my mistake." Howe said,
"I'm disappointed in myself."
The Rangers were disappointed,
but because they happened now
rather earlier, in the
"It would have been devastating if this had happened to us during the season," said John Blake, Rangers spokesman. "At least now we know."
"It's still mind-boggling to think about it," said Rangers General Manager Tom Grieve. "He gave up $1 million just like that. Maybe I'm just naive. It is a despicable disease that can do awful things to lives."
The team was fined $250,000 last year by Commissioner Peter Ueberroth for bringing Howe back to the hospital after a drug rehabilitation program.
The Rangers suspected the worst when Howe, who twice undergone drug rehabilitation programs with the Los Angeles Dodgers and
Minnesota Twins, failed to show for an off-season workout last Wednesday.
Howe, who submitted to urine tests four times a week, had pitched well and looked trim during a Monday workout.
When he failed to show two days later, "it didn't take a genius to figure out what had happened," Grieve said.
"It won't be as good a pitching staff without him," he said.
"He was going to be a major part of our bullpen along with Mitch Williams," Grieve said. "It was going to be one of baseball's best left-handed tandems. It opens a spot on the pitching staff for somebody. I just feel badly for our pitching staff.
Howe was 3-3 with the Rangers and had a 4.31 earned run average in 24 games after being called up from Oklahoma City last year.
The Rangers felt so good about Howe they gave him a guaranteed contract for two years, but a substance abuse clause allowed them to void the deal.
Correction
Because of an editor's error, the women's basketball preview box was incorrect in Friday's Kansan. Marian Washington is Kansas' coach, and Etta Burns is a guard for Iowa State.
COLLEGE BOWL
WE HAVE A FEW QUESTIONS FOR YOU
Saturday, January 23 The Kansas Union
Sponsored by Lambda Sigma & Student Union Activities
Information and entries available at SUA. Sign up teams before Jan. 21. Winning team will represent KU at the Regional Tournament, Feb. 19-21.
Classified Ads
COMMUTERS Self Serve Car Pool Exchange
Main Lobby, Kanaus Union
Don't forget Pepa hour daily between 3 and 9p
oil moats drink only $3 at Baxs's Drive-In 49b
NEED A RIDE / RIDER? Use the Self Serve Cane
Change A HANDLE Main Lobby. National Union
Accessible for all. 84 hours of care 7 - 3:30. Easy access from 9th or 32nd.
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MUSIC *********** MUSIC *********** MUSIC
Red House Audio - Part music, 8-track studio,
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J Brad 749-1275.
READING FOR COMPREHENSION AND SPEED WORKSHOP. Monday's January 25, February 1 and 8, 7 - p.m. Materials fee $15. Register/pay by fee on月 20 - p.m.
[email address] 344-864-3944
Tutors: List your names with us. We refer stu-
ters to you. Student Assistance Center
121 Storm.
WANT TO HIRE A TUATOR? Our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 123
♩
AT YOUR REQUEST
D. J. Sound & Lighting for any occasion Professional and Affordable! 841-1405
If you would like to help GARY HART qualify for the Kansas ballot, call 842-1133
Paid for by Kanes for Hart (Don Stroll & Vick Bingboy)
COTTON TIGHTS
SALE
$10.00
THE BEACH HOUSE
GIFTS & ACCESSORIES
9 EAST 8TH
749-0334
Fred: Good, great! 4 bdmr, fireplace,
micro, etc. Loat: two roommates! Respond:
lg bdmrs($150-$135) plus 1/4 util. Call 843-2936
lbmrns
3 bedroom luxury townhouse, 2 full baths,
whirlpool, fireplace, hot tub, tennis and basket
ball courts. On K.U. bus route. Extra storage.
$650 per month, one year lease required. For in-
quiries call (800) 745-9122.
LISTENING AND NOTETAKING INTENSIVE WORKSHOP Tuesday, January 26. 7 p.m., 300 Strong Hall Learn to listen carefully, taking notes and assisting Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall 844-6044
Apartment, two bdmr, spacious, very clean, or
room. 814-9200 Call Airline
841-9200 Call Airline
FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY SKILLS PROGRAM. Help for students of any foreign language. Thursday January 21, 7:49 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. 833-645-2551, Assistance Center, 234 High St., 964-404-6961
Clean rooms furnished 5 minute walk from cam pu, single, two share utilities, kitchens eat in areas, share utilities
Bob Dole Needs KU Students!
Beautiful 2-bdm apartment with bath and cozy fireplace. Very spacious and a fun place to live. ON kU bus route: $400.00/mo. minimal utilities oth and Michigan, Call 814-1899 or 8437810
Deluxe 3 B/1-2 house. Fp, Ca, garage, basement. Couple or Sm sfr playmess. No pets, ref. on bus route. Possibly partly furnished. Rent reduce first few months. Must see to app.
All the best known names in musical instruments and accessories; Alesis, JBL, Roland, Korg, Tascam, Kramer, Fender, Gibson, Martin, and many more!
Completely Furnished Studio, 1-2-3 & 4 bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient. Bring with you in touch. Call 949-1812, 949-1825, or 749-2415. Mastercraft木屋。
To help with his presidential campaign
*Organizational meeting at
7 p.m., Thursday, Jan. 21
in the Walnut Room at the
Kansas Union, or call Brett
864-7114 for more information.
Female roommate, preferably quiet and non smoker, needed to share 2 bedroom apt. with female Grad. student at Spanish Crest Ap1. 2017 W2th on bus route 1155/m plus utilities. Swimming pool, tennis court, covered grounds. If interested, call 843-9042 and ask for Elizabeth or Spanish Crest Ap1. at 841-6868.
GET INTO THE GROOSE Metropolis Mobile
radio and club DJ radio. Hot spin. Maximum Party
FREE RENTAL ASSISTANCE. For studio 1 and 3 bedroom apartments and duplexes. All in good campus locations or on bus route. Immediate occupancy. Kaw Valley Management, 801-267-4900.
J * 4 M FAVORS AND FLASHBACK FOTO. THE
J * 1 M EAMBLE. Quality party favors and fast party pics. Call 843-0770 or 841-6490 to book your next part".
Furnished room for rent, most utilities paid, with off street parking, two blocks from university, quiet, studious atmosphere, and no pets please. 841-5500
HARVARD SQUARE Now available large
parking lot for bus and taxi. Paid.
Efficient location on and bus route C17.
ENTERTAINMENT
*In stock* see information.
*House close to campa-
ment. Female preferred. Fully furnished with laundry
Immediate opening in house close to campus.
Female prefered. Fully furnished with laundry
room and full kitchen.
I NEED A ROOMMATE BAD' Own bedroom.
Pay $200. p/o Wont negotiate.
843-7390
Mature male roommate for two bedroom
furnished apart, laundry, facilities, parking lot.
$150/m water bead. Behind Watson Library
843-2658
2 bedroom townhouse, furnished. On KU bus route. Call enquiries (913) 818-8116 (call us)
2 roommates needed for 3-bedroom Duplex, part lv furnished. $130 plus 1/2 up. $100, $48-840.
MASTERCHAFT offers beautifully furnished apartments, various sizes, all great locations! Designed with the K.U. student in mind. Call 814-1212, 814-3255 or 749-4226.
Nice 1 bedroom apartment
info Must sublease
Hanover Place
841-1212 or Jennifer 749-7671
FOR RENT
Come by and see us!
To need sublease to one bedroom, unfurnished
room in the property. Woods, starting in
February. Call 748-7222
MASS ST. MUSIC
cisco scale app & firmware
cisco scale app & firmware
cisco scale app & firmware
- Microwave
1347 Mass. 843-3535
Villa26 Apartments-Townhomes BRAND NEW 1 Bedroom Apartments
- Energy Efficient
- 1 Bedroom Apartments
- On KU Bus Route
- Excellent Location
- Open Daily
- Washer Dryer Hook-ups
- Move In Today
2201 W. 26th/Apt. E-102
—phones—
842-5227 • 842-6454
841-6080
Nowhere at KU will you find a residence hall with the advantages of Naismith Hall. Applications for fall/spring semester are now being accepted while space remains.
ADVANTAGES
Not satisfied with where you're living? Naimish Hall has one female space available for inmates in the room. It also provides individual lease liability, excellent "All-U-Can-Eat" meals, paid utilities, weekly maid service, and a fully furnished building best housing options at KU! For more info, call or come by Naimish Hall 1803 Nismith Drive.
"Undiscovered" Beaver Creek is great skiing, m. toail. V. Toail 3 bedroom townhouse is reasonable with all amenities. (303) 528-064. Wanted preferably two female roommates. Campus convenience. Two rooms available. $190 or month. No utilities. Call George at 842-3417.
FOR SALE
OPEN HOME VILLA 26 apartments, 2201 West
28th street. Brand new apartments. Immediate
occupancy-free rental assistance. Saturday
10:30 to 11:30 a.m. Call KAW Valley
Management 841-6000.
One room in nine楼 on Lawn Avenue. Not smoke
no drinker $125 plus utilities!
71 VW Super Besteil ATAC, New Engine,
73 VW Super Besteil ATAC, New Engine,
Excellent condition $1200 6O8 842-9200
Excellent condition $1200 6O8 842-9200
81 Honda moped - reasonable price, 796-6465. An absolutely Awesome array of Articles, colorful furniture, vintage collectibles, 1/2 price paperback books, full line of new comic books, Playbies, Penthouse, toes of loads of antique toys, fine art glass, house doll furniture, vintage bedding, good stuff, the right vintage clothes for any occasion,
Responsible, non-smoking vegetarian woman to share house. 6467 plus 1/3 usehours: 749-200
Beautiful stressed-leather bouncy jacket, brand
new brown boots size 8/11. AIRI 743-1001.
beer, tape recorder reel 0- to reel, skand 19000,
playgirl and playboy magazines after 5. (913)
(245)
NAISMITHHALL
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
913.841.8559
Drafting tools, beds, lamps, chest of drawers.
Everything But Ice, 616 Vermont.
SHANNON PLAZA CLUB APARTMENTS on KU u.bus路. Wather/diverger included, water, trash paid. Dishwasher microwave, ceiling fan. Basketball courts. 6- or 12 month lease. 841-7726.
Kokai Rapid RCA paper approx. 90 sheets: $30.00.
Lilyds Bulk Loader containing 50 ft. of Kokai Ectracrane $0 - $50.00, close-up lenses: 1, 2, 4
mm, used once. $30.00 - 841-5673.
Maten, at reduced prices. Call Robert 842-4607.
For sale, limited edition prints by such artists as Politeh, McCarthy, Bateman, Slivers, Lovell and Fernandez. Contact Robert 842-4607.
**MOTHIBAL GIORDANO GOOD FURNITURE**
Friday, 16:50 - 5:00 p.m. Saturday, 10:20 - 5:30 p.m.
312 E. Houston Ave.
Bike Sale 20% off all 1887 bicycles. 10-speeds from $119.96. Bicycle bikes from $159.95. Uptown Bicycles, 133 Mass K. 749-6036
Rock-n-roll- Thousands of used and rare albums Quantity's Flair Market, 411 New Hampshire Ave. Quantity's Flair Market, 411 New Hampshire Ave.
1973 ww bu. Reconditioned engine less than 500 miles. Brand new radials on back. Very reliable
AUTO SALES
mente. Security deposit call. Call 841-6997.
Sublease, Duplex two bedroom, 1床, 184
Missouri, great location for KU student, $380/m,
1/2 block E of Nalsham Mist. 841-3972.
1888 Chevrolet Cavalier Z2 $49.95, Camaro Iz-2
$12.94, *Note* Carlo as 32s. $185.36, *Mordor*
$18.04, *Note* Mario as 34s. $185.36, *Turbo* $14.79, *Mercury Cougar* XK19.35,
*Pontiac Fiero* Coupe $48.46, *Firebird* $9.82,
*Trans* AM $12.51, *FACTORY* warranty
refinancing trade-in. You choose option
Try cooperative living. SUNFLOWER HOUSE.
749-0671, ask for Ann,辟 or Tom.
Car won't start? Mobile repair service on foreign cars. Call Aaron at 814-4629
Red Hot Bargains! Drug dealers' cars, boats,
gardens, and pools. Buyers. Area buyers.
gadgets (803) 687-0000 s/475
LOST-FOUND
HELP WANTED
Found: Set of keys on western side of Potter
Lobbs, Library #C47809.
Sunflower House has private rooms, low rates and a great location. Call evenings
Student position: On campus publisher seeks help 10-15 hrs/wk to open and distribute daily mail, answer phones, type and assist in various duties. Must be able to work afternoons $35-$75/hr. Must come to University Press of Kansas, 329 Carrigan to complete application by 1/20/88.
Bucky's Drive-In is now taking applications for part time employment. Flexible hours. Half price meals. Apply in person between 10 and 5 at Bucky's Drive-In 9th and iowa. Thank you!
Flashback Foto will be taken for applications for the new site at the Westridge center at 6th st by our office in The Westridge Center at 6th St.
GOVERNMENT JOB$ $16.00-$49.00/202g. New
GOVERNMENT JOB$ $16.00-$49.00/202g. New
G0VERNMENT JOB$ $16.00-$49.00/202g. New
current Federal LATent$ 687-0000 use R.9758
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $10,400-$19,200 /yr. Now
$19,200 - 67,000 /stc. IU 97584 for
current Federal List.
Immediate opening for laboratory assistants for pharmaceutical research, half-time or more. Requires college course work in physical sciences, including 16 hrs. of chemistry, and transcripts required. Apply to: Personnel Dept. Merck/UniC. Job Dated: 04/29/2024. an equal opportunity employer. M/F/N/V
math instructors for GMAT, GRE, ACT review courses. Qualifications-excellent test scores, top 10% on GRE or GMAT. 3.5 undergraduate G.P.A., undergraduate degree, excellent communication skills, ability to motivate students, ability to initial time for successful call. 842-6442 942
Local marketing firm seeks several new
weekends to help house owed work hours (neck
nights). Call ljm 149-7066
Part time house cleaners wanted. Day and evening hours avail. If you enjoy cleaning and are meticulous, Buckingham Palace is interested in cleaning transportation. Must be available over breaks.
Preschool aid. After school 4-3-0. Early childhood training experience Sunshine
Qualified individuals earn up to $400/m. Fr./Sph. years and $740/m. Jr/Sr. years. Requirements: Full time student, physically fit, willing to join the AROTC-SMP program.
Postal Jobs: $206.00 $647! Prepare Now!
Postal Job: (918) 532-4444; http://www.
postaljob.com/ (918) 532-4444; Ext 1153
Person to assist with my care or supper. Mornings and/or evenings, weeks: 749-4305.
*ewarding Summer for sophomore and older college students in Colorado mountains with support from the Colorado Wildlife, many outdoor programs. Write now: include program interests and goals. Sanborn
SALES EXPERIENCE OPPORTUNITY J4M is now taking applications for Sales Kepi for the KU area. This is an excellent opportunity to gain sales experience while making extra money selling quality party favors. To apply, stop by our office at J4D Shipping Shoproom at 6th and Kaldi 101.
Service Technician Lawrence 1 Computer Store
& Technology, Inc. or Davenport, Iowa and Keypoy Micro, printers etc. familiarity with micro prefers. Growth potential and experience and resume or credentials by JAMS in the job offered.
Student Business Assistant I. Deadline 1/25/88.
Salary $40.00/Hr. types and departmental budget and purchasing documents. Participates in the budget accounting process. Maintains budgetary accounting process. Maintains ledgers, database files on micro computer. Other responsibilities include the year experience in Office environment, typing and filing; 2) course in bookkeeping or account accounting; 3) ability to speed up 45 wpm; 4) ability to follow complex oral and written instruction; 5) currently enrolled (or currently not enrolled) as a University employment) as a student at the University of Kansas; 6) Skilled in operating microcomputer. Fill out an application at the reception desk. Send resume to University of Kansas.
1988 summer positions available:
Administrative assistant Production assistant T-shirt security Stage hands
needed student resource aid for spring 88,
clerical and typing (30wpm) skills. Data entry
experience preferred but not mandatory. Must be
applicable to most morning hours. Apply
ESB building 846-3971
Summer camp jobs in the Northeast. For free list, send self addressed stamped envelope to Midwest Camp Consultants, 1785 Red Coat Dr., Maryland Heights. Mg. 63043.
Sandstone Amphitheater
Warm caring children - who like children ages 3-5 and up. Call for a minimum of 2 hrs per day one week per day: 7:30 and 3:30 M-F. Day care volunteers needed from 10:30-5:30. For more information visit www.nurserycare.com.
Fill out an application at the reception desk at the Computer Center, University of Kansas.
The University of Kansas has a position opening for a continuous half-time student assistant. The person in this position will assist you for the university's budgets. This position will gain a good experience to future employers within the university's financial environment. The position requires senior or junior staff, both in hours of accounting, and good written and oral communication skills. Desirable applicant will be employed on a full-time basis for 6 months. $400-$480 per month for half-time employment. Closing date is January 30. Start date is February 12. Apply at Pestinger, Budget Office, 844-6138. Applications available in $39 Holding Hall between 1:40 p.m.-3:00 p.m.
For information call:
(913) 287-1154
MISCELLANEOUS
Secret grade point increase techniques revealed. Results guaranteed." free detail for Dean L' dreamer Writer, Report Card Hambon, Zephy Press P.O. Box 831, Orange San Anselmo.
PERSONAL
Heavy metal songwriter - guitarist wants to meet other metalists, male or female, to exchange info, jam or possible low budget recording. Vocals also welcome. Call 843-6512. Leave name and email.
Tamera from Walmart, give me a call to me if you go up in time for your 2.0 Spanish class.
Twin -Let me help you! Old blood? What Rocky Horror Film Show? Farm! Pani pens from Michael's. Eric at Dillons. What next? Outa Trucker warehouse-hackery-in-Tonka Trucker terrible disease, Cerebral Psalus. Play a crutch in the doctors office? Or run on them with a Bagel-wheeled laundry-hackery-hasketron* Tonka Trucker terrible disease. Cookie follower. I really'll miss sliding on magazines, wearing mud masks, and snuggling
follow needed in all subjects. Requirements: 3.0
Robots need in a subject, good communication
skills. Apply at Supportive Educational
Services. 863-3971
BUS PERSONAL
$50 Value when presented to ward and new patient ser-
tence. Dr Johnson, Spinal Exem.
Dr Johnson, Chr. Craptorpe.
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-6821. Confidential help/free pregnancy
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided 411-2316.
New York Times
by subscription.
Jan.18-May 12: $20.90
Jan.25-May 12: $19.59
send to: N.Y. Times
P.O. Box 1721
Lawrence KS 66044
for Sunday Service
or more info call
National Edition
only 25¢ per copy Mon.-Fri.
841-5073
BLICK'S SMOKED MEATS
TUE. & WED. ONLY
AT J & L's
IN WESTRIDGE
BBQ Sandwiches
BBQ Ribs
Smoked Chickens
Briskets
WELL CATER ANY PARTY (216)872-3221
HARPER
LAWYER
1101 Mass
Suite 201 749-0123
SERVICES OFFERED
Become a Valentine always remembered, with a
photo of your special valentine to Photo's
Photo's. 749-796. Free consultation.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwinter Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749.
HELP! Furstretched by red tape? Needing a
call to the UNIVERSITY INFORMATION
MISSION to tell the UNIVERSITY INFORMATION
MISSION that the report is incomplete.
Kim's Alterations-Quick Service Suits, coats,
shirts, shorts & accessories 649-802 (Bite Food for 10)
649-802 (Bite Food for 10)
THE FAR SIDE
opera care individual
group rates 841.048
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob Gyn and Adherent Ser
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ektachrome processing with 24 hours. Complete B/W services. PASSPORT $6.00. Art & Design Building, Room 206. 864-4707.
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $/hr, 843-9032
(p.m.)
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
TYPING
1-1000 pages; No job too small or too large. Atc
address 842 7945 or Lai 842 7945
The college of Liberal Arts and Sciences offers tutoring in math, english, business, and economics courses at a reasonable charge through Supportive Educational Services, apply
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your
driving school completed. Transportation provided.
1-per Woman Word processing Former editor transforms your scripts into accurately spelled and punctuated grammatically correct pages with "print service" or "printer service. Fast professional word pro
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in term paper fields. may improve correcting Selective Matching
1-A: Relieving Typing Service Term papers,
2-B: Relieving Typing service typical, IBM
Ethernet Typewriter 842-3448
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term papers, letters, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailings list. Letter
printing, spelling corrected. 842-7247.
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS,
MOMMY'S TYING, one day service available
842 3379 at 9 p.m., please.
For professional typing/word processing, call Myrna 841-6090. Spring special $120 payable online.
editing, grammar, spelling, research applications, dissertation writing, computer science, Degree Requirements
Quality typing. Includes excellent spelling, grammar, punctuation, editing. Fast and reliable service.
Typing at a reasonable rate Call Holly a
FAST. ACCURATE. DEPENDAHLE. Letter
TYPICAL SPAM. spell check
TOP NETWORK SERVICES 885-2470
Pension pennsimming rooming 2-Br Apt. close to campus, $179.79 per apex. No deposit required.
Female roommate needed to share huge room in
rm. apt, Pursued soil, 1/2 baths, 8/16 plns
in room, 3 ft x 5 ft.
Female female wanted to share bedroom with 4 boys. He needed a Gas and water paid. Rent is in vegetable. Call Lle
biring! Government Jobs-your area $15,000
68,000 Call (623) 838-838 ext 4055
Need rest-play aids right after lunch for one or two hours. Call the Employer Smith (844)-600-1400. Open Opportunity Employment
ROOMMATE WANTED FOR SUNRISE
ROOMMATE WANTED FOR SUNRISE
Utilities. January rent paid. Cherys 749-600
Utilities. January rent paid. Cherys 749-600
Roommate wanted Unique 2 or apartment 1 block off campus $205 plus utilities. Price range $1,899-$2,699.
Roommate: 4 Br. 3 bath, 3 story closes close to
murs, $170/month plus utilities and deposit
amounts.
**STUDENT ASSISTANCE** - Half-time. The Organizations and Activities Center has a weekly 1/2 or 3-hour orientation as a supervisor to the City Council and member fraternities. Required qualification, enrollment for fall 1887 and being a member of the 2016-2017 2.0 G.P.A. Prior experience in fraternity leadership, ability to work flexible hours. Complete coursework in Office Management and Activities Center, 364-4861. Submit a letter of application, resume, and three letters of recommendation from the Student Organization and Activities Center, 105 Burgess Street, 60045. Position available immediately. EFO
Wanted non-student basketball tickets 842-673-683
Wanted to share spacious, clean warm 3-bedroom house with professional woman. 29 Prefer grad student or working person. Walk 2 blocks to KU. Central heat and air conditioning. Pay 15% plus 1/2 of reasonable utilities. 842-631-683
By GARY LARSON
Vinci Bras
Cockroach Farm
"Hours of revolting
entertainment!"
"Now remember, Cory, show us that you can take good care of these little fellows and maybe next year we'll get you that puppy."
14
Tuesday, January 19, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Joe Student's Law of Economics: Shop Food 4 Less.
CHIPS
NUTS
FOOD4LESS
So
all th
CHIPS
FOOD4LESS
Now that you're back at school, Food 4 Less is going to make this semester a breeze. You see, we've got the lowest prices every day on all the national brand name items, including everything for setting up your apartment or dorm room.
So shop Food 4 Less this semester. And just imagine what you can do with all the money you save!
THERE CAN ONLY BE ONE LOW PRICE LEADER!
FOOD4LESS
We always have been...And we always will be.
Wednesday January 20,1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Vol. 98, No. 78 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Gay rights bid gets no action
I am very happy to see you.
By Joel Zeff
Kansan staff writer
Ann Ryun embraces Nancy Liskey, both Lawrence residents, after the Lawrence City Commission voted last night to take no action to amend the existing human rights ordinance. Ryun and Liskey both opposed the amendment that would have added the phrase "sexual orientation" to the ordinance.
The Lawrence City Commission voted 3-2 to take no governmental action last night on a proposal to prohibit discrimination against homosexuals.
In taking no action, Mayor Mike Amyx said, the commission could consider the proposal again at anytime. Each commission explained his stance on the issue before the noaction vote, with Amyx casting the deciding vote.
Amryx, speaking to an overflowing chamber room, said that the vote was not a deferral on the issue but that no action would mean no change.
Commission members Sandra Praeger, Bob Schumm and Amyx opposed the city's Human Relations Commission's recommendation to amend Lawrence's human rights ordinance to prohibit homosexual discrimination in employment, housing and public accommodation.
Commissioners Dennis Constance and Mike Rundle voted for the proposal.
The human rights ordinance, passed in 1983, now prohibits discrimination based on race, sex, color,
nationality, religion, age, ancestry,
or handicap.
"I'm disappointed they didn't vote in 'favor,'" said Liz Gowdy, spokesman for Citizens for Human Rights in Lawrence. "But I'm pleased there wasn't a 'no' vote. I think we've come a long way in educating the public and helping people understand about discrimination."
Amyx and Schumm said they voted against the proposal because the human relations commission didn't have enough evidence to support the claim that homosexual discrimination occurred in Lawrence.
Schumm said, "I find no documented evidence of discrimination (toward homosexuals) in housing, education, and transportation. We do need factual data."
Ray Samuel, chairman of the executive division of the Human Relations Commission, said that when people are afraid to come forward and testify, the data needed would then become unavailable.
vide leadership. We have documentation. "Fear makes it difficult to get numbers on a page."
Liz Tolbert, president of the Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas, said that the proponents of the proposal now have the opportunity to come up with the numbers needed.
Constance, however, simply asked the commission how much discrimination was enough before action could be taken.
The main opposition, Alliance of Citizens for Traditional Values, was happy with the vote.
"Somebody has to be first," he said. "City Commission should pro-
Judge denies Iran-contra petition
WASHINGTON — A federal judge refused yesterday to order the grand jury investigating the Iran-contra affair to review congressional testimony of key participants in the arms sales to Iran and diversion of profits to Nicaraguan rebels.
U. S. District Judge Aubrey E. Robinson Jr. denied the petition filed by retired Air Force Maj. Gen Richard V. Secord, a target of the Iran-contra investigation being conducted by independent counsel Lawrence E. Walsh.
The Associated Press
Secord, who helped negotiate the sale of U.S. arms to Iran and the diversion of profits to the contras, had sought an order requiring the grand jury to consider the testimony of Lt. Col. Oliver L. North, John M. Poindexter and others who received congressional immunity.
Second also sought an opportunity to tell his side of the story to the group.
what he could tell the panel about the congressional testimony.
Secord had been offered an opportunity to testify before the grand jury if he confined his testimony to answering the prosecutor's questions. Walsh sought to prevent Secord from giving grand jurors a summary of the congressional testimony of immunized witnesses.
Second, North, Poindexter and Second's business partner, Albert Hakim, are targets of the investigation being conducted by Walsh. The grand jury, which has been sitting for about a year, is expected to return indictments against the four in the coming weeks.
Record, a lead witness at last
vacuum, testified
testified without an immunity grant.
Robinson gave no reason for denying Secord's request, which had been made by the defense. Thomas C. Green, he said he would probably appeal Robinson's order.
Reagan authorizes weapons airdrops to contra fighters
Congress preparing for aid battle
The Associated Press
"This is really a gut issue for the president," said Rep. Lee Hamilton, D-Ind, an opponent of the aid renewal Reagan is expected to seek for the rebel on Jan. 26. "It is his highest foreign policy objective. The administration will pull out every stop in order to win this vote."
WASHINGTON — President Reagan yesterday authorized the CIA to resume airdrops of weapons to Nicaragua's contra rebels, as congressional opponents worked to offset an expected presidential lobbying blitz for an extension of military aid.
The House is to vote Feb. 3 on Reagan's request for an as-yet-undetermined amount of new military aid to the war zone in the Senate would vote the next day.
In a speech to administration political appointees yesterday, the president reiterated his belief that only continued military pressure on Nicaragua's leftist Sandinista government will lead to peace for the region.
"We must have the courage to stand behind those who continue to put their lives on the line for democracy in Nicaragua," Reagan said.
He said his final year in office would be "the year that the United States will strongly alarm that the terrorist organisation is the future of Central America."
The airdrops had been suspended
The rebels are currently operating on a short-term infusion of humanitarian aid approved before Congress left for its holiday recess, including money to pay for CIA airdrops of previously stocked weapons and ammunition. That money is expected to last through next month.
The rebels are currently operating on a short-term infusion of humanitarian aid approved before Congress left for its holiday recess, including money to pay for CIA airdrops of previously stockpiled weapons.
for the past week because of the weekend meeting in Costa Rica of the five Central American presidents who signed a peace accord Aug. 7. To resume the supply flights, Reagan had to certify that no cease-fire had been achieved and that failure to do so was the fault of the Sandistas.
Reagan sent Congress a letter certifying that no cease-fire had been agreed to by the Sandinistas and the contras, that the failure to achieve a cease-fire "results from the lack of good faith efforts by the government of Nicaragua" and that the contras had acted in good faith.
"The time for Sandinista compliance with the (Central American peace) accord has come and gone, and the Nicaraguan people and the Central American democracies have waited in vain for the Sandinistas to carry out their promises." Reagan wrote.
"It has become increasingly clear that, without the pressure created by a strong Nicaraguan democratic resistance, the Sandinistas will not conduct to comply with compromises made in theimately made and broken since 1978."
Under the law, Reagan must ask for any new military aid next week, triggering votes in Congress.
Higher education lobbyists take their case to governor
Kansan staff writer
By Iill less
Students fill Statehouse with support for Margin proposal
TOPEKA — The mere presence of student lobbyists at the Statehouse yesterday helped the Board of Regents Margin of Excellence proposal as much as what the students had to say, legislative leaders said.
About 250 students from the University of Kansas and the other five Regents universities met with about 150 legislators in a student-sponsored effort to win support for the Regents plan.
"You can't create this kind of activity if there aren't real issues behind it," said Mark Tallman, legislative director of the Associated Students of Kansas, which sponsored the lobbying effort.
Martie Aaron, director of the KU SK chapter, said she thought the idea was well received.
"Weeks from now, when the legislators are trying to make up their minds on how to vote (on Margin of Excellence), they're going to remember, I talked to a student about that." Aaron said.
Gov. Mike Hayden, in an 11 a.m.
speech to ASK members, said he was impressed by the presence of the students.
"I'm proud of the fact that you'd come and take the time because one of the most difficult problems to overcome is anathy." Havens said.
The lobbyby consisted of telling the legislators what the problems were at the universities and why the Margin of Excellence proposal would help alleviate those problems. The students broke into groups and met with individual legislators.
The Margin of Excellence is the Regents three-year proposal to add $47 million to the Regents schools' budgets.
Laura Amber, Lawrence junior,
was one out of about 150 students who
lived in the district.
Ambler said she told legislators about crowded classrooms, overworked professors and lack of funds for libraries.
State legislators said they didn't know the effect of the lobbying but predicted that much of the Margin of Excellence proposal would be approved.
"I will support at least a certain percentage of it, but I don't think I can swing all of it," state Rep. Darrel Webb, D-Wichita, told student lobbyists.
One of the problems that many legislators cited was the lack of money to support the full Margin of Excellence proposal.
State Sen. Joseph C. Harder, R-Moundridge, said that he would support the Margin of Excellence proposal but that he didn't know where the money could come from.
Hayden's budget proposal for the coming fiscal year includes about 80 percent of the requests made in Margin of Excellence. A 5-percent increase in faculty salaries and a 4-percent increase in student and classified salaries were included, but program enhancements, such as money for Regents school libraries, were not.
Aaron said in a training session for the lobbyists Monday night, "We're happy with this, but couldn't it have been better?"
But Harder said yesterday that he
BALLET
Gov. Mike Hayden spoke to students in the Capital rotunda yesterday. The students were in Topeka lobbying legislators for increased funding for higher education.
However, Democratic leaders in the House and Senate said that the
didn't think the proposal was indecdeate
"I don't think we've given them the short end of the stick," he said. "We just haven't given them as much as they'd like."
Margin of Excellence proposal could be met in full.
Senate Minority Leader Michael Johnston, D-Parsons, said that money could come from many sources. The tax windfall or carry-over money.
House Minority Leader Marvin
Barkis, D-Louisburg, said, "Sacrifice for education is a normal pattern from the past."
Not enough sacrifices are made for education, he said.
Aaron said that she was pleased with the way the day went.
Many unclassified employees unhappy with Hayden's budget proposal
By Rebecca J. Cisek
Kansan staff writer
The Board of Regents may have been happy with Gov. Mike Hayden's budget proposal for fiscal 1989, but many unclassified employees at the University of Kansas aren't smiling.
Unclassified employees are all people not part of the classified civil service and include administrators, teachers and teaching and non-teaching faculty.
Hayden's recommendations would give all unclassified employees a 5 percent cost-of-living increase, but only teaching faculty will be allowed the additional 2.8 percent Margin of Excellence increase.
Carolyn Kelly, assistant to the vice chancellor for academic affairs, said that KU employees who would not receive the Margin of Excellence increase under Hayden's plan included people such as assistants and teaching staff members at the computer center, directors of laboratories, student
The governor felt that the major emphasis after talking with the Regents. . . was that teaching faculty present the largest problem in retaining.'
- Kathy Peterson Gov. Hayden's press secretary
T
affairs employees. Watkins Hospital employees and facilities directors.
The Margin of Excellence is a proposal to bring Regents schools to 95 percent of their peer schools in overall funds and 100 percent in withheld funds. Pear schools are similar in size, scope and mission.
Kathy Peterson, press secretary to the governor, said yesterday that Hayden thought that the salaries of
teaching faculty had the greatest need for enhancement.
Keith Nitcher, director of business affairs, said analysis of the number of University employees affected was under way and he expected to know the precise number in about a week.
"The governor felt that the major emphasis after talking with the Regents, that teaching faculties, the largest problem in retaining," she said.
One group of employees unhappy with the proposal is librarians
"We're almost in a state of disbelief that librarians are not included," said Jim Ranz, dean of libraries. "I can't think of any reason for that."
In comparison to the peer schools, Ranz said, librarians' salaries are in worse shape than those of any other group of University employees. He said he had been losing librarians to Harvard, Stanford, and Northwestern universities and to the University of California at Berkeley.
Sandra Brandt, chairman of the library faculty assembly at KU, said that the group would lobby the Legislature for the inclusion of salary increases for librarians.
Ranz said the Association of Research Libraries in Washington, D.C., ranked KU 50th out of 106 member schools in librarian salaries in the mid-1970s. KU currently ranks in the low 90s. Ranz said.
Robin Eversole, director of university relations, said that University employees who did not teach fulfilled many important roles but that they did not share in the Margin of Excellence increase.
"The support staff has not received much recognition." she said.
Some of the support staff include people who provide specific services or assistance.
KU's peer schools.
"That ticks me off to no end," he said.
"I don't see any reason why we were not important when the (teaching) faculty were," he said.
Jerry Rogers, director of student financial aid, said that employees who worked in the financial aid office were one of the most underpaid groups in the Big Eight and among
Allan Long, director of cartographic services in the department of geography, is angry about the proposed budget's salary increases.
"I support any increase the faculty
but I loved it, too," Lee said.
"I don't know whether it was intentional or accidental, but it seems that a rather large part of the University was left out," he said.
Jim Stinson, assistant director of admissions, said he thought the governor's actions neglected many unclassified employees.
Correction
Incorrect information in a page one story yesterday about spring enrollment was attributed to once Lindvail, director of admission.
Lindvall clarified yesterday that 20th-day enrollment figures were usually lower than first-day figures. First-day enrollment figures increased Friday showed an increase of 688 students over last spring.
Official enrollment is calculated on the 20th day of classes. Lindvall estimated that those figures would show an enrollment increase of only 300 to 400 students.
---
The difference between first-day and 20th-day figures is partially due to students who go through the day of late enrollment and add-droon.
2
Wednesday, January 20, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Wetter Forecast From the KU Weather Service
LAWRENCE
Cloudy
HIGH: 32°
LOW: 13°
Today, chance of flurries in the morning with brisk winds. Clearing by evening high will be in the low 30's. Tonight, clear and cool with a low in the teens.
KEY
Rain T-Storms Snow Flurries Ice
REGIONAL
North Platte 30/3 Clear Omaha 24/4 Clear
Goodland 32/5 Clear Heys 30/11 Clear Salina 30/12 Partly cloudy Topeka 29/12 Cloudy Kansas City 30/13 Cloudy Columbia 30/15 Cloudy St Louis 35/18 Cloudy
Dodge City 36/11 Clear Wichita 35/12 Clear Chanute 34/16 Clear Springfield 31/18 Clear
Forecast by Alice Meas Temperatures are today's high and tonight's low.
Tulsa 35/18 Clear
5-DAY
THU Mostly sunny 32/16 HIGH LOW
FRI Cloudy 35/10
SAT Flurries 23/7
SUN Cloudy 20/7
MON Cloudy 22/11
On Campus
a. aretrees' club coffee will be at 10 a.m. today at the Adam Lounge in the Adams Alumni Center. Music will begin at 11 a.m.
A University forum featuring Tom Eblen, general manager and
news adviser to the Kansan, will begin at 11:40 a.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. His topic is "Ad Astra per Aspera, The Student newspaper as Paradox."
Local Briefs
PARTY CHAIRMAN RESIGNS: Dean Lebesky, chairman of the Douglas County Democratic Central Committee since 1968, has announced that he will resign from that position effective next week.
Lebesty, co-owner of The Jay Shoppe, 835 Massachusetts St., said yesterday that he was resigning for personal and business reasons. He said the central committee would meet Tuesday to choose a new chairman.
Garth Burns, who has been involved with the committee for 18 years, said he plans to run for the office. Lebestky said no other people
had yet expressed interest in the job.
Lebestey said that the position had been rewarding but that it had also taken a great deal of time.
"I'll still be involved in the party."
Lebestky said. "I just don't have time to devote to the chairmanship."
Burns, manager of engineering computer resources at Bendix/King in Olathe, has served as the committee's treasurer in the past. He also worked in voter registration drives and in State Rep. Jessie Branson's 1980 and 1982 campaigns.
joe Wilkins IIIKANSAN
Burns said his committee experience would help him be an effective chairman.
I. O. T.
Foggy day
Tom Robert, Overland Park senior, adjusted his wool hat yesterday morning while walking beside Fraser Hall.
Call 864-4810
Tornadoes, snowstorms rip the nation
The Associated Press
STORY or PHOTO IDEA?
So far, 24 deaths have been blamed on bad weather this week, and the snowstorm caused an estimated $65 million in damage to Southern California and Mexico.
A snowstorm whipping drives up to 10 feet high stranded hundreds of motorists as it roared across the Midwest yesterday, while tornadoes and rain pounded parts of the South and killed at least five people.
Blinding snow whipped up by gusty winds stopped travel and closed schools in western Kansas, while
Winds gusting up to 52 mph piled snow into three-foot drifts on Cheyenne County roads, and ranchers could not get to cattle to feed them. The heaviest snow was in Wallace, Sherman and Thomas counties, the Kansas Highway Patrol said.
dense fog blanketed parts of south east and south-central Kansas.
Blowing snow cut visibility to near zero. Interstate 70 was closed to westbound traffic from Colby to the Colorado state line and to eastbound traffic from Goodland to Colby, the patrol said.
"Most of the doors of the truck stop are drifted up. It's a pretty good one." said trucker Roger Ealum of LaSalle, Colo., who was snowbound at Limon, Colo.
Tornadoes and thunderstorm winds swept over the lower Mississippi Valley on Tuesday. Officials said at least two people were killed and 20 iomes badly damaged or destroyed when a tornado hit north of Moscow, Tem.
Another tornado struck near Allen. Officials said one person was killed and five injured and three houses
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, January 20, 1988
3
Campus/Area
Evacuation of handicapped not specific
By Stacy Foster
Kansan staff writer
The hall fills with smoke The alarms sound. Students hurry from their rooms, except for one. He can't hear the alarm because he's deaf. A specially designed strobe light flashes, alerting him to the danger, and he makes it safely outside.
The University of Kansas has specific procedures for evacuating students from residence halls in emergency situations; and the University of Missouri has a plan for evacuating handcapped students.
"There are a number of procedures in evacuating a building, and one of those is to make sure the handicapped are assisted," said Fred McElhenei, director of residential
programs.
Of the 4,500 students in residence halls, McElhene estimated, five were handicapped.
Ken Stoner, director of student housing,
said he thought the University had an adequate evacuation system. He said in cases where a student has needed special assistance, adaptations have been made in the warning system.
Students can fill out requests for special warning signals, such as a special light or a vibration, that would alert the student in emergency situations, he said.
Jim McSwain, Lawrence fire chief, said the fire department had no special procedures for evacuating handicapped students.
The fire department uses the same procedure for evacuating handicapped students as they do for rest homes and hospitals.
"The people in the most dargar have our top priority," he said. "When we move people, we try to use the least amount of resources. We move them to a safe place where others can assist them while we attend to the fire."
Even though KU officials don't think an evacuation plan tailored to handicapped students is necessary, one Regents school has developed a handicapped evacuation plan that is being used as a model across the country.
Emporia State University introduced an evacuation plan for handicapped students in
their campus buildings last spring.
Pat Wade, associate dean of students at Emporia State, said the school has had a long history of assisting handicapped students. He said the school made its building wheelchair-accessible even before a federal law went into effect in 1973 requiring schools that received federal funds to make their buildings accessible to the handicapped.
The evacuation program at Emporia State includes two plans. One is evacuating non-residential buildings on campus. The other plan, now in its final draft stage, is a blueprint for evacuating handicapped students from residence halls. One part of this plan, an individual notification-evacuation form, has been put into effect.
Handicapped students at Emporia State can list on a form the nature of their handicap and potential risks involved in evacuating them. Other students are then trained by the handicapped student on the proper way to help during an emergency.
Denny Orr, coordinator of residential life at Emporia State, said the plan had been very effective. The local fire and police departments have received copies of the handicap forms so they know where handicapped students live.
Lori Michel, assistant director of student assistance center at KU, said that Emporia State's program was successful because it had a smaller campus and fewer buildings.
Group lists Cubans' complaints
By Jeff Suggs
Kansan staff writer
LEAVENWORTH — When Cuban prisoners rioted in federal prisons in Atlanta and Oakdale, La. eight weeks ago, they said one of the reasons they rioted was that prison conditions were poor.
Now at the U.S. Penitentiary at Leavenworth, some of the 400 to 500 Cuban prisoners are complaining again, said a member of an organization set up to represent the detainees. And conditions are as bad as the conditions in Atlanta and Oakdale, if not worse, he said.
With the penitentiary looming in the background, three members of
the Atlanta-based Coalition to Support Cuban Detainees conducted a press conference at the entrance to the prison Friday morning and called on prison officials to improve conditions for the Cuban prisoners.
Prison officials deny that the prisoners are being treated unfairly.
Gary Leshaw, an attorney from Atlanta and a member of the coalition, said he met for more than six hours Thursday with 10 candidates from both two who were involved in negotiations to end the riots in Atlanta.
"The detainees are still in (24-
hour) lockdown," Leshaw said. "They receive their meals in their cells.
"There are complaints about medical care, the lack of medical care. There are complaints about the fact there's no access to telephones, visiting rooms. Families can't visit here. There are complaints about lack of information, lack of literature. Lack of even the priest coming around."
Leshaw said that the prisoners also complained about the recreation facilities. The Cubans said a room the size of a prison cell is being used for recreation.
"One of them said it's what you
THE LAW OF CONSERVATION IN U.S. POLITICS
But Jeff Duncan, executive assistant to the warden at Leavenworth, said the recreation facility had helped Leshaw led many to believe
put a little bird in," said Steve Donziger, a member of the coalition. "I guess he was referring to a parrot's cage."
Gary Leshaw, an attorney and a member of the Coalition to Support Cuban Detainees, speaks in front of the U.S. Penitentiary at Leavenworth about living conditions for the Cuban prisoners.
The coalfaction members said living conditions in the prison needed to be improved for the Cubans.
"You heard a lot of the same complaints you heard in Atlanta over the years," Donziger said about the living conditions, "That kind of treatment upsets them. I don't think it matters and a question of what the proper prison management is. And I think these issues need to be raised."
"I find serious problems about how things are going here," Leshaw said. "I think at this point, it's going beyond what is necessary."
The coalition members also were in the area to recruit students, particularly law students, to represent the Cubans, free of discrimination and Naturalization Service release hearings next month.
On Thursday and Friday, coalition members went to the law schools of the University of Missouri-Kansas City, the University of Kansas and Washburn University to help train students for the proceedings.
The coaltion members said they would hold another training session tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. in the morning. They recruited 125 area students so far.
"If we could get 200 people, then each person could take two or three cases," said Carla Dudeck, another member of the coalition. "Especially if the (prison) population goes down."
Ex-wife testifies about abuse
Trial continues of Lawrence man charged with murder in wife's death
Kansan staff writer
By Ric Brack
An ex-wife of a Lawrence man accused of murdering his wife testified yesterday that the man had both physically and mentally abused her during their marriage and once threatened he was "gonna put her in a coffin."
The man, Carl Kemp, is on trial in Douglas County District Court on first-degree murder charges for the death of his wife, Judy. Judy Kemp's body was found in a wooden box in a trailer behind the Kemp's trailer Sept. 9.
Pat Hanks. Kemp's ex-wife, testified that "he was real drunk one night and in the other room was
saying stuff where I could hear it to scare me. 'I'm gonna put her in a coffin.' He was talking to someone else."
Hanks, who was visibly shaken as she testified, said she was married to Kemp for $1\frac{1}{2}$ years. She said that at the time of their divorce in 1979, he hadn't allowed her to see her mother for five years or her sister for seven years.
Hanks said that she had received many severe beatings from Kemp, especially in the latter part of their marriage, and that she had a scar on her face from being hit with a beer can.
Kemp's attorney, Carl Fleming,
objected to allowing Hanks' testimony on the grounds that no evidence had been introduced that Kemp ever struck his wife Judy.
Douglas County District Attorney Jim Flory argued that Hanks' testimony was relevant in light of testimony from Lawrence police detectives and Wichita pathologist William Eckert that Judy Kemp died of trauma she suffered from a head injury.
Ed Brunt and David Davis, the two Lawrence detectives, testified yesterday morning that during interrogations on Sept. 9 and Sept. 10, Kemp offered several versions of the events of Sept. 3.
Davis said that at one point, Kemp blurred up. "To hell with it, I can't
gonna lie no more."
Brunt and Davis said Kemp told them that as he and his wife were driving up to their mobile home, they began to argue. She jumped out of the car, which Kemp said was traveling about 20 miles per hour. At that point, Davis said, the story starts to diverge.
In one version, Kemp said that as house,
she laid her bed, on a roof made
by bit, her bed, on a roof made
In another version, she ran into that post, spun around and hit another post; and in yet another version, she hit no posts at all but fell face down onto the steps leading to
See KEMP, p. 11, col. 1
Students denied desired classes statistics show
By Elaine Woodford
Kansan staff writer
As students lobbied politicians yesterday for financing of the Margin of Excellence proposal, statistics compiled by the office of student records supported one of their complaints
Many students aren't getting the classes they want.
Course demand statistics, compiled Jan. 14, showed that students were denied enrollment into class sessions on 3.988 occasions this spring.
However, Brower Burchill, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, said the statistics may have been leaking because they were inflated.
The numbers represent each attempt of a student to enroll in a closed class. One student may try to enroll in a closed section of an open class and still be counted. A student may also try to enrol in a class several times.
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences has had the greatest demand for courses in its departments. The political science, psychology, English and communication studies departments have all had trouble accommodating student demand for courses, particularly classes for juniors and seniors.
In the college, four departments were widely strained, the survey indicated.
- The department of political science denied 287 requests by students for entrance into 300- and 600-level courses. All but seven of those attempts were made by students who were uniors.
- The department of psychology rejected 470 attempts by students to enroll in 100- to 700-level courses. Two hundred and sixty-five of those were made by juniors and 199 by seniors.
The department of English turned down 121 requests, including 100 from juniors. No seniors were denied spaces in classes. Since the statistics were compiled, the English department has opened four additional sections of English 209, introduction to the novel, which eased the crunch of students trying to complete their English requirements.
■ In communication studies, 818 attempts were denied. All but 12 of those came from students who were junior and seniors. The communication studies department closed four sections of communications 150, personal communication, to open four upper-level communications
The professional schools haven't
W
We have tried to add sections where it's possible, but it's difficult to find qualified instructors.'
— David Shulenberger
associate dean of academic affairs for
the School of Business
escaped closed classes, the survey indicates. Although the schools are able to control class sizes more easily through admissions policies, they are also trying to provide enough courses for their majors, school officials said.
The School of Business had the highest incidence of closed courses among the professional schools. A staff roll in business courses were denied.
"We have tried to add sections where it's possible, but it's difficult to find qualified instructors," said Rachel Tucker. "I had no academic affairs for the school."
Shulenberger said that the school used waiting lists of students trying to get into classes to determine which students really needed to be enrolled in courses.
Courses in organizational behavior analysis were especially hard to enroll in this spring. According to course demand statistics, 89 students were unable to enrol in either business 479, organizational behavior, or business 655, personnel management, a two-course sequence that is popular with personnel administration majors.
Shulenberger said the school would try to accommodate business majors first. He also said he had not heard of any seniors who had been forced to delay graduation because they were unable to enroll in a course, although personnel administration majors may have more difficulty completing course requirements in the business school.
Burchill said that the college and
in professional schools had other
opportunities.
"Departments can require students enrolling in classes to obtain a special permission card that would have to be presented at enrollment in order to enroll in a class," he said.
Burchill suggested that departments use waiting lists to track students trying to enroll in courses required for their majors.
Although it would require additional resources from the departments and quite a bit of paperwork, Burchill said he thought these options might help departments to more effectively control class size.
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Wednesday, January 20, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Supreme Court's ruling stifles high school press
Last week, the U.S. Supreme Court erred in giving public school officials broad power to censor student newspapers.
In a 5-3 vote, the court ruled that a Hazelwood, Mo., high school principal did not violate students' free-speech rights when he ordered two pages deleted from an issue of the student newspaper.
The case, Hazelwood School District vs. Kuhlmeier, was the first high school press case heard before the high court and only the second student expression case since the 1969 Tinker vs. Des Moines Independent Community School District.
In the Tinker case, the court ruled that public high schools may curtail student's free-speech rights only when the student expression is materially disruptive or invades the rights of others.
One of the two censored articles dealt with teen-age pregnancy. The other addressed the effect of divorce on children. Both were later published in the St. Louis Globe-Democrat, and no student or parent raised a complaint.
In his opinion for the court, Justice Byron R. White wrote that a school need not tolerate student speech that is inconsistent with its educational mission.
How can articles that address reality be inconsistent with the educational mission of public schools?
Reality is often unpopular because it shows institutions and society in a negative light. If the student press is allowed only to depict a sanitized view of student life — straight-A students, choir practices, pizza parties and homecoming queens — a disservice is done to both readers and student writers.
The court ruled that the student newspaper was not a forum for student expression but a regulated laboratory for the students to practice what they learned in journalism class.
The court's decision opens the door to censorship of any speech that does not show a school in a positive light.
However, journalism is more than a collection of facts, opinions and art splattered across newsprint. The basics of writing and researching a story cannot be separated from the mission of a profession that demands freedom from outside restraint.
Insecure and power-hungry principals will use the court's ruling to justify their manipulation of student publications. Student journalists should not consent to being public relations conduits, even if it means taking student publications "underground" to better serve readers.
Administrators should not be allowed to exploit the ruling. They should recognize the need for student expression and defer to the good judgment of student editors acting on input from faculty advisers.
Student journalists, because of their proximity to student issues, can provide coverage that is often more enlightening than that provided by professional publications.
Regardless of the Supreme Court's ruling, public schools should honor First Amendment rights of student journalists.
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
Other Voices
For a coach who has lost two of his last three games, Nebraska football coach Tom Osborne sure has wound up in a profitable situation.
The NU Board of Regents will vote Saturday on a proposed $8,900 salary increase for Osborne, who just completed his 15th season at Nebraska.
An $8,900 raise just doesn't make sense. The salary increase would boost Osborne's pay to $79,000 a year — $3,370 more than University of Nebraska-Lincoln Chancellor Martin Massengale and $39,900 more than Gov. Kay Orr.
For now, Osborne's $89,000 salary is competitive with salaries of other college football coaches. The same can't be said of UNL faculty salaries, which, even with help from a tuition hike and Orr's budget proposal, will still be lower than at other land-grant universities.
The Daily Nebraskan University of Nebraska-Lincoln
News staff
Alison Young...Editor
Todd Cohen...Managing editor
Rob Knapp...News editor
Anne Pfleger...Editorial editor
Joseph Rebello...Campus editor
Jennifer Rowland...Planning editor
Anne Luscombe...Sports editor
Stephen Wade...Photo editor
Richard Stewart...Graphic editor
Tom Eben...General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Kelly Scherer...Business manager
Clark Massad...Retail sales manager
Brad Lenhart...Campus sales manager
Robert Hughes...Marketing manager
Kurt Messersmith...Production manager
Greg Knipp...National manager
Kris Schorner...Traffic manager
Jannie Brown...Classified manager
Jeanne Hines...Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and less than 200 words and must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University of Kansas, please include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest columns. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom. 111 Staffer/Final Hall
Letters, guest columns and columns are the opinion of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University Daily Kansas. Editorials are the opinion of the editor.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stairfer Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6045, 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. 6044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $40 in Douglas County and $50 in County. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through campus.
POSTMASTER Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
JIMBROGMAN
CANKINATTENCHW0001088
TV
"ANOTHER BLAST OF ARCTIC AIR HEADING OUR WAY..."
Sometimes joy of living dies first
After 95 years, there are few loose pieces remaining in the puzzle of life
Mabel has seen the world evolve from covered wagons to the Concorde. She remembers the Titanic sinking and Henry Ford coming out with his first car. She has lived through the administrations of 18 presidents, from Benjamin Harrison to Ronald Reagan.
She is in the middle of her 95th year and has
history most of us know only through our
textbooks.
Mabel had to quit school in the eighth grade to work in a broom factory to help support her family. She has been married twice — once divorced, once widowed. She has seen the birth of two children, six grandchildren and more great-grandchildren.
Mabel is full of knowledge despite her lack of education. She knows life; she's lived enough of it.
Her older grandchildren remember spending countless hours listening to their grandmother. Mabel would sit in her favorite chair with the table that always held a half-completed jigsaw puzzle on it pulled up to her. As she deftly fitted a picture of her father into the puzzle, were her favorites, she would bring her past to the present and make it come alive. Jigsaw puzzles keep the mind fit, she would say as she placed
Anne Luscombe Sports Editor
another piece on the first try
But Mabel doesn't do jigsaw puzzles anymore.
But she doesn't do jigsaw puzzles any more.
She is still part of this world, but the vibrant, stubborn woman who has survived almost a century is now just a shell of her former self.
Her great-grandchildren know her only as the old lady who lives in a smelly nursing home room, unable to talk. they are frightened of when she reaches out to grasp their hands. Soon, however, they simply lose interest in their silent elder.
Mabel has suffered several strokes. Her vocabulary has been reduced to a few simple phrases, a couple of words and two expletives.
Mabel wants to die.
She has outgifted all of her friends and most of her siblings. The world she used to be a part of has shrunk to half of a 12-by-14-foot room. Her soul is trapped in a body that refuses to relinquish its
hold on the earth.
hold on the earth.
Mabel doesn't understand why.
Her eyes light up when she has visitors. But as soon as they leave, she is unsure of whether they were really there. Her mind can recall President McKinley's assassination as vividly as though it happened just a few hours ago, but by dinnertime she has forgotten what she had for lunch.
She looks around her half of the room, cluttered with knick-knacks she has accumulated during the six years she has spent in the nursing home. The photographs that once held places of honor on her mantel are now stacked haphazardly on her nightstand.
Each day, she hopes that this will be the day she goes back to the home she and her husband built, or that this will be the day she dies.
The woman who has seen America grow into a superpower, seen her descendants move all over the country and seen her children grow old thinks she has seen enough.
Mabel just wants to put the last piece of her life's jigsaw puzzle in place, close her eyes and say good night.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Faculty did not fail
It appears that once again KU has an athlete who is academically ineligible. From news reports, it seems that Coach Brown is angry at the faculty for Marvin Branch's misfortune. The faculty did not fail, Coach. Marvin Branch failed.
When recruiting these basketball players, maybe intelligence should be considered. In that respect, Coach Brown, too, failed. Wouldn't more intelligent individuals make more intelligent basketball players? That is, better basketball players.
Timothy C. Downs Oshkosh, Wis., junior
Of course, Coach Valesente was fired for that very consideration. KU administrators need to decide whether this school was built for academics or athletics.
I am even more upset with Larry Brown's
As an avid KU basketball fan, I am disappointed in the recent declaration of Marvin Branch its ineligibility for the remainder of the season.
Brown should accept rule
Anne Luscombe is a Kansas City, Kan., senior majoring in journalism.
attitude toward KU's academic standards. First of all, the NCAA establishes what it considers to be minimally acceptable college work. If an athlete fails to meet such requirements, a university has no choice but to declare the student ineligible for athletics.
Brown or any other college coach does not have a right to demand an easier program for a student who is also an athlete. Lambasting an entire academic program that has been in effect since Brown's debut as KU's basketball coach is inexcusable.
To echo the words of Olga Evelyn, academic adviser for the basketball team, an athlete in college is aware of what is expected of him academically and is responsible for meeting such requirements.
Perhaps a prospective athlete should give equal thought to both the quality of the team he wants to play for, as well as the academic demands of that university.
But even more importantly, a coach should be equally and continually concerned with his player's performance on the court and in the classroom.
Darren Rivera
St. Louis junior
Dole is a proven leader
Senator Bob Dole does not promise all things to all people. His proven dedicated leadership from World War II to the present enables him
generally, the first casualty in a political campaign is the truth. Words and promises tailored to what most want to hear flow more freely than wine. The presidential race of 1988 is no exception.
to find the best solution and to slowly but surely implement it.
Bob Dole leads people and manages problems.
Kathee Crough Salina junior
Brown's attitude poor
Larry Brown is certainly correct: it is "obvious that we have to make some changes." University Daily Kansan, Jan. 14. However, the changes that need to be made should be concerned with his attitude toward education, not with University programs as he has suggested. According to Mr. Brown, special programs should be set up for students that "don't have the normal background other students do."
Can a university that is currently experiencing budget problems and inability to provide enough classes and professors for qualified students really afford to devote more money to those who do not display the ability to work on a university level?
It would seem that this is precisely the reason for academic probation — to allow the student a second chance to prove him or herself. If one cannot make the grade even after a period of probation, then it should be that student's responsibility to seek a more conducive atmosphere for his or her ability level.
Mr. Brown and others who espouse his point of view would do well to remember that this is a university — an institute of higher learning. Or at least it should be.
James A. Martin Shawnee senior
BLOOM COUNTY
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday. January 20, 1988
5
Alcohol awareness group to start
By Christine Martin
Kansan staff writer
The president of the KU chapter of Bacchus, a national alcohol-awareness organization, is hoping the group will become active again this semester.
Bacchus, which stands for Boost Alcohol Consciousness Concerning the Health of University Students, was started at KU in 1982 but had been inactive, Jon Brax, president of KU's chapter said yesterday. The national organization has 293 chapters.
The organization gives students who are concerned about alcohol-related issues a place to bring suggestions, Brax said.
Brax said that KU's chapter of Bacchus had no members now. But people who are interested in joining the group can sign up at the Student Assistance Center in 121 Strong Hall.
Brax said that this semester, he hoped the group could hold meetings, bring speakers to KU and work to make an arrangement with bar owners that would provide free nonalcoholic beverages to
designated drivers. He hopes the organization will help with future Alcohol Awareness Weeks, such as the one last October.
Brax plans to invite the presidents and social chairman of sororities and fraternities to join BRAX.
Lorna Zimmer, director of the Student Assistance Center and adviser to KU's chapter of Bacchus, said the organization focused on teaching people about the safe use of alcohol.
Form shortens add-drop lines
By Kim Lightle
A shorter add-drop form is meaning shorter lines for students needing to change their schedules.
Kansan staff writer
The new add-drop form allows students to add, drop and change classes with one form. Students also can rank the transactions in the order they want them processed.
Students can pick up the new forms on a table outside the enrollment center until Jan. 28. After that, students will be required to use separate cards for each add, drop or change of section.
Students had to use the individual cards for the entire add-drop period under the old system. That system took longer and cost the
University more, said Gary Thompson, director of student records.
More than 80,000 of the individual cards were handed out for the fall semester, costing the University of Kansas about $800, Thompson said.
Because students took handfuls of the cards, the enrollment center began handing cards to each student.
"It was a waste of staff time to hand them out that way," said Thompson. "It made us look stiny."
Thompson said he hadn't gotten a bill for the new forms but expected the new system to be less expensive.
Keeping costs down was a concern, he said.
"Some schools charge for their add-drop cards and their time-tables," he said. "We don't want to do that."
One of the best benefits of the new system, he said, is that it is easier for students to change their schedules.
The forms have cut down on the amount of paperwork for the students and the computer operators who process the forms, he said.
Susan Doherty, Olathe sophomore, has been through add-drop three times since she has been at UCF and a new form was a pleasant surprise.
"I was ready to go in and pick up about five or six cards," she said. "It's put everything in order. I feel a lot more confident about what I'm doing."
SenEx reviews Ramaley response
The University Senate Executive Committee yesterday discussed Executive Vice Cancellor Judith Ramaley's draft response to a campus AIDS task force report and agreed on the wording of an add-drop proposal.
Ramaley was not at the SenEx meeting, but she distributed draft copies of her response to SenEx members last week. She is expected to respond publicly this week to several recommendations from a campus AIDS task force.
One of the suggestions the task force made in December was to install condom machines in campus restrooms.
SenEx also approved the wording of an add-drop proposal that will be debated by University Council on Jan. 28. SenEx had previously approved a similar plan that would make the drop period two weeks and the drop period two weeks and two days.
By Brenda Finnell
Kansan staff writer
The SenEx proposal divides the class withdrawal period into time segments.
During the first segment, which includes the first two weeks of the semester and first week of the summer session, students could drop a course and have it deleted from their records after notifying their school's dean.
The second segment includes the third, fourth and fifth weeks of the semester and the second week of the summer session. During this time, students would be able to drop a course and a "W" would appear on their student roll.
Halls offer ample space for students
Each school would develop its own withdrawal policy after the fifth week of the semester ...
The SenEx proposal also includes an drop policy that would prevent a student from enrolling in a course or changing class sections after 12 academic days (Monday through Friday) into the semester, provided the class has met at least twice.
Although residence halls at the University of Kansas were booked past their limit last fall, they have more than enough space for students this spring.
At the end of last week, 4,300 were students living in KU's eight residence halls. The halls can accommodate 4,740 students.
By a Kansan reporter
Fred McElenie, director of residential programs, said that no students were living in temporary housing now. In the fall, 176 students had to be housed in temporary rooms.
"People have been contracting for spring semester since last fall,"哄Elkhenne said. "We know we will lock in this summer, but we don't know how many."
McEllenie said that regular residence hall spaces were available in late October but that some students continued living in temporary housings until the winter when preferred staying in the temporary rooms to moving to another hall.
McElhennie said his office did not keep records on how many students canceled their residence hall contracts for this spring.
Randi Schneider, Lewis Hall residence director, said students canceled their contracts for many reasons. The reasons can range from joining a sorority or fraternity to leaving school, she said.
When these students leave, their rooms are filled by students who lived in temporary housing and students who are now contracting for a room, McElhene said.
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Wednesday, January 20, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Haskell to get repair funds
By Donna Stokes
Kansan staff writer
Haskell Indian Junior College will receive $1.28 million in federal funds this year to bring the college up to fire and building code standards.
Rep. Jim Slattery, D-Kan, has said that the college will need an additional $4 million to $6 million in the next five years to improve safety.
Cynthia Rapp, press secretary for Slattery, said yesterday that critical repairs would include updating emergency exit lights and old electrical wiring, as well as fixing problems with fire exits and pathways, such as crumbling staircases.
Water lines also need to be fixed to
gain water pressure equal to fire code standards, she said.
Charles Thomas, facilities manager at Haskell, said, "There are 42 buildings on the campus, and about them could use some improvements."
The improvement money will come from the U.S. Department of the Interior's Bureau of Indian Affairs.
Improvements already are taking place. Thomas said. "We are really happy that we're getting a lot of the problems fixed, although we do have a long way to go."
Powhattan, a residence hall, is currently under renovation and will be up to fire and building standards
by October, Thomas said. The renovation of Pocahontas Hall is planned. That should also be completed by October.
Renovations of other buildings, including the auditorium and the administration buildings, will follow.
"We are considering safety first and foremost." Thomas said.
Rapp said that Slatterry thought it was a priority to keep the college safe and well run. Slatterry will ask for additional improvement money from the Department of the Interior until the problems are resolved.
"Slattery thinks it is shameful that funds have been cut from the Bureau of Indian Affairs," she said.
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Trafficway action amended
Law corrected to let federal money be used on entire route
By Jeff Moberg
Kansan staff writer
Douglas County now will be able to use federal money along the entire length of the proposed South Lawrence Trafficway because of an amendment in a transportation act made by the U.S. Senate in December.
When the Surface Transportation Act passed in 1987, it included $7.2 million for the trafficway. But a technical error, discovered months after the act passed, allowed the county to use the money on only about four miles of the western leg of the 3.3 mile length. The four miles spanned the eastern leg of the trail from Clinton Parkway to Interstate 70 west of Lawrence.
An amendment to correct the error passed Congress on December 18, and it allows the county to use the federal government's tax base.
"It makes construction on the entire roadway more
The $38 million trafficway is planned to loot south and west of Lawrence, joining Highway 10 with L70.
Last week, city and county officials sent a letter to Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole, thanking him for the role he and his staff played in pushing the amended bill through Congress.
"We solicited and appreciate his help in getting the language changed," said Douglas County Commission Chairman Dennis Hopper. "He really works for his constituents, and we appreciate his efforts."
An official from Dole's Washington office said that the amendment, introduced by Dole, needed only clarification and was corrected easily.
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A cold is spread by direct contact (such as kissing, sharing the same coke) or by inhalation of airborne droplets (following coughing or sneezing); indirectly by hands and articles freshly contaminated by discharge of the nose and throat from a person with a cold.
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THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH EDUCATION
あなたの希望する職業を。
あなたの国、日本で。*
Nippon Motorola Limited will be on campus February 2,1988.
Together we can make it happen — as Nippon Motorola Ltd. offers you the opportunity to come home to family, friends and a brilliant future with the world leader in microelectronic components and systems.
Right now, outstanding career opportunities are available in our ultra-modern Tokyo campus. We also have a new factory of the future in Sendai. Summer internships in the States are also available.
If you are a recent college graduate with Japanese citizenship, or if you're a permanent resident of Japan with an interest in working back home, there's a position waiting for you in one of the following areas.
- Design, Device & Manufacturing Engineering
- Software Design Development
- Programming/Systems Analysis
M
---
- Accounting/Financial Analysis
* Production Control
* Human Resources
For more information, stop by your International Student Affairs Center, Career Services/Placement Office or call COLLECT (602) 943-6949. We write us at: Manager of International Staffing, Motorola Motoria Limited, P.O. Box 2953, Phoenix, AZ 85062, Mall Drop EC702. We are an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Employee.
Advanced electronics for a more productive world.
NIPPON MOTOROLA LTD.
*Imagine the career you want. In the country you love, Japan.*
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, January 20, 1988
7
NationWorld
New space policy approved; plans aimed for moon, Mars
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Reagan has approved a new space policy, designed to explore new technologies to help expand the U.S. program into the solar system, the White House confirmed on yesterday.
White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said the president was expected to discuss the policy in his State of the Union address Jan. 25 or in the legislative program that he will send to Congress after the speech.
"This policy reiterates our desire for space leadership," Fitzwater said.
As part of the program, he said, the president approved a multi-year program established by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration that would develop so-called "pathfinder" technologies.
Shuttle wrongful death suit is settled
HOUSTON — Morton Thiolok Inc. has agreed to settle wrongful death claims lodged by the parents of two astronauts killed in the explosion of space shuttle Challenger, an attorney said yesterday.
The amounts agreed on by the company and Sarah Resnik Belfer, mother of mission specialist Judith A. Resnick, and Bruce Jarvis, father specialist Gregory B.Jarvis, are confidential, said attorney Ronald Krist.
the technologies are aimed at returning astronauts to the moon by the year 2000 and beginning flights to Mars early in the 21st century.
The Associated Press
He said the National Aeronautics and Space Administration was not contributing to the settlements.
"We filed a claim (against NASA)
Morton Thiokol officials in Chicago would neither confirm nor deny the reported settlement.
The Challenger exploded Jan. 28, 1986, killing all seven crew members. The disaster was blamed primarily on the solid rocket booster manufactured and assembled by Morton Thiokol.
for Bruce Jarvis, but it'll be resolved in this," Krist added.
NASA and Thiokol shared the cost of settlements reached in December 1986 with Jarvis' wife and survivors of Francis R. Scobe, Ellison S. Onizuka and Christa McAuliffe.
Sources have said each family received more than $1 million.
Sandinistas lift state of emergency
The Associated Press
MANAGUA, Nicaragua — The leftist Sandinista government formally lifted the state of emergency yesterday and disbanded its system of revolution "people's courts," Foreign Minister Miguel D'Escoto announced.
Nicaragua was required to take the measures to fulfill a Central American peace plan signed by five of the region's presidents on Aug. 7.
In Miami, Contra leaders were willing to accept Nicaragua's failure.
dent Daniel Ortega's offer to hold direct talks but said that they were wary about Ortega's motives.
D'Escoto told a group of diplomats during a briefing at the Foreign Ministry that the nearly 6-year-old state of emergency and the tribunal system were formally abolished by presidential decree.
Asked if the government was taking the measures only to influence the U.S. Congress to reject more Contra aid, the foreign minister said: "Of course we are. We want to stop the war."
American caught selling stolen violin
The Associated Press
TOKYO — Police said yesterday that they arrested an American trying to sell a stolen Stradivari violin for $1 million and seized the 320-year-old instrument.
shop told authorities it recognized the violin when Hwang came to sell it, a police official said.
Robert Hwang, a 31-year-old dentist from New York, was arrested Monday after a downtown music
Hwang arrived in Tokyo yesterday with the violin, made by Italian Antonio Stradivari in 1667 and stolen from a New York shop in November, according to the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Soviet dissident arrives in Israel
The Associated Press
TEL AVIV, Israel — Jewish activist Josef Begun arrived in Israel yesterday to a joyous welcome after a 17-year battle for the right to emigrate from the Soviet Union.
A grandchild in his arms, the 56-year-old Begun waved to the welcoming party and clambered down the stairs from the airline that brought the family from Bucharest, Romania.
Among those waiting was Natan Sharansky, who as Anatoly Shcharansky was the best-known Jewish dissident in the Soviet Union.
Israeli delegation will visit Moscow
"I feel like the happiest man in the world," said the bearded Begun, smiling broadly as officials and friends pressed around him and his family. Israel Television broadcast a movie "Ben-Gurion airport live to the nation."
Asked what he planned to do in Israel, Begun replied: "To be a Jew."
"Shalom, shalom," said his wife Inna. "I'm very happy," she said in broken Hebrew. "We don't have the
MOSCOW — A government spokesman announced yesterday that the Kremlin had decided to allow a small group of Israeli diplomats to visit Moscow. It would be the first official Israeli delegation permitted in more than 20 years.
The Associated Press
Foreign Ministry spokesman
Gennady I. Gerasimov told repor-
taters at a news briefing that the Israelis wanted to travel to Moscow to see how their nation's affairs are being handled here.
The Soviet Union broke off diplomatic relations with Israel in 1967 over seizure of Arab lands in the region and the occupation of official ties has been made tough on Israel's ceasing occupation of those territories.
Gerasinov said the visit was discussed at a meeting of Soviet and Israeli diplomats in Helsinki last week but that a specific timetable had yet to be agreed on.
words to express it in Hebrew or any other language."
In the absence of official ties between the Soviet Union and Israel, the embassy of the Netherlands in Moscow has assumed responsibility for Israel's interests.
Begun, a soft-spoken Hebrew teacher, led the Jewish emigration movement for nearly two decades. He spent three years in prison and was exiled to Siberia during his campaign for an exit visa.
Yuri Stern, spokesman for Jerusalem's Soviet Jewry education and anti-Semitism.
would settle on a kibbutz, or com-
munal farm, in central Israel.
Begun got permission to emigrate on Sept. 7 but postponed leaving until Yanna, the wife of his 23-year-old son Boris, was allowed to leave.
When he first applied for permission to emigrate in 1971, he was refused on grounds that his job as an electrical engineer made him privy to state secrets.
He lost his post as an engineer and later was fired as a manual laborer. Begun was exiled to eastern Siberia until 1880 on charges of parasitism, or failure to hold a job, and violating internal passport laws.
Sweden detains suspect in Palme slaying
In 1983, he was sentenced to seven years in prison for anti-Soviet agitation and propaganda. He served three years in Chistopol prison in the Ural Mountains east of Moscow.
The Associated Press
STOCKHOLM, Sweden — Police on Tuesday picked up a man for questioning in the 1986 assassination of Prime Minister Olof Palme, according to news reports.
March 1986 and then released.
They said the same man was detained for a week for questioning in
said the man had no alibi for two hours after 1 p.m. on Feb. 28, 1986.
news agency TT.
Under Swedish law, a suspect cannot be identified by name if there are no legal proceedings.
The Expressen newspaper said the man was a 34-year-old Stockholm resident. It said that police on Sunday restricted him to Stockholm and took away his passport. Police renewed their surveillance of the suspect last September, according to the national
The Aftonbladet newspaper said the suspect's former girlfriend was ready to testify that she had seen a weapon in his closet. The newspaper
Police declined comment on the reports.
Palme was shot in the back as he strolled along a Stockholm street shortly before midnight on Feb. 28.
News Roundup
'PHANTOM' ON BROADWAY: The play, "The Phantom of the Opera", which swows down Tuesday on Broadway, has already racked up a record $17 million in advance ticket sales. The British import is sold out for weeks at prices up to $50 a ticket.
GOVERNMENT SUES CHURCH: A trial began yesterday in Charlotte, N.C. involving a U.S. Labor Department lawsuit against a church. The Labor Department said the church violated child labor laws by using children as young as 9 for construction projects in a vocational training class.
INDUSTRIAL CAPACITY: U.S. industry operated at 82.1 percent of capacity in December, the highest level in almost eight years, as smokestack America continued to benefit from the falling dollar abroad, the government reported yesterday.
QUAKE JOLTS CALIFORNIA: Another aftershock of the Oct. 1 Whittier quake jolted the Southern California area yesterday, but there were no immediate reports of injuries or damage. The aftershock measured 4.0 on the open-ended Richter scale.
GULD REPRIMANDS LANDIS: Officials of the Directors Guild of America have voted to reprimand director John Landis and two others in an accident that killed three people during filming of "Twilight Zone: The Movie." The board cited them for unprofessional conduct.
UTAH STANDOFF: In Marion, Utah, shots were fired last night from a house where a polygamist clan believed responsible for a church bombing was holed up. Authorities sought to end the four-day standoff with floodlights and low-flying aircraft.
PAP SMEAR RECOMMENDED: Medical authorities yesterday recommended that all women over age 18 have an annual Pap smear to detect cervical cancer. The old guidelines called for screening to start at age 20 and to stop after age 60. The new standards set no upper age limit.
NOFZIGER CHARGED: At his conflict of interest trial, former aide aide Lyn C. Nofziger was charged yesterday with illegally lobbying the White House to deliver on political promises that would benefit his clients. Nofziger resigned as White House political director in 1982.
SOVIETS GRANT ASYLUM: An American couple from Pennsylvania was granted political asylum in the Soviet Union a Soviet official said yesterday. The Soviet spokesman said the two would be provided with jobs and housing.
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Miller · Freund
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DECISION ANALYSIS Raiffa
Elements of Econometrics
ELECTRIC CIRCUITS COMPILER
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Fluid Mechanics
Numerical Methods in Engineering Practice
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Stop by your bookstore and see both sides of the TI-74 BASICALC for yourself. Either way, it'll blow you away.
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[Signature]
8
Wednesday, January 20, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
U.S. House seat may be shifted Kansas population decline could cause loss after 1990
By Kevin Dilmore Kansan staff writer
When the 435 votes are tallied in the U.S. House of Representatives after 1990, there is a good chance that one of those votes will no longer be from Kansas.
According to a study released by Election Data Services, a Washington, D.C., consultant, Kansas could lose one of its five seats in the House because of its declining population.
Every 10 years, congressional seats are reapportioned to reflect federal census findings. House seats are based on population, and shifts can mean the loss or addition of congressional seats. Kansas lost a House seat because of reapportionment in 1960.
Kim Brace, president of Election Data Services, said yesterday that the reapportionment findings were based on 1987 population estimates released by the Census Bureau last month.
"We took these estimates and ran them through the reapportionment formulas approved by Congress and came up with what seats would be affected by the changes," he said.
According to The Associated Press, the Census Bureau's 1987 population estimate for Kansas was 2.48 million, down 4.5 percent, or about 112,000 from 1980.
Brace said the census figures were only estimates and not projections
"We anticipate more changes before 1990, but if things are still fluid, we expect 13 seats to be shifted," he said.
Burdett Loomis, chairman of the political science department, said that if a shift occurred, state lawmakers would have the job of creating
new districts during the 1991 session.
new districts during the 1961 session. he changed "he" said
But Loomis said the 3rd District in northeast Kansas and the 4th District in south-central Kansas were the least likely to be affected.
"I see the state as having two population centers — Wichita and Johnson County — and those districts will probably be maintained," he said, "but the Wichita area may be extended farther east."
"And the 1st District is already 'The Congressional District That Ate Kansas' and can't be changed that much," Loomis said yesterday. The 1st District covers much of western Kansas.
Rep. Jim Slattery, D-Kan., said Rep. the seat would not be good for Kansas.
"Whenever you lose, in effect, 20 percent of your representation, you are going to have an adverse effect," he said yesterday.
"It means we could lose a seat on the Agriculture Committee, or the Energy and Commerce Committee, or the Budget Committee or the Foreign Affairs Committee," Slattery said. "And if we lose that seat, we lose the representation of Kansas interests."
Slattery said that losing a seat also would mean one less vote in the Electoral College, the body that is directly responsible for electing the president.
But Loomis said he didn't think one vote in the college would make much difference.
Loomis said the reapportionment also could force two incumbents to run against each other.
"How many presidents campaign in Kansas anyway?" he said.
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Presidential candidate Leslie Manigat got it a strong lead over three rivals yesterday as the junta-run Electoral Council released its initial vote count from national elections.
Haiti releases election figures
The council said that of the 212,378 ballots counted, university professor Manigat had 11,579 votes compared to 4,811 for attorney Gregoire Eugene, 2,186 for agronomist Gerard Philippe-Auguste and 1,698 for sociologist Hubert DeRoncey. Six other candidates shared the remaining votes.
The Associated Press
An alliance of major opposition groups boycotted Sunday's election and urged other governments not to recognize the winner of the balloting, which they said was fraudulent.
The first vote count represented less than one percent of the electorate of 3 million, but given a turnout estimated by opposition leaders as low as 5 percent, it could represent a considerable fraction of the votes cast.
Greard Bretous, spokesman for the Electoral Council, handed out the data at 7:30 p.m., more than 48 hours after polls closed. The tabulations were from four of Haiti's nine geographical departments.
Bretous, refusing to estimate the voter turnout, said
the council would issue additional results today. Under the election law, the council is not required to issue complete results until Sunday.
Balloting was for a president and National Assembly to replace the junta, led by Lt. Gen. Henri Namphy, that has ruled since dictator Jean-Claude Duvalier fled to France on Feb. 7, 1986.
Leaders of the opposition Civil Society said in a statement read at a news conference: "We ask every country that respects the Haitian people and their own constitutions to denounce the masquerade of Jan. 17 and refuse to recognize the bogus government that will emerge."
In Washington, the State Department said: "It is not possible to portray Sunday's voting as fully free and open."
About 50 business, labor and religious groups belong to the alliance.
Department spokesman Charles Redman said the results were clouded by lack of a secret ballot and the absence of some candidates with popular followings. After voters marked ballots, election officials inspected them before they were put into the boxes.
Redman said suspension of more than $75 million in U.S. aid would continue but the United States expects to maintain relations with the next government.
Dole appears to dominate Kansas with Robertson as only challenger
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — State Republican Chairman Fred Logan predicts that Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole will claim all of Kansas' 34 national delegates, despite the fact that supporters of Pat Robertson have filled full slates of candidates for delegate spots in a dozen large counties.
Logan said that more than 2,200 Republicans had registered as committed to Dole and the Dole organization. He also declared delegate candidates in all 115 counties.
He said supporters of Robertson, the Virginia television evangelist and businessman, have filed complete or partial slates in about 50 counties.
am confident the Dole
Backers of Vice President George Bush, Jack Kemp and former Gov Pierre du Pont have only a handful of registrants apiece, having
1.
campaign is going to win all 34 delegates.
Fred Logan
State Republican Chairman
decided not to challenge Dole's favorite son status in Kansas.
Logan said the Robertson faction was vying for about 900 delegate spots and the full Robertson slates were filed in Sedgwick, Shawnee, Johnson, Saline, Riley, Douglas, Lyon, Barton, Seward, Ellis and Finney Counties.
Logan said the Robertson delegates were registered largely as uncommitted and it was difficult to pinpoint them. All Dole delegates are
Those who registered by midnight last Friday are eligible to vote at county caucuses Feb. 1-6 and bid for election as delegates to the GOP congressional district conventions held Feb. 20 and the state convention on March 5. The state's 34 delegates to the Republican National Convention held in New Orleans in August will be elected at the district and state meetings.
registered as committed to the state's senior senator.
The first step toward becoming a delegate was to register for the county and then allow county caucuses will elect 1,249 delegates to the county and state conventions.
Among the larger counties, Sedgwick, Johnson and Wyandotte have their meetings on Feb. 5. Shawnee, Douglas, Riley and Saline meet Feb
Hart and Bush lead in South, poll shows
The Associated Press
BOSTON, Mass. — A poll of voters in 13 Southern states, released yesterday, suggests that Gary Hart leads the Democratic pack, with Vice President George Bush holding a better than 2-1 lead over GOP rival Bob Dole.
The Gallup poll indicated that Hart had the support of 26 percent among Democrats; Jesse Jackson had 21 percent; Sen. Albert Gore of Tennessee, 17 percent; and Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis, 8 percent.
Missouri Rep. Richard Gephardt drew 6 percent, Illinois Sen. Paul Simon had 5 percent and former Arizona Gov. Bruce Babbit had 2 percent. Fourteen percent were undecided.
The Democratic poll had a margin of error of plus-or-minus five percent.
On the Republican side, Bush led with 54 percent, trailed by Dole with 25 percent; Pat Robertson with 3percent; Rep. Jack Kemp of New York with 5 percent; and Pete du Pont and Alexander Haig had 2 percent each. Five percent were undecided.
The Republican poll had margin
of 0.14 plus-or-minus six percent.
[#25] polls?
States covered by the poll included North Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi, Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Texas, Virginia and South Carolina.
They are among the 20 states holding primaries or caucuses on March 8, dubbed Super Tuesday.
The poll of 1,201 voters was conducted Jan. 15-17 for the Boston Globe, WEEI radio and VCBV-TV. IT included 322 Republican voters and 370 Democrats.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, January 20. 1988
9
One in three inherits risk
Doctors link heart disease genetic trait
The Associated Press
NEW ORLEANS — An estimated one in three Americans inherits a newly recognized form of cholesterol that is linked with triple the usual risk of heart disease, according to research released yesterday.
"We have identified a new genetic trait that may predispose to heart disease risk," said Dr. Ronald M. Krauss of the University of California, where he described his work at a meeting of the American Heart Association.
Although Krauss has not pinpointed the gene that is responsible, he said its hallmark in the bloodstream is a substance called dense LDL, which can be measured with a blood test.
About one-third of the population has relatively large amounts of dense LDL, and they are three times more likely than usual to suffer heart attacks. Krauss said.
Not all of these people will have heart attacks, and dense LDL itself may not even be the culprit. Instead, it may be a genetic marker, or signal, that they are at higher than usual risk.
Krauss said that such people may be unusually susceptible to the dangers of bad living habits that are often associated with heart trouble. These include obesity, a high-fat diet, lack of exercise and poorly controlled blood pressure.
When the heart gets into trouble, it is usually because fatty deposits of cholesterol build up on the walls of arteries that feed the heart. A heart attack occurs when when one of these arteries is plugged. The heart muscle is starved of blood, and some of it dies.
Cholesterol doesn't float through the bloodstream by itself. Instead, it is bound up in particles of protein. Ordinarily, doctors think of two kinds
of particles known as HDL and LDL.
HDL, or high-density lipoprotein, is the so-called good cholesterol. It gathers up cholesterol and carries it away. Its counterpart, LDL or low-density lipoprotein, transports the fats deposited on the blood vessel walls.
Krausss based his estimate that one in three people has a copy of the gene on studies of the blood of 2,000 individuals.
Krauss, working with researchers from Harvard and Rockefeller universities, studied 109 heart attack victims. Their dense LDL levels were compared with those of a group of 121 healthy people.
Although their total LDL levels were the same, there was a significant difference in how much dense LDL they had. A statistical analysis of the two groups revealed a threefold increase in the risk of heart attack associated with dense LDL in both men and women.
Krauss and colleagues have discovered that there are actually two categories of LDL: a light variety and a dense type.
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10
Wednesday, January 20, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
K-NEA wants new program
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — The president of the Kansas-National Education Association said yesterday that the association would request money from the Legislature for a pilot program that would give more of a school's decision-making power to teachers.
Carolyn Schmitt said her group was asking for $5,000 from the state to set up a program at three or four Kansas schools that would bring teachers together to discuss specific problems at each school. K-NEA would provide another $10,000 for the program, she said.
Schmitt said K-NEA wanted to shift the focus of education reforms to individual school buildings because many reforms at the state level already have taken place.
"All too often, we assume that schools are the same and kids are the same," she said.
Teachers at individual schools are the best judges of that school's specific problems and how to solve them, Schmitt said. Although teachers often participate now in decisions about curriculum, they need to address broader questions.
"There's generally not time for faculty to come together and talk about things like that," she said. "We believe our faculty are talented, and with time, support and research, they can come up with solutions."
In similar programs she has seen at schools in Florida and Arizona.
teachers have decided to change things such as discipline or truancy procedures. The faculty at one school decided to do away with corporal punishment, she said.
Schmitt said the programs would not diminish administrators' authority, although in some cases, faculty might decide certain things, such as schedules of events, that previously were decided by assistant principals or counselors.
"We're suggesting that the decisions will be better if more people are involved." Schmitt said.
If disputes arose, school boards would still have local authority, she said.
I there's no question that building reforms would have to take place within the whole network of state and federal regulations and policies," she said.
The state money would pay to bring teachers together, either by paying them on weekends or hiring substitutes, and to hire consultants, Schmitt said.
schmitt said the programs would benefit both students, by improving quality of education, and teachers, by taking them more say in their schools.
"One of the benefits of this is that teacher can exercise more profes-
sional skills."
Legislation to create the program will be presented to the Senate Education Committee this session.
Dan Starling/KANSAN
(1)
Faculty art
Tanya Perkins, Kansas City, Kan., senior, and Monica Liston, Kansas City, Mo., senior, take in the untitled work of Brian Fiorentino, their ceramics teacher. The two were looking at one of the many works on display yesterday at the Design Faculty Show.
Center to expand
Restoring space artifacts has become lucrative sideline for tourist attraction
The Associated Press
HUTCHINSON — The Kansas Cosmosphere and Space Center will soon form a subsidiary called International Space Works Inc. to handle restoration, reproduction and consulting contracts expected to total nearly $500,000 in 1988.
The Cosmosphere is negotiating, with the help of the Nevada-based Cernan Corp., founded by former astronaut Gene Cernan, to produce exhibits for a 1989 space exhibition in Yokohama.
The Cosmosphere, the state's top tourist attraction, has been non-profit since its inception, but restoring and recreating space artifacts is an expanding and profitable sideline. It had $400,000 worth of such contracts last year, including a $106,667 restoration of an Apollo command module and nearly $300,000 to build displays and simulators for space exhibitions in the Japanese towns of Gifu and Satima.
The corporation will be formed within a week to 10 days, legal adviser Bill Swearer told the Cosmosphere's board of directors Monday. It could be either a non-profit or for-profit corporation.
Max Ary, executive director of the Cosmosphere, said the museum has proposed 70 exhibits to the Japanese, and if even 30 are accepted the
The prospect of that continuing income endangering the Cosmosphere's tax exemptions as a non-profit corporation is the main reason the Space Works is necessary, Ary said.
Cosmosphere will have a multimillion dollar contract on its hands.
But that doesn't mean that another non-profit organization with a different charter and mission statement might not be on clear ground, he said.
He said that when the Cosmosphere was chartered in 1962, it wasn't set up to do some of the activities it's now involved in to the extent that they're being done.
"A lot of the logistics of how it will work we don't know yet," Ary said. "We've got to determine exactly what the organization will be. It's got to be a very clean break between the two agencies.
"The International Space Works' purpose is still to develop educational programs and support educational programs around the world, making people more aware of space," he said.
The Space Works, with a separate budget and board of directors, will probably be based in the new warehouse that the Cosmosphere bought last year, largely through a $100,000 donation from an unidentified private foundation.
New tort reform is possible
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — State Sen. Robert G. Frey, R-Liberal, said yesterday he thinks the Legislature will make another effort to limit the size of claims that victims of medical malpractice can receive.
The Kansas Supreme Court struck down a 1983 law that places a limit on the amount of money a person can receive in a malpractice suit if collateral sources of benefits are available. Such collateral sources of benefits include retirement benefits, workers' compensation payments or insurance.
The Legislature, as part of a tort reform effort, passed the law to limit the settlement sizes injured people can receive in court if they also receive payments from collateral sources, said Frey, who is chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Court struck down lawmakers' cap on malpractice claims
The court, in striking down the law, noted that the legislative purpose was to increase the quality and availability of health care but ruled that the measure had the opposite effect.
But the court said the law penalizes certain victims who have other benefits.
"The court determined that the 1985 law impairs a medical malpractice victim's remedy if a jury determines he is not entitled to full compensation due to benefits from collateral sources," Mike Heim of the Legislative Research Department told the Senate Judiciary Committee.
"The court concluded that the burden should be placed on negligent health care providers rather than on victims, their insurers and the general public." Heim said. "The court said the law created unconstitutional classes of both injured plaintiffs and negligent defendants."
State Rep. Robert Wunsch, R-Kingman, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, said much of the tort reform legislation passed in the last three years likely would be declared unconstitutional because in the court's eyes the legislation probably would create different classes of litigants.
Bill would allow parks donations
"We have unconstitutional legislation from 85, 86 and 87." Wunsch said.
The Associated Press
TOPEKA - Kansans would be able to donate money to the state's reorganized Department of Wildlife and Parks under a bill now in a House committee.
Robert Meinen, secretary of wildlife and parks, told members of the House Energy and Natural Resources Committee that a private fund could provide up to $4,800 a year in interest revenues for his agency.
"That may not seem like a lot, but for some of these smaller projects, that could be a lot," Meinen said.
Generally, if people donate money to the department, they want it used for a specific project or area of the state. Meinen said. The department wants to track the money to assure donors that their money is going where
they want it to go.
"It is our intent that as those funds come in for special projects, they will be tracked." Meinen said.
Gov. Mike Hayden created the department, effective July 1, by merging the Kansas Fish and Game Commission and the state Park and Resources Authority. Before they merged, each agency had a fund for private donations, but the park authority's fund didn't draw interest. Meinen said.
Meinen said that if the bill were approved, his department probably would try to publicize it more throughout the state.
The committee chairman, Rep. Dennis Spaniol, R-Wichita, said the committee would act on the bill next week.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday. January 20. 1988
11
Doctors promote peace Anti-nuclear activist discusses responsibility
By Regan Brown
Kansan staff writer
There was a time when Ed Lucas helped build bombers. The military projects he worked on as an engineer and physicist included B-52s and B-1s.
Looking back he described that pause of his life as "working without thought."
Now a second-year medical student at the University of Kansas Medical Center, Lucas came to Lawrence last night to tell local physicians about Physicians for Social Responsibility. In a speech at the Eldridge House to the Douglas County Medical Society, he described the logistics of nuclear war and how doctors can help avert it.
"It's an issue of care," he said. Doctors are trained to prevent the things they cannot cure, and this should apply to nuclear war as well
as disease. Lucas said.
He said his group's mission was worldwide education on the issue of the nuclear arms race. Physicians are in a unique position to influence world leaders, Lucas said, because their opinions are taken seriously.
Promoting world peace can be as simple as doctors placing materials about nuclear disarmament in their waiting rooms. Lucas said.
When Physicians for Social Responsibility was founded in 1961, its members were more concerned about the medical effects of nuclear power plant accidents than the global implications of the arms race.
As U.S. nuclear policy became increasingly more aggressive, the group became a single-issue organization and the cause of arms limitation, he said.
It is the ittih-largest medical organization in the country. Lucas said,
with more than 50,000 members. In 1980, the group joined with Soviet physicians to join the International Physicians for Prevention of Nuclear War.
Physicians for Social Responsibility supports the Intermediate Nuclear Forces treaty and favors a comprehensive test ban treaty with the Soviets. As for Strategic Defense Initiative, or "Star Wars," Lucas said. "Other than having a few flaws, such as being easily overwhelmed, underflood, and an economic disaster. I think it's a hell of a system."
Lucas said there were better ways to spend the estimated $200 billion to one trillion dollars that it will cost to fund education. "What want it if we were free," he added.
As of 1984, 26 percent of medical students belonged to Physicians for Social Responsibility, Lucas said.
C
Expert testimony was heard yesterday from Eckert, a Wichita pathologist. He testified that in his Sept. 16 autopsy, he found 15-20 areas on the body that had suffered some sort of trauma.
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Another version was that he was cut outside on the porch as he attempted to take the knife away from her.
He said that in his experience, such traumas can be caused by blows from the hand, knee, elbow or foot of an assailant.
"She died as a complication of the trauma she suffered and the head injury," he said. Asked by Assistant Nurse Anne Cordray, four, to say, this woman, had been
Davis said Kemp told investigators that his wife had run into the kitchen, grabbed a knife, and slashed his left wrist three times as they struggled in the mobile home's hallway. Davis said that Kemp later told him that he had attempted to kill himself by slashing his wrists.
the front door. Davis said.
beaten to death?" Eckert replied, "I think this could be a description that would fit."
Continued from p. 3
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The trial began Monday with opening statements by Flory, who told the jury of seven men and five women that "the state will not present an eyewitness or a murder weapon except the defendant himself," and that evidence presented would tell a tragic and disturbing story.
Fleming deferred opening defense statements until after the state presents its witnesses.
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Wednesday, January 20, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Hayden's tax plan introduced
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Two important tax-reform proposals endorsed by Gov. Mike Hayden were introduced in the Legislature yesterday, and a Senate committee took quick, favorable action on 29 gubernatorial appointment.
Hayden's full tax-reform plan, contained in his proposed budget, was introduced in the Senate. It calls for cutting the highest individual and corporate income tax rates, decreasing the number of tax brackets and taking about 100,000 Kansans off the tax rolls.
In the House, the Taxation Committee introduced a bill that would exempt the purchase of business equipment and machinery from the state's 4-percent sales tax.
Supporters of the proposal have said that the lack of such a tax break puts Kansas at a competitive disadvantage with other states, many of which allow the exemption.
The measure would cost the state $7.3 million during fiscal year 1989, which begins July 1, 1988, and $16 million starting in fiscal year 1990. It is managed by the chairman and chairman of the House Taxation Committee.
mittee, said that he thought the plan's cost might cause some lawmakers to oppose it but that he saw broad support for the proposal.
"I think the time is probably ripe for it," Rolfs said. "I think there's a consensus that the current statute creates a climate that isn't conducive to attracting new businesses."
The income tax-reform proposals, which were developed by a task force Hayden appointed, would cut individual income taxes by $21.3 million. Supporters also have said the plan could make filing a return much simpler for about two-thirds of the state's residents.
The Senate Assessment and Taxation Committee will begin its consideration of the measure with a briefing Friday. The panel's chairman, State Sen. Fred Kerr, R-Pratt, has said he sees broad support for the plan.
Lawmakers say they can afford to implement tax reform because of an expected $135 million income-tax windfall created by federal tax reform in 1986.
With little discussion and only one Demo
crat present, the Senate Confirmations Committee recommended that 29 people appointed to various posts, including four cabinet-level positions, be confirmed. The recommendations now go to the full Senate.
The committee's endorsements included Winston Barton, secretary of social and rehabilitation services; Stanley Grant, secretary of health and environment; Esther Wolf, secretary of aging, and Robert Meinen, secretary of wildlife and parks.
The committee also recommended that former Kansas Supreme Court Chief Justice Alfred Schroeder be confirmed as chairman of the Kansas Racing Commission, along with its other four members, Phil Martin, Harry Anthony, Bert Cantwell and Kay Arvin. Jimmy Grenz was recommended for approval as the commission's executive director.
The committee also recommended for confirmation three of the four members of the Lottery Commission. They are Ray Morgan, Duane Nightingale and Kete Klein.
'Plastic Fork Rebellion chooses nonviolent path
The Associated Press
GREENFIELD, Mass. — Fifth-graders upset over plastic forks and spoons in their cafeteria are demanding a return to stainless steel, and their principal said they could protest with posters and petitions "as long as they had everything spelled correctly."
The campaign, dubbed "The Great Plastic Fork Rebellion" by one father, began a few weeks ago when students at the Four Corners Elementary School discovered their stainless-steel tableware had been shipped to the high school for use by what one youngster called "ugh. teen-agers."
In the place of the stainless steel were bakers' plates and spoons made of reusable hard plastic.
Christopher Peters, 11, described the new tableware as "bumpy, thick, hard to hold . . . and eating with them makes you feel weird all over."
Using nonviolent tactics they studied for the Martin Luther King Jr. observance, Chris and his classmates hung posters in their cafeteria that read "School Is No Picnic" and "Real People Deserve Real Silverware."
By Friday, the youngsters had gathered from more than 40 schools to the schools 318 para-grade 5 through 12.
The leaders of the protest met yesterday with the food services director, who said she should have been there.
"We didn't break anything or start any riots," said Steven Berson, 10. "We just wrote signs and talked to people, like Martin Luther King."
Sandra Herzig, the director, said she ordered the plastic tableware because the stainless-steel utensils ended up in the trash too often. She added that the plastic utensils cost about 5 cents less than each stainless steel piece.
Energy secretary announces finalists for supercollider site
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Energy Secretary John Herrington yesterday confirmed sites in seven states as finalists for the $4.4 billion superconducting supercollar and again pledged to make the selection a nonpolitical one.
The sites were those chosen last month by a joint committee of the National Academy of Sciences and
the national Academy of Engineering. The sites are in Texas, Illinois, North Carolina, Tennessee, Arizona, Michigan and Colorado.
"The department found no justification for either rejecting or changing the academies' recommended list of sites, which in the judgment of the department was developed impartially and without bias." Herrington said at a news conference.
The academies' committee was asked to consider geology, environmental impact, regional resources such as nearby universities, site availability, outside impacts such as noise and vibration from nearby traffic, availability of utilities and costs.
The committee also chose a site in New York, which Gov. Mario Cuomo withdrew because of local opposition.
Cuomo requested that another site in the state be substituted.
Herrington said the department would not consider the withdrawn site further and did not act on Cuomo's request because he said he didn't think it would be fair to the other states.
had probably the most prestigious selection committee of nonpolitical expertise that's been put together in a long time."
"To the best of my ability, this is a nonpolitical process," Herrington said. He said. "The academies' panel
The department is offering briefings to the 17 rejected states, if requested, on why their proposals did not make the finals.
Before Herrington makes his tentative choice in July, department offi- cations will be called to order.
particular attention to soil conditions and environmental impacts.
Herrington is scheduled to make his selection final a year from now, but he has said his July choice will stand if it survives the preparation of an environmental impact statement.
Congress still has to appropriate the money. President Reagan is expected to seek $363 million for the collider.
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10-5 p.m.
EXPLORING TWILLS
$45.00 fee, 1 weekend
Jan. 30-31 (Sat./Sun.),
10 p.m.-4 p.m.
RUG BRAIDING
$10.00 fee, 4 weeks
I. Starts Feb. 10 (Wed.).
7-9 p.m.
II. Starts March 23 (Wed.).
7-9 p.m.
BEGINNING SPINNING
I. $15.00 fee, 1 session
I. Feb. 27 (Sat.).
10-4 p.m.
II.
April 2 (Sat.).
10-4 p.m.
BOBBIN LACE
BOBBIN LACE
$18.00 ee; 7 weeks
Starts Jan. 25 (Mon.).
7-9 p.m.
BEGINNING BASKETRY
$15.00 for
BEGINNING BASKETRY
$15.00 fee
1. Eric's class (Turs.), 6:30-8:30 p.m., 3 weeks
2. Ilas Starts 9 (Sat.), 9:30-12:30 p.m., 2 weeks
EASTER EGGS BASKET
$8.00 fee; 1 session
March 13 (Sun.),
PRE-REGISTRATION REQUIRED
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918 Mass.
Sports
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, January 20, 1988
13
Operations beach KU's 'Shark'
Redshirt forward Mark Randall spends his afternoons watching basketball practice rather than participating while he recovers from law and nose surgery
By Elaine Sung
Kansan sports writer
His teammates used to call him "The Shark."
A. J. BURKE
But redshift forward Mark Randall has a new look since doctors operated on his jaw two weeks ago.
Teammates Scooter Barry and Jeff Gueldner made up the nickname last year. Gueldner said it was because of his nose and his voracious appetite.
“When people came to visit me, their first comment was, ‘Your nose smaller.’” Randall said. “Everyone on the team said I look like a rail now.”
"We used to say that if he got into the Alvamar pool and floated on his back with just his nose sticking up, the kids would run out of the pool when we arrived. He told herder said. "And before the operation, he would eat everything in sight."
Randall, who has dropped from a summer high of 235 pounds to 220, still cannot chew solid foods. Instead, must purse everything before he eats it.
"I can't bite anything," he said. "I have a permanent hat, I have to have my neck fitted shirt."
That was what doctors were considering when they operated on Randall. But they decided to hold his upper jaw together with the help of a splint made of plastic plate sections and screws.
A dentist had discovered the jaw problems first when he found that only two of the molars in Randall's mouth touched when Randall closed his mouth, resulting in a gap between the jaws.
He sent Randall to an oral surgeon, who said that an operation was the only solution and if surgery were performed with facial muscles could lock at any time.
Randall, however, had been chosen earlier for the Big Eight Select team, scheduled to compete in the People's Republic of China that summer. His dilemma was whether to opt for a medically validately or to travel with the team.
Instead, Randall decided to red-shirt his sophomore year at KU and undergo surgery during the winter break.
"I wanted to put it off," he said. "I was going to delay it until next summer."
He checked into St. Joseph's Hospital in Denver on Jan. 4.
Randall's upper palate, which was too small, was sawed into four sections and widened out. The entire upper jaw was then moved forward and held together with the plastic splint.
The result is that he can now breathe 100 percent better and that infected tissues are not prevented from returning. Randall said.
"I had a slight case of asthma to start with. It's something I've lived with, and I was used to it," he said. "But since the operation, the asthma's cleared up as well. I guess I got all the problems out of the way."
Randall goes back to St. Joseph's in seven weeks to have the plates removed, and he may need to see an orthodontist as a positioner or braces for his teeth.
"I have pain medication, and I take it when I need it," Randall said. "My teeth are shifting, so they're just sore and there's a little discomfort."
The procedure itself was not painful, he said, and with the help of anti-inflammatory drugs, the swelling was kept to a minimum.
The operation caused only a few problems; small nosebleeds being on them.
“it's kind of embarrassing when I constantly wiping my nose,” he said.
Another problem is Randall's lack of sensitivity in the area under his right eye and above the upper lip. The nerves there were damaged during the operation and will take up to a year to grow back, he said.
for another six to seven weeks.
"I didn't want to shave the first couple of days," Randall said. "When I'm shaving now, I can't really feel it."
According to his recovery schedule, Randall can start riding a bicycle in two weeks, but to keep the practice alive, he must practice any except free-throws
He makes a habit of attending basketball practices now, and he even suited up to help out during the Special Olympics basketball clinic last Sunday.
For now, he watches his teammates carefully from the bleachers of Allen Field House, often holding a baseball and spinning it on his fingertips.
Gueldner, who was Randall's roommate last year, said he never knew the situation was serious enough to warrant an operation.
Randall, a business major, said he did not regret his decision to redshift, and would use this year to concentrate on his studies.
"I'm happy to be back and just be around the team," he said. "It was really tough for a while when I wasn't playing."
"It never seemed to get to the point where he'd have to sit down in practice," Guelndner said.
It felt worse, though, when he had to watch his team on television instead.
"When I was still in Colorado, I stayed up to watch the tape-delayed game of the Kansas-Missouri game," Randall said. "Being there and not playing is one thing, but not being there at all is tough. You want to be there cheering for them."
Kansas women need victory against Buffs to avoid an 0-3 start
By Keith Stroker
Kansan sports writer
An 0-3 start in the Big Eight Conference is something the Jayhawk women's basketball program has never experienced.
It could become a reality tonight if Kansas loses to the Colorado Lady Buffs in Boulder, Colo. Game time is 6:35 p.m.
The Lady Buffs, 10-5 overall and 0-2 in the conference, have been a surprise this year, according to Washington.
Senior Sandy Shaw replaced junior center Deborah Richardson in the starting lineup against Iowa State on Saturday. Richardson, who injured her knee in practice Thursday, will be out for at least a week and will return after a short rehabilitation process.
The Jayhawks, 10-5 overall, need to work on mental toughness and aggressiveness, said Kansas coach Marian Washington. She said the team was struggling but this was somewhat misleading because the conference was much more competitive this season than in years past.
In the two conference games, starters Lisa Braddy and Lisa Baker have combined to hit just two of 27 field goals for 7.4 percent. Cook said it was a matter of instilling confidence in them, as well as the rest of the team, to stop the two-game losing streak.
Richardson leads the Big Eight with 34 blocked shots. She has scored in double figures in seven of nine pitches and the Jayhawks winning all seven.
Assistant coach Kevin Cook agreed with Washington. He said the Big Eight was the second toughest conference, from top to bottom, next to the Southeast Conference, which includes perennial powerhouses Louisiana State, Georgia and Tennessee.
"Colorado was one of the favorites
the year in the conference.
Washington is in the state."
good every team in this conference is. We can't afford to take anyone lightly."
Colorado is led by junior guard Bridget Turner, who is averaging 13.7 points, 5.9 rebounds and 5.8 assists a game.
This season Turner became only the seventh player in Lady Buffs history to score 1,000 career points. She sheared that number Dec. 30 against California State-Fullerton.
Washington said Colorado had a terrific perimeter game, with a deliberate offensive attack. She said their only weakness was the inside game.
Kansas assistant coach Julia Yeater has seen Colorado play this year. They are a ball club that plays under control, she said.
"They are a team that has very few weak spots," Yeater said. "They never turn the ball over."
Washington said she knew how good the Lady Buffs could be, referring to their play in a 66-59 loss at Louisiana Tech, which is ranked No. 80 in the nation's college basketball important game for the Jayhawks and for the rest of their season.
Last season the two teams split, each one winning on its home court. The scores were 83-65, Colorado, and 65-62, Kansas.
The Jayhawks are 9-4 overall against the Lady Buffs, 2-3 in Boulder. Kansas last won there on Jan. 26, 1965, 66-55, but has lost the last two.
PROBABLE STARTERS
PROBABLE STARTERS
Kansas Jayhawks 10-5
Coach: Marian Washington PPG
-F34 Mesh Strohwer 5'8" 7.9
-F32 Liza Baker 5'11" 5.9
-C23 Sandy Shaw 6'0" 11.7
-G12 Lisa Braddy 5'7" 8.8
-G3 Lisa Doudyhert 5'8" 13.5
Colorado Lady Buffs 10-5
Coach: Calary Barb PPG
F-55 Rosland Stark '61' 1.5
F-55 Molly Hall '61' 1.5
C-34 Crystal Ford '62' 10.9
G-24 Bridget Tripp '58' 13.7
G-42 Tracy Tripp '510' 13.1
UCLA
Former KU swimmer Karen Dionne overcame insurmountable odds by returning to school and becoming an assistant swimming coach after a near-fatal injury ended her swimming career.
Former swimmer finds joy in spite of disabling injury
By Tom Stinson
Kansan sports writer
Boring lectures. Late nights. Breaking even with your laundry.
For some students, it just seems hopeless. But for Karen Dionne, even the most menial task has its own rewards.
She's back and she's loving it. Dionne, a former swimmer and now a student assistant coach with the Kansas swimming program, was injured in an automobile accident Nov. 30, 1985, while driving to Lawrence after Thanksgiving break. The car sled on ice into an oncoming car. No one in the other car was seriously injured.
She suffered severe head injuries and was comatose for about a month following the accident. Tammy Pease, Dionne's teammate and one of the passengers in the car, died in the accident.
"It it's been a long two years," the Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore said. "But it's great to be here. My first day back was all smiles."
The return of Dionne's smiling face in Lawrence capped off two years of battling odds that many thought were insurmountable. After nine months in Bartlesville, she spent 11 months in therapy at the New Medico Rehabilitation Center in Wauchoa, Fla.
"It's amazing that she's back," said swimming co-captain Anne Bloomfield, also from Bartlesville. "But that's typical for Karen. If
anyone could do it, she could."
Dionne, a recreational therapy major, said the most difficult aspect of therapy was overcoming the physical limitations. Maintaining a positive attitude was simple for her, she said.
"The mental part of therapy was really no problem," Dionne said. "Swimming helped that. Swimming toughened me up. I always wanted to do more than what the hospital wanted me to. Then I'd illustrated when I couldn't do something. That was the problem."
Relearning basic functions such as walking, talking and eating posed new obstacles for Dionne.
"I walked for the first time with (swimming coaches) Gary (Kemp) and Brad (Wells)," Dionne said. "It was about 35 steps at a swim meet in Bartlesville. I remember I was thinking 'this is the beginning.' It was really encouraging."
Kempf also remembered the first time he heard Dionne's voice.
"It was fantastic," he said. "I had heard her whisper, so I was waiting for her voice to come back. Then, one night, she just called. To watch her . . . step-by-step return and to see how well she is now is really excited."
Dionne said that accepting her inability to compete in swimming any longer was the hardest part of the ordeal. She began competitive
swimming at the age of eight
Dionne was the 1985 Big Eight Conference champion in the 100-room breast stroke team and was an All-Star at the 2007 N.C. State Basketball and 200-vard freestyle volleyb
"At least I can still work out and I can still do all of the strokes," Dionne said.
Last semester in Bartlesville, she swam as much as two miles a day. She also took classes at Bartlesville Wesleyan College.
Graduating and getting a job are Dionne's newest goals. During her rehabilitation, she changed her major from occupational therapy to recreation therapy. Dionne also plans on specializing in what she can best relate to - head injuries.
"I think I'll know a little bit about it," she said jokingly. "I want to help people. If people say 'you don't know what it's like', I can say 'yeah I do.'"
Rebuilding a life in two years requires a level of confidence that Dionne said grew with time. She said support from her family and friends helped her maintain that confidence in every aspect of her life.
"Now I feel like I'm unstoppable," Dionne said. "I feel that I can attempt anything. Something like this makes you look at life in a different perspective. It really gets your priorities straight."
Kent State hires new coach
The Associated Press
KENT, Ohio — Former North Carolina football coach Dick Crum, who resigned under pressure in November, was named yesterday as the new head football coach at Kent State.
"He's a proven winner," Kent State President Michael Schwartz said at a news conference. Schwartz said Crum had been associated with fine programs and was concerned about both the academic and athletic achievements of his players.
Kent State declined to release the terms and length of Crum's contract in a news release issued today. But the Akron Beacon Journal reported in yesterday's editions that Crum had agreed to a three-year contract that calls for a salary of $60,000 a year, $30,000 less annually than Crum had earned as coach at North Carolina.
Athletic Director Paul Amodio said that $60,000 was a reasonable estimate and that Crum would be paid at least that much.
Crum replaces Glen Mason, who accepted the head coaching job at the University of Kansas on Dec. 29. Mason led Kent State to a 7-4 record in 1887. The school shared second place with American Conference with Miami-Ohio and Bowling Green. Each had a 5-3 conference record.
Crum, a 53-year-old native of the Youngstown suburb of Boardman, said he was looking forward to returning to his home state. The coach is a graduate of Mount Union College in Alliance, Ohio.
"The Ohio area, I think, is a special area when it comes to football," he said. "It's always nice to get back to an area where you know a lot of
people."
Crum said that the top priority was for students to do well on the field and in class.
Crum said his top priorities were recruiting new players and getting his staff set up. He said he had the staff members from North Carolina.
Crum accepted an $800,000 buyout of the remaining four years of his 10-year contract at North Carolina. Terms of the buyout allow Crum to keep the money although he has accepted another coaching job.
Before he moved to North Carolina, Crum led the Miami of Ohio Redskins to three Mid-American Conference titles and a 34-10-1 record between 1974 and 1977. Miami in 1974 was ranked 10 nationally, the highest finish ever by a Mid-American Conference team.
Wilander defeats Jarryd, reaches the semifinals in Australian Open
The Associated Press
MELBOURNE, Australia — Two-time champion Mats Wilander scored a clinical straight-stacks victory over fellow Swede Anders Jarryd yesterday to reach the semifinals of the Australian Open Tennis Championships.
Wilander, the No. 3 seed, defeated the sixth-seeded Jarryd 7-6, 6-2, 6-3 in a 2-hour, 41-minute battle of wills. Wilander captured the first-set tiebreaker 7-2.
He earned a meeting with either defending champion Stefan Edberg of Sweden or Andrei Chesnokov of the Soviet Union, the last remaining non-seeded player in the tournament.
The men's semifinals are scheduled for Friday
The other men's semifinal will be between top-seeded Ivan Lendl and Wimbledon champion Pat Cash. Neither has lost a set in the tournament.
he masters $8m per kilm leaf some in the difficult swirling winds, won the Australian Open title 1983 and 1984. He is seeking the fifth Grand Slam title of his career, also having won the French Open twice.
Jarryd provided stiff competition throughout the first set, which dragged on for one hour. 20 minutes. Wilander staved off three set points in the 10th game.
After that, Jarryd's baseline game fell away and Wilander was able to outlast him in a number of torrid slugging baseline duels.
Wilander was more adventurous than usual, particularly in the second set, when he advanced to the net with surprising regularity.
Wilander did not serve one double fault against Jarryd, and the errors he did make often came at the net.
Jarryd, a quarterfinalist in the event for the second straight year, just did not have the consistency of his countryman.
"I felt like it was very important to Anders to win the first set," Wilander said. "I felt like he was tired from his big match the other day."
---
"I was lucky to win the first set and lucky to win in three straight."
14
Wednesday, January 20. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Tyson may hurt Holmes, trainers predict
The Associated Press
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — Larry Holmes' will to win could result in a bad bating by Mike Tyson, says Eddie Futch, who trained the former heavyweight champion for 12 title fights.
"Tyson has the style and strength that could make it hard for Larry to avoid getting badly beaten and possibly hurt." Futch said in a telephone interview yesterday from his home in Las Vegas, Nev.
"I don't feel good about the fight," he said.
Tyson, the 21-year-old undisputed heavyweight champion, is an 8-1 favorite to beat Holmes in their scheduled 12-round fight Friday night at the Atlantic City Convention Center.
"Larry has pride," Futch said.
"He will go in there and do his best.
Larry is not afraid of anybody, but I feel he doesn't have the physical capabilities at this stage of his career."
"At this point in his career, I hate to see him in there, that's all," said Ray Arcel, who helped Futch prepare Holmes for his 13th round knockout of Gerry Cooney on June 11, 1982.
"You don't belong in the ring, not with a 21-year-old guy who can punch." Arcel said by telephone from New York.
"Tyson is getting better," Futch continued. "At one time, I thought he had gone as far as he could go. He started standing up like he did against Bonecrusher and Tony Tucker (both decision victories). I could see him getting利耿."
"Then he went back to what he had been doing against Biggs — going to
In his last fight, Tyson knocked out Tyrell Biggs in the sevent round here on Oct. 16 and boosted his record to 32-0, with 28 knockouts. Holmes has a 48-2 record, with 34 knockouts.
the body and crouching."
"I advised Larry more than a year ago not to take another fight," Futch said.
Holmes, who was the premier heavyweight in the world for 71/2 years, has not fought since losing a 15-round split decision to Michael Spinks when he tried to regain the International Boxing Federation title April 19, 1986.
Holmes has been holding closed workouts for several weeks at his training center at Easton, Pa., and is scheduled to arrive here Wednesday afternoon.
Tyson, who is a student of boxing history and films, has said he thought
Holmes' best fight was his 15-round split decision over Ken Norton for the World Boxing Council title June 9, 1978.
"I think his peak was around the second Shavers fight," Futch said.
Holmes, who won a one-sided 12-round decision over Earnie Shavers to earn his title shot at Norton, struggled up from a one-punch knockdown to stop Shavers in a title defense Sept. 28, 1979.
"He started showing signs of deterioration about three years ago, about the time of the Bonecrusher Smith and David Bev fights." Futch said.
Holmes, who was cut and in trouble, stopped Smith on cuts in the 12th round Nov. 9, 1984, and stopped a pudgy Bey in the 12th round March 15, 1985.
Celtics' Ainge wants DiMaggio's record
The Associated Press
BOSTON -- Watch out, Joltin' Joe,
here comes Downtown Danny.
Boston's Danny Ainge, who couldn't connect on the long ball in baseball, has hit it with unprecedented consistency in basketball. He has shattered the NBA record with an 3-point basket in 20 straight games.
"I'm going for Joe DiMaggio's record," he said.
The former New York Yankee holds the hitting streak record of 56 games set in 1941. The former Toronto to Blue Jay would reach that total on April Fools day against Detroit if he played three in each Celtic game until then.
Ainge, who hit just two homers and 220 in three seasons as a Blue Jay infielder, has made 68 of his 3-pointers on the long-distance shot this season.
"I plan on getting my four or five
shots a game. If I hit .200, I'm all set," Aiae said.
The 6-foot-5 guard has availaged 4.4 attempts from 3-point range in the 35 games he's played this season.
On Jan. 6 against New York, he hit the shot for the 13th straight game, breaking the record he tied last year that had been held by teammate Larry Bird and former Celtic Chris Ford, now a Boston assistant coach.
With the season less than half over,
Alge has a good chance of breaking
up.
He has made 68 of 154 shots from the 3-point area to lead the league in both categories. The single-season records are 92 baskets and 257 attempts, set in the 1984-85 season by Utah's Darrell Griffith.
"A lot of people have been talking to me about it every day," Ainge said. "It's fun to keep it going. Obviously, you don't keep it going at the price of losing games, but it's fine
to keep interest up."
Ainge made 26 of 73 3-pointers in 1985-86 and 85 of 192 last season. In 20 playoff games last year, he hit 32 of 73 shots from that distance. This season, he is well on his way to career highs.
Ainge has the green light to bomb away and, despite his success, Celtics Coach K.C. Jones can't watch without mixed feelings.
"I've been a shooter anyway my whole life. That's been the specialty part of my game, and I've always wanted to be a shotman, but then a big adjustment for me," he said.
"He puts the ball in the basket and that helps, but I cringe on all kinds of 3-pointers," he said. "A coach's outlook is ... that's a long way from the basket and chances are he's going to miss it and you've got Kevin (Mahale) down there, you've got Larry (Bird) to post up. If Larry's out there shooting it, you've got
Robert (Parish) to post up So coaches say, 'let's get the ball in'
"But I won't tell a guy not to take it (a 3-pointer) unless it's really being abused, and Danny's come nowhere near that."
The only people being abused are the Celtics' opponents.
On Jan. 4, Ainge sank all six of his 3-point shots in a nine-point victory over Utah. On Jan. 13, he hit four of seven against Detroit, and two days later he made five of six against Sacramento. Boston romped in both games.
"There's been a lot of games this year where Larry and I have put teams away with our 3-point shooting, particularly in the third quarter and early in the fourth quarter," said Ainge, who has tried at least one 3-pointer in each of his 35 games and will try to extend his streak Wednesday night against Phoenix.
Bring yourself and your swimsuit to... The Soiree Tahitienne
January 22 at 8 p.m.
Sponsored by Le Cercle Francais
To receive further information, please contact the French department
Painting by Toulouse-Lautrec
SUMMER JOBS CAMP OZARK
Christian sports and adventure camp for boys and girls ages 8-15, located in Mt. Ida, Arkansas is now accepting applications for counselor positions.
VIDEO PRESENTATION:
Thursday, January 21
8:00 p.m.
Kansas Union- Pine Room
For more information contact:
Camp Ozark
SR 2, Box 190
Mt. Ida, Ark. 71957
(501) 867-2071
DUNGEONS &
DRAGONS™
PRESENTING THE NEW DUNGEONS & DRAGONS CLUB WITH THE FULL CLUB CAMPAIGN
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Cive World written to be played in by many groups
2nd meeting : Wednesday the 20th, at 30 pm in the Pioneer Room, Burge Union
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842-8861
926 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass.
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842-8861
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Thursday, Jan. 21:
Classic and Original Rock from:
THE DRIVE
Wednesday, Jan. 20:
--to 10-6.
Wednesday, Jan. 20:
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841-9443
AERHEDRON
K-State defeats WSU
The Associated Press
MANHATTAN, Kan. — Forward Mitch Richmond scored 24 points last night and center Fred McCoy added 12, leading Kansas State to a 58-47 victory over intratake rival Wichita State.
The Wildcats, who improved their record to 9-4, lead the all-time series 10-7. Wichita State's record dropped
Wichita State cut a 53-42 deficit to 53-47 with 1:24 to play on a basket by Lew Hill with 48 seconds left. WSU Coach Eddie Fogler was given two technicals for arguing with a referee, and Richmond converted five of six free throws to seal the victory.
Joe Griffin led WSU with nine points, making three 3-pointers in the second half.
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SUA FILMS
JAMES STEWART IN ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S REAR WINDOW*
ALSO STARRING GRACE KELLY
TONIGHT & TOMORROW NIGHT!
Jan 20-21
7:00 p.m.
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM/KS UNION
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THIS WEEKEND
Jan 22, 23, 24
Fri 3:00, 7:00, 9:00
Sat 3:00, 7:00, 9:00
Sun 3:00
Sun 2:00
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
COMUTERS: Self Serve Car Pool Exchange
Main Lobby, Kansas Union
Conversational English A course of study for those who have mastered the basics of speaking and understanding English as a second language. Comprehension and use of practical vocabulary will be covered in this course, followed by conversation English syntax and semantics. Further information call the Lawrence Conniving Education Office 642-6243. Class will be taught by LORA staff. Leave $3 plus supplies: 7-8 dollars.
Don't forget Pepsi hour daily between the 3 and 4 pumps drinks only 3 at $1.89 a Drive-In 10 miles
FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY SKILLS PROGRAM
Help for students of any foreign language Thursday January 21; 7-9 p.m. @ 464-856-2500, Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall, 864-404-8444
Bob Dole Needs KU Students!
To help with his presidential campaign
*Organizational meeting at 7 p.m., Thursday, Jan. 21 in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union, or call Brett 864-7114 for more information.
NEED A RIDE / RIDER? Use the Self Service UHBR
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LISTENING AND NOTETAKING INTENSIVE WORKSHOP Tuesday, January 26, 7 p.m., 300 Strong Hall Learn to listen carefully taking notes in our student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall 844-4064
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Spinater Books and Webbery, Lawrence's women, 'children', ladies, 'lesbiac and feminist' bookstore and resource center welcomes KU students back to town. Drop by for a fun book, album, button or a cup of tea (Th 6-8 p.m.) Open on Monday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. (I 8; I 8/2) / Mass S. Suite 4, d. 8th St.
If you would like to help GARY HART qualify for the Kansas ballot, call 842-1133
Paid for by Kansas for Hart (Don Stroll & Vick Shingboy)
READING FOR COMPREHENSION AND SPEED WORKSHOP Monday, January 25. February pay by fee noon 12/08 at the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall 864 4064
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, January 20, 1988
15
Hillel
EVENTS
Thursday, Jan. 21
Exec. Board Meeting
6:00 p.m.
Gen. Board Meeting
7:00 p.m.
Hillel House
940 Miss.
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of
tutors for student Assistance Center, 121
Strong.
Friday, Jan. 22
Shabbat Dinner
6:00 p.m.
Hillel House
RSVP Thursday, Jan. 21
CHOICES YOU'VE GOT A GREAT YEAR AHEAD OF YOU!
DO YOU FEEL THAT YOU ARE STUCK IN A RUT? DO YOU FEEL THAT YOU HAVE NO ALTERNATIVES? DO YOU FEEL FRUSTATED WITH THE WAY THINGS ARE? THIS WORKSHOP WILL FOCUS ON THE FACT THAT YOU DO IN FACT HAVE CHOICES AND THAT YOU CAN, IN FACT, CHOOSE TO HAVE A GREAT YEAR!
TUESDAY, JANUARY 26, 1988
7:00-9:00 p.m.
PINE ROOM, KANSAS UNION
X
SPONSORED BY THE EMILY TAYLOR
WOMEN'S RESOURCE CENTER.
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL SHERIEL
ROBINSON AT 864-3552.
ENTERTAINMENT
GET INTO THE GROOVE Metropolis Mobile
com and radio DJ's. Hot spin. Maximum Party
radio and club DJ's.
J 4 M FAVORS AND FLASHBACK FOTO. The perfect combo. Party favors and fast party pics. Call 843 8770 or 841-4390 to book your next party.
BILLIARDS AND
VIDEO GAMES...
WE'RE NOT JUST BOWLING
THE KANSAS UNION
JAY BOWL
804-2515 LEVEL ONE
864-3545 LEVEL ONE
FOR RENT
route. Call events (913) 843-8116 (call collect).
2 roommates needed for 3-bedroom Duplex, part furnished $130 plus 1/7 usd. $100 dep. bd. 843-8085.
1 roommate required. Hot tub, wi-fireplace, hot tub, tuxedo and basket ball courts. On. Our route. Extra storage. In formation or appointment, call 843-1057.
Found: Great apartment! 4 bdmr, fireplace,
mic. etc. Leo; two roommates! Resward: lg
bdmrs($150-$135) plus 1/4 util. Call 843-2963
Soon
Beautiful 2-bdm apartment with bath and cozy fireplace. Very spacious and a fun place on RU bus route. $400.00 mo. municipal utilities. Michigan, Chicago. Call 819-1489 or 831-7809.
Apartment. two bdrm, spacious, very clean, on
lower level, low util. W 25 W 24-
818-709 Call Anytime
Clean rooms furnished 5 minute walk from campgrounds, kitchens, bathrooms, laundries, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens, kitchens,
Completely Furnished Studios. 1-2-3 & a bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you in mind Call 841-123-8412, 841-255, or 749-245. Mastercraft
Deluxe 3 Br 1/2 house. Fp. Ca, garage, base-metal. Couple or Sm fsm prefer. No pet, reis. On bus route. Possibly partly furnished. Suitable for new months. Must see to appreciate. 843-7700
Female roommate, preferably quiet and non snoker, needed to share 2 bedroom apt, with female Grad Student at Spanish Crest Apt. 12, wfth B2 on bus route *115* mpl plus utilities. Swimming pool available. Grounds. If interested, call 841-9424 and ask for Elizabeth or Spanish Crest Apt. 18, 841-6688.
FREE KENTAL ASSISTANCE "For $until" 1.2 and 3 bedroom apartments and duplexes. In all gbd campus locations or on bus route. Innside office in New Valley Management, 810 Nucklake, 810 Nucklake.
Furnished room for rent, most utilities paid, with off street parking, two blocks from university, quiet, studious atmosphere, and no pets please. 941-5000
HARWARD SQUARE Now available large 2-bedroom apartment with gas, heat and water paid. Excellent location on bus route. Call 841-6090 for information.
If you saw a great a great last week for a roommate needing to do an apartment that is close to campus, we would welcome you to our microwave, plus January rent paid, we're sorry our ad number was disconnected - please call us.
Immediate opening in house close to campus.
Female prefered. Fully furnished with laundry
supplies. Please call 212-750-8460.
I NEED A ROOMMATE MAD! Own bedroom,
pillow ID. ppd $200. Will negotiation.
(3)
MASTERCAFTAFT offers beautiful furnished apartments, various sizes, all great locations! Designed with the K.U. student in mind. Call 841-1212, 841-3255 or 794-8236.
Mature mate roommate need for two bedroom furnished apt. laundry, facilities, parking lot. $190/m water paid. Behind Watson Library 843-2658.
Needed: non-smoking female to share space容纳女性 to $162.50/m. Call 843-8687 or message [www.non-smoking.com](http://www.non-smoking.com)
Need to sublease a one bedroom, unfurnished
space apartment at 18429 79-0279 Woods starting in
the third floor.
Nice 1. bedroom apartment.
Must sublease
Hanover Place
841-8123 or Jennifer 749-6767
Nice studio apartment. Low utilities. Close to
129-641-691. KT 841-741-200 after spm 513
892-641-691.
Not satisfied with where you're living? Naimsht Hall has one female student and a male student. Both provide such features as individual lease liability, excellent "A.U-B-Can" program for housing, and you'll see why we are recognized as one of the best housing options at KU! For more info, call or come by Naimsht Hall, 1803 Nairn Drive, DH-275.
Villa26
Apartments-Townhomes BRAND NEW 1 Bedroom Apartments
- Microwave
- Energy Efficient
- On KU Bus Route
- Excellent Location
- Open Daily
- Washer Dryer Hook-ups
- Move In Today
2201 W. 26th/Apt. E-102
—phones—
842-5227 • 842-6454
841-6080
One room in nice house on Lawrence Ave. None smoker, no drinker. 250 plus愿客. Call
OPEN HOUSE, Villa 26 apartments, 2021 West 26th street. Brand new apartments. Immediate occupancy-free rental assistance. Saturday 10:35. Simplify the information. call Kaw Kaw Simplify the information.电话 814-848-6166
Private, recently carpeted room, joint kitchen and living accommodations; handy to campus; off-street parking. Reasonable rent. Call events (93) 341-9542.
Responsible, non-smoking vegetarian woman to share house.
607 plus 1/3 utilities ₹749.
SHANNON PLAZA CLUB APARTMENTS on KU bus. route. Washer/dryer included, water, trash paid. Dishwasher, microwave, ceiling fan, laundry room. Basketball courts 6 or 12 month lease. 841-7726.
Try cooperative living. SUNFLOWER HOUSE.
749-8617, ask for Am, Dm, or Tom.
Subbase, Duplex two bedrooms, 1 bath, 1804.
Missouri, great location for KU student, $300/m.
2 bedrooms.
Sunflower House has private rooms, low rafts and a great location. Call evenings.
Wanted: female roommate to share furnished
Apt. 117-250, no utilities. Private room, 841-6194
Wanted: Non-smoking roommate. Own room,
roommate. m. Bus route, very nice
*reek, 841-5531*
ADVANTAGES
Nowhere at KU will you find a residence hall with the advantages of Naismith Hall. Applications for fall/spring semester are now being accepted while grace remains.
while space remains.
NAISMITHHALL
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
913.843.8559
Wanted preferably two female roommates. Cambridge, MA. Applicants must be at least 150 per month. No utilities. Call George at (617) 428-3911.
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
EDDINGHAM
PLACE
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
- Swimming pool
841-5444
24th & Eddingham (next to Gammons)
- Exercise Weightroom
- On-Site Management
contract
2 BR APARTMENTS
Free Showtime Satellite T.V.
- Fire place
- Energy efficient
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Management, Inc
- Laundry room
Coke Machine - Wty rent - dispense cans soda or beer; tape recorder reel - to, reel, akun 18000; playback and playboy magazines after 5, (913)
FOR SALE
Beautiful stressed leather bomber jacket, brand new, worn twice, size 40, reg. 182, 749-1901.
Bike Sale 20% off in 81 bicycles speeds up to 35 mph. $159.95. Uptown Bicycles, 1337 Mass. 749-0636
BioHomedo - reasonable price: 796-645. An Absolutely Awesome Array of Antiques, collage, sculpture, stucco, have: hardback books, 12价 paper superbooks, playbooks, Playbios, Penthouse, etc., loads of antique, Indian art, vintage cineramic, glitter or varnish, vintage cinderblocks, antique toys, fine art glass, doll house furniture, miniatures, fiesta, and the best selection of antiques from New York & Miami; B11 New Hampshire, Open Sat & Sun.
miniature, natures, flesh and the test edition of *The
Market*, 811 New Hampton. Open Ads & Sat
Market. 811 New Hampton. Open Ads & Sat
Drafting tools, beds, lamps, chest of drawers.
Everything But Ice, 616 Vermont.
FOR SALE; by Nagel, Warhol and Monet, at reduced prices. Call Robert 824-4607.
For Sale. 2 full Fultons. Have been well cared for. Call 824-3971. Have call 841-3572 from 9-9 n. Jennifer.
for sale, limited edition prints by such artists as
Lovell and Vernandes. Contact Robert 848-607-7912.
and Verndanes. Contact Robert 848-607-7912.
Kokap Rapid RCA paper approx. 90 sheets: $20.00.
Kokap Rapid paper approx. 150 sheets: $34.99.
tracromie $50 - $60, clean-up tissue: 2.4,
$75 - $85, clean-up tissue: 2.4, $100 - $125,
- MOTHBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE
* 750 W. 6th St, p. 60, m. Saturday 10:3 p.m.
512 E. 8th - 749-608
512 W. 7th - 749-608
AUTO SALES
1988 Chevrolet Cavalier D24 $2,957; Camara FZ-2
$12.047; Monte Carlo as $13.358; 1988 Ford
Mustang GT Convertible $19.895; 1988 Volvo
$19.895; 1988 Pontiac Fire Coupe $4,686; Firebird $9,223
Trans AM $12.501) FACTORY warranties
reinstate financing, trade-in. You choose options
1973 vw bus. Reconditioned engine less than 500 miles. Brand new radials on. Very reliable
Car can’t start? Mobile repair service on foreign cars. Call Aaron at 814-4629.
LOST FOUND
Red Hot Bargains! Drug dealers' cars, boats,
bags, luggage. area s/742.
address: 805 690-4007 ext. 1234
Found: Set of keys on western side of Potter Lake. Call 864-4358.
HELP WANTED
needs needs afterschool help with 4 kids,
8-13 years old, M-F 3:15-6:00. Responsibilities:
transportation, light house keeping, meal
preparation. References. For interview, Call
Rucky's Drive-In is now taking applications for part time employment. Flexible hours. Half price meals. Apply in person at Rucky's drive-in. Thank you for your support. Thank you for sketches of 21st Century autos and
ash for sketches of 21st Century auto and
rains. Original work only. 841-2382
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16,400-$32,900 yr. Now
offered. 878-000-7000. One-day
National Listed.
Flashback Tues. will be taking applications for拍照 Fri. Tues. and Wed. 12-4. To apply, stop by our office in The Westridge Center at 6th Dasei, D101.
GOVERNMENT JOBS $16,400-$23,900.yr Now
government jobs 877 900 8700 used for current Federal List.
--to work within the university's financial environment. The position requires senior or assistant office manager with a minimum of hours of accounting, and good written and oral communication skills. Desirable applicant will be able to work in a team environment.
Be the best in Boston
Boston's leading nanny placement agency invites you to spend a challenging, rewarding, and profitable year with carefully screened professional families. Complete support network awaits your arr-
Call 1-800-262-8771
or write American Au Par
P.O. Box 97
New Town Branch
Immediate opening for laboratory assistants for pharmaceutical research, half-time jobs. Req. Master's degree in chemistry and transcripts required, including 16 hours of chemistry and transcription tests. 200 W. 21st St., Lawrences Rd., 6004, an equal opportunity employer.
Math instructors for GMAT, GRE, ACT review courses. Qualifications excellent test scores top GP. GPA must be 3.5 or higher. GP. undergraduate degree. excellent commitment to the program. willing to put in initial time for success class.
New Town Branch Boston. Mass. 02258
Needed resource aid for spring* 28; clerical and typing (*spm*) skills. Data entry experience preferred but not mandatory. Must be available to work some morning hours. Apply
Local marketing firm seeks several new week nights) call Jim L49-7666
--to work within the university's financial environment. The position requires senior or assistant office manager with a minimum of hours of accounting, and good written and oral communication skills. Desirable applicant will be able to work in a team environment.
1988 summer positions available
Sandstone Amphitheater
Administrative assistant Production assistant
For information call:
Stage hands
T-shirt security
Part time house cleaners wanted. Day and evening hours await. If you enjoy cleaning and are meticulous, Buckingham Palace is interested in you. Please call 1-800-735-2960 for transportation. Must be available over breaks.
(913) 287-1154
Part time workers 1/2 time. Production shift 4
Workers 3/4 time. Production shift 6.
Call Personnel Depot 2. Packer Flatrics.
5. Call Personnel Depot 1. Packer Flatrics.
Pizza Delivery Drivers Wanted. Must be 18 yrs.
or older, have own car and ins. $36/hr plus commission and
compromise. Apply in person, Checker's Pizza,
2214 Yale Dd.
*Pontoal Jobs!* $20,064 Start! Prepare Now!
*Pontoal Training Exams! Exam Workshop. 190184. Ext 135*
*Workshop. 190184. Ext 135*
Students needed part time, Monday, friday, Thursday and Sunday, week. The University Day Kaanan has a position available for a student to proofread advertisements on your website, understand the grammar and a fundamental understanding of the English language will be expended on you, you'll need to be reliable and responsible. We prefer a self-starter. You'll need to be comfortable with newspaper and be off when we don't (like exam week, when you need the time to study). $4.00 per week, $350 per semester.
Rewarding Summer for sophomore and older students in Colorado mountains working with native wildlife, many outdoor programs. Write now; include program interests and goals. Sanborn
Qualified individuals earn up $240/mr Fr./Soph.
年费 and $700/mr Jr/Sr years. Requirements:
Full time student, physically fit, willing to join the
AROTC-SMP program.
Service Technique Lawernance 1 Computer Store
Software 2 Networking 3 Edge and Edge
Edge and Kypro Microprinter, printers etc. Facilitary
with micros preferred. Growth potential and
credentials or credentiales by Jan.
8. to Computer Outlet.
Preschool aid After school 4-5:30 Early experience Sunshine hotel 842-223 or 743-623
Summer camp plants in the Northeast. For free list, send self addressed stamped envelope to Midwest Camp Consultants, 1785 Red Coat Dr., Maryland Heights, Md. 60403.
SALES EXPERIENCE OPPORTUNITY JEM is now taking applications for Sales Reps for the KU area. This is an excellent opportunity to gain sales experience while making extra money selling quality party favors. To apply, stop by our office at the Ackle Ridge Shopping Center at 6th and Kadol D9.
communication skills. Desirable applicant will be planning to stay in the Lawrence area 18 to 24 months from your current employment. Closing date is January 20. Start date is February 1. For information call Jay at (718) 534-9000 or visit available in 138 Strong Hall between 14:30 pm EO/AA Employe
The University of Kansas has a position opening for a continuous half-time student assistant. The position requires knowledge of budget and accounting transfers for the university's budgets. This person will gain a good exposure to fund accounting and have an opportunity to work within the university's financial enrolment system. You will be required to graduate student status, a minimum of seven hours of accounting, and a minimum of written and oral examinations.
Volunteers needed: Headquarters Counseling Center Training sunny nights. Information meetings. Wednesday 20th or Sunday 24th. 8-9 n.p. n.149 Massachusetts.
Tutored needed in all subjects. Requirements: 3.0
skills. Apply to Supportive Educational
skills. Apply at Supportive Educational
Wanted: At Alvamar Country Club. Housekeeping position, 20-hour hours. In person in room 18.
Warm caring people - who like children ages 3-5 are need at Head Start as volunteers for a day care unit. From 7:30 and 3:30 M-F. Day care volunteers from 12:30-5:30 M-F. For more information call 862-943-5020.
Student position: On campus publisher seeks help 10-15 hrs/wk. to open and distribute daily mail, answer phones, type and assist in various duties. Must be able to work afternoons $3.50-$7.50/hr depending on experience. To come to University Campus, call Carruth, to complete application by 1/20/88.
Secret grade point increasing techniques revealed. Results guaranteed! Free details for Dean's List Dreamers Write. Report Card Ramboning, Zephyr Press, P. O. Box 315-UK, San Amelio.
MISCELLANEOUS
DOWNTOWN
BARBERSHOP
824 MASS.
$5 HAIRCUTS
We feature
discounts on:
- Redken
- Sebastian
- Paul Mitchell
No Appointment Necessary!
Mon. thru Fri. 8:5:30
Sat. 8:12
843-8000
Rex Jon
Porter Amyx
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
Call or drop by Headquarters. We're here because we care. 841-2345 1419 Mass. 1419 Mass.
REALLY LISTEN
We're always open.
841-2345 1419 Mass.
PERSONAL
GRADUATIN SENIOR SEEKING COMPANION
FOR EXCICTING TRIP TO THE BAHAMAS! EN-
JOY SAILING AND SCUBA DIVING, ISLAND HOPP-
ING AND MORE GREAT ACTIVITIES. MAKE
NAMIBIA ISLAND YOU MUST BE 21
WITH JUNGLE FEVER. CALL TROPICAL BOB
643-3822
Heavy metal songwriter - guitarist wants to meet other metalists, male or female, to exchange info, jam or possible low budget recording. Vocalists call: 843-6541. Leave name and number.
Tamera from Walmart, give me a call to let me
me meet time for you at 3:00 Spanish class.
Class: Walmart - 7900
Well, I am back. Thanks you guys for being so supportive. Thanks for all your help Kim, Tami and Scott. You all are such good friends. Love, Lewy, P.S. Hey Kem you finally got a personal.
Amyx Barber Shop 8421/2 Mass.
Reg. Haircuts
$5.50
842 9425
4 Barbers
4 Barbers for Your Convenience
Welcome Students
480 Value when presented toward new patient a-
vice. State & student insurance accepted. Free
Spinal Exam. Dr. Johnson, Chiropractor,
483-3979.
For the best in world and national news, complete business section, and extensive coverage of sports, movies, books, etc..
New York Times
Jan. 18-May 12: $20.90
Jan. 25-May 12: $19.59
only 25$ per copy Mon.-Fri.
d to: N.Y. Times
P.O. Box 1721
Lawrence KS 66044
for Sunday Service
or more info call
841-5073
(formerly Green's) 810 West 23rd
WEBB'S PARTY SUPPLY
National Edition
Weekly Beer Specials
HARPER
LAWYER
841-5073
Jan. 20 - Jan. 26
Coors Lt. 24 pk. $9.97
Miller Draft 6 pk. $2.78
Miller Lite 6pk. $2.78
Busch 12 pk. $4.49
Old Style 12pk. $3.69
Busch 12 pk. $4.49
Old Style 12 pk. $3.69
Weidemann 12 pk. $3.19
Hide a secret message inside of a jazped up balloon bouquet. Call University Balloons today (866) 355-2100.
Products Liability
* Other legal matters related to students
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthing at 843-8421. Confidential help/free pregnancy
- DWI's, take D'Is, and other alcohol related offences *
* Personal Injury, Medical Malpractice,
* Products Liability
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SHOP. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-2316.
1101 Mass.
Suite 201 749-0123
DONALD G. STROLE
16 East 13th St. 842-1133
SERVICES OFFERED
Hair CUTS $2 off with KU ID for the months of January and February. Ask for experienced hair stylist, Ann Beamy at Standing Ovation, 14 E Ace, 749-0771
HELP! Frustrated by red tape? Needing a movie or game time? Just don't know where to turn. Call the UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER at 844-3564. 24hrs a day.
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ektachrome processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W services. PASSPORT $6.00. Art & Design Building, Room 206, 864-4767.
BLICK'S SMOKED MEATS TUE. & WED. ONLY
IN WESTRIDGE
BBQ Sandwiches
BBQ Ribs
Smoked Chickens Briskets
WE'LL CATER ANY PARTY
(316) 872-3221
MATH TUOR since 1976, M.A., $/hr, 843-9032
(p.m.)
MATH TUTOR 895, experience. Individual and group rates. 841-0148
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and
Airport Services.
Overland Park...(913) 461-6878
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. 841-2316.
THE FAR SIDE
Become a Valentine always remembered, with a
"BOUDOI PORTRAIT" call Mike or Gracie at
Photo's Place, 749-3706. Free consultation
The college of Liberal Arts and Sciences offers tutoring in math, english, business, and science; provides a reasonable charge through Supportive Educational Services, apply at SES BUILD. 844-3971.
DRIVEWAY EDUCATION offered thru Midwest
DRIVEWAY education available obtainable, transportation
bill 817/740
TYPING
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing an order processing, web design or programming.
I-41. Reliable Typing, Service Term papers,
Resumes, Letters, etc. professionally typed. IBM
Electronic Typewriter. 842-324
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term papers, theses, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mail lists. Letter quality
printing, spelled correct. 842-7247.
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS
MOMMY'S TYPING, one day service available
849.3378 before 9 a.m. please
1 per woman Word processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 843-268, days or evening.
i plus Typing; Letters, resumes, thesis, law typing, 16 years experience. Call Terry 845-279-0391.
24 hr. typing service. Fast, professional word processing with letter quality printer 843-7641 Accurate, affordable typed in experience paper; tissues, mice, correcting Selectric, word processor 843-7644
For professional typing/word processing, call
844-614-8900. Spring special $12/pass
balances. 844-614-8900.
Quality typing. Includes excellent spelling, grammatical, punctuation, editing. Fast, reliable service. Send resume to: Quality Testing, Inc., 230 W. 67th St., New York, NY 10019.
FAST. ACCURATE. DEPENDABLE. Letter
patent for mail check, spell check
TOP-MATH SERVICE 883-2104
TYPING PLUS assistance with competition,
testing, testing, writing, applications,
dissertations, papers, letters, applications,
and presentations.
WANTED
Typing at a reasonable rate Call Hall at 8456111
Female nonsmoking room: 2 Br. Apt, close to campus $187.00 plus elect. No deposit required.
Hiring¹ Government Jobsee area $15,000
689.00 Call 602.838 1088 ext 4055
Female roommate wanted for nice 2 bedroom apt. on bar band 160 / Mo+ plus 12 units' CALL
Female roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom apt. Located on corner of Harvard Rd. and Iowa. Gas and water paid. Rent is negotiable. Call Liz or Nancy 842-1979.
Female roommate needed to share huge room in rn. apt. Furnished. 1.1/2 baths. $89/mi plus 50% deposit. Call (612) 345-7626.
Need rest-play aid after right lift for one or
two sessions (Smith or Smith)
844-1900. Equal Opportunity Employer
Part time student drafts person HVAC) wanted to work at Architectural Services. Duties include architectural and mechanical detailing on carpentry, woodworking, average architectural or mechanical drafting skills and proficient understanding of construction assemblies, materials, and building codes. Six months or more drafting experience with an architecture office. Call for an interview at 843-3413
\MATE WANTED FOR SUNRISE
14 utilities. January rented. Chris 749-600
Responsible male roommate needed for 2 br. apartment at Graystone, adjacent to Traildrief House. Utilize utilities. References helpful. Erie 749-2085. ROOMMATE WANTED FOR SUNRUFS
ROOMMATE WANTED! Male needed to share
room with girlfriend. Water and gas paid
and water used. Call 843-7537 before 10 p.m.
Roommate wanted Unique 2 br apartment.
Price negotiable $205 plus price. Price
negotiable $6280.
Roommate: 4 Br. 3 bath, 3 story closet close to bathroom plus utilities and deposit 129 ask for Job #568 129 ask for Job #568
STUDENT ASSISTANCE · Half-time) The Organizations and Activities Center seeks one 1/2 time each of the following positions: University Council and member fraternities. Required qualification: enrollment for fall 1967 and Spring 1968. GPA: 3.0 or greater. 2 G.P.A. A. Prior experience in fraternity leadership, ability to work flexible hours. Complete bachelor's degree in a relevant field and Activities Center, 84-481. Submit a letter of application, resume, and cover letter to Assistant Director, Organizations and Activities Center, 103 Burg Ave. 60445. Position available immediately. EEO
Wanted non student basketball tickets. 842-6783.
Wanted to share spacious, clean, warm 3-bedroom house with professional woman, 29. Prefer grad student or working person. Walk 2 blocks to KU. Central heat and air conditioning, cost $175/month plus 1.2 of reasonable utilities. 842-8531.
wanted to work at Architectural Services. Duties include blueprint machine operation, drawing specification and product brochure file clerk and preparation of inked roof plans. Must be acceptance examiner. Must be prequalified for state work study program. Call for an interview at 864-3431.
By GARY LARSON
1-20
1988 Universal Press Syndicate
The Bluebird of Happiness long absent from his life. Ned is visited by the Chicken of Depression.
16
Wednesday, January 20, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
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Thursday January 21,1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 79 (USPS 650-640)
KU sports threatened by boycott
Official says blacks not considered for job
By Christine Martin Kansan staff writer
KU Athletic Director Bob Frederick will meet within a week with the director of the Black Coaches Association, Rudy Washington, to discuss the threat of a boycott by black athletes, Frederick said yesterday.
The threat was made by Harry Edwards, an adviser to the coaches association and a professor at the University of California-Berkley, because he thought KU officials did not consider black candidates for the football coaching position that Glen Mason, who is white, recently accented.
Edwards made the threat during a recent press conference. Frederick said he did not want to comment until after his meeting with Washington.
Edwards could not be reached for comment.
An official statement by the Athletic Department, which was issued after Edwards made the threat, said that the search committee "contacted the executive director of the Black Coaches Association and advised him that the University was interested in receiving applications from black candidates."
The statement also said that the committee "undertook special efforts to determine interest in the head football coach's position by qualified black candidates" but that "the only identifiable black applicant expressing an interest in the position did not have头 coaching experience, which was of major importance to the committee."
Tom Mulinazzi, associate dean of engineering and a member of the six-member search committee that selected Mason, said the committee had asked Edwards to suggest possible black candidates for the position.
Mulinazzi said that Edwards suggested one leading candidate, Sherman Lewis, who is an assistant coach for the San Francisco 49ers.
Mulinazizi the committee considered Lewis but decided against him because he did not have full-time head coaching experience. He said that the committee did not consider color as a factor.
Ed Manning, assistant men's basketball coach and a member of the Black Coaches Association, said he thought the University of Kansas had chosen the best possible coach.
Manning said he thought a boycott would hurt the University.
"I hope it never materializes." Manning said. "I think it would affect everyone."
Three other KU coaches they were concerned that KU was receiving bad publicity because of the threat.
Alvin Gentry, assistant men's basketball coach, said, "I think any time you have negative publicity, it's going to be difficult."
Women's basketball coach Marian Washington agreed. "Any time you have a negative focus it will have an impact on your program," she said.
"I'm sorry that it has to take place. I think it's unfortunate because there will be other sports that will suffer." Washington said.
She said that the issue was important, however.
"I think there is a real issue relative to the very few number of black head coaches and a real issue in terms of women getting moved out of coaching positions.
"It's not always pleasant," she said, referring to the threat of a boycott. "I don't always agree with the method, but sometimes things have to be harsh in order to make changes."
Baseball coach Dave Bingham said he was disappointed that Kansas was singled out by Edwards, and that the publicity was unfair to the people who hired Mason.
Bingham said he was concerned about how the threat might affect other programs.
"All of us need to be concerned with equal opportunity," he said. "We like to provide equal opportunity for everyone involved, and we want to look for the most qualified people."
Ioe Wilkins III/KANSAN
BENNETH J. CUNNINGHAM
Amy Randles, Olathe junior, and Laura Ambler, Lawrence junior, explain their opposition to the shorter add-drop period.
Senate proud of AIDS project
By Kevin Dilmore
Kansan staff writer
Student Senate got back into the swing of things last night by acknowledging the success of two ongoing programs and allocating funds to a campus club.
program. Jason Krakow, student body president, opened the first meeting of the semester by welcoming senators back from their break. He said KU students had a lot to be proud of thanks to the Student Senate Task Force on AIDS and the Higher Education Rescue Operation.
Of the AIDS task force, Krakaw said, "We not only got KU students thinking, but we got people in the community involved."
Michael Foubert, task force chairman, said students passed out about 10,000 condoms and information packets during the two days of fee payment. He said demand was so high that task force members could have passed out an additional 6,000.
Although all of the condoms are gone, the task force will continue to operate. "The issue is not dead." Pepo said.
The committee will set up appointments to speak to student living groups and will try to establish an acquired immune deficiency syndrome hotline through the Lawrence Memorial Hospital Wellness Center, he said.
Foubert also acknowledged the negative feedback the information packet had generated and said he would have been disappointed if there had been now
"I only hope this will cause those who have not yet taken a stand on the issue to do so," he said.
Krakow also said he was pleased by the turnout of about 150 KU students for the Margin of Excellence program.
"It was a tremendous credit to us," Krakow said. "We are now not seen as an apathetic or self—serving community."
Jane Hutchinson, director of the KU chapter of the Associated Students of Kansas, said KU students were responsible for the success of the lobby day.
"But it's by no means over," she said. "We certainly have a battle ahead."
Senators also voted to allocate $302 to the KU Cricket Club. Sirram Naganachan, Madras, Temn., graduate student, said the money would be used to replace worm team equipment that he brought to show the senators.
Also, Stephanie Quincy, student body vice president, said eight senators had turned in resignations between semesters because of schedule conflicts.
Quincy said she hoped the election committee would appoint replacements within the next two weeks.
University rejects idea on condoms
By Regan Brown
Kansan staff writer
KU's AIDS policy calls for combating the disease through campus-wide education. But don't look for condom vending machines on campus any time soon.
Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, responded yesterday to recommendations that a 22-member University task force on AIDS sent her in December. She rejected the task force's suggestions for condom vending machines and "safer sex" kits in favor of educational programs for students, faculty and staff.
Ramaley said the controversy over the kits and vending machines was counterproductive.
She said the University should concentrate on the "slow and painful process" of education instead of shorter-term solutions.
"We start here with the assumption that students are adults," she said.
Condoms are available for reduced prices at the Watkins Hospital student pharmacy. Michael Foubert, graduate student and chairman of the Student Senate Task Force on AIDS, said many students felt a stigma connected with buying condoms at Watkins.
Foubert said that Ramaley's actions dealt mostly with the institutional structure of the University.
'But students' lives are at stake,' he said.
Another task force request was for a half-time coordinator to enact a comprehensive AIDS education program for KU. Citing budget restraints, Ramaley turned down the request for the position and expressed confidence that the health education department at Watkins could administer a comprehensive educational program.
Such a program would include specialized training for police, lab personnel, food workers and medical staff.
A five-member advisory committee named yesterday will evaluate the task force's educational recommendations and work toward their implementation.
Advisory committee members are: Phil Huntsinger, associate professor of health, physical education and recreation, committee chairman; Janine Demo, health educator at Watkins; Henry Buck, Watkins physician; Mick Quinn, training manager in personnel services; and Anthony David Wahbeh, Lawrence senior. All were members of the University task force on AIDS.
Regarding Ramaley's decisions on the task force's recommendations, Buck said, "I believe we should withhold criticism about one or two items that did not come out as we had hoped. Overall, the thrust of this report is exactly on target, and it will do a great deal to meet the needs of the University."
Buck said that teaching responsibility was the key to educating children about AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases.
"We need to teach everyone who is sexually involved to accept responsibility, use the right methods, and be responsible to their partners and themselves," he said.
Classified employees still seek salary equity
Kansan staff writer
By Rebecca L. Cisek
Classified employees at the University of Kansas are pleased with Gov. Mike Hayden's proposed salary increases, but they say they are still taking the back seat compared with their unclassified counterparts.
Hayden's proposal for classified employees includes a 4 percent cost-of-living increase and a longevity bonus for employees who have served 10 years or more. The movement increase that amounts to about 2.5 percent
Classified employees are defined as state civil service workers
Hayden has done a fair job with classified employees' salaries, but the problem of inequity still exists, said John Brothers, interim president of the KU Classified Employee Senate.
"We are very much behind the Margin of Excellence and want to see it through, but we are afraid that it will be a little harder."
three years. Peer schools are similar in size, scope and mission.
Brothers said the longevity pay was the innovative part of Hayden's plan since employees with 10 or more years of service no longer received the step increases. The bonus for this year would amount to $25 for each year of service.
Margin of Excellence is the proposal that would bring Board of Regents schools' budgets to 95 percent of their peer schools' average, and would bring teacher salaries to 100 percent of peer teachers' average salaries within
But he said there had been an inequity between the salary increases and benefits of classified and unclassified employees for many years. The state contributes 3.1 percent of classified employees' salaries to their retirement funds but, as a result, the state receives less salary. Classified employees also receive less vacation time than unclassified employees.
Brothers said classified employees deserved the same percentage of increase as unclassified employees.
Bob Redling, public information director for the Kansas Association of Public Employees in Topeka, provided a history of classified employees' salaries compared with unclassified employees' salaries.
Redling said classified employees were upset that their salary increases hadn't kept up with those of unclassified
employees. Redling said that according to a study done by the
Kansas Legislative Research Department, classified employees' salaries increased 78 percent from 1975 to 1985, while the salaries of Regents faculty increased 123.3 percent. During that same period, unclassified employees lost 39 percent of their buying power while faculty lost 3 percent.
Diana Dyal, library assistant, said that Hayden's proposed increase wouldn't cover the increased fees she had to pay for Social Security and health care.
"I realize that teaching faculty are underpaid and I sympathize with them, but I don't feel that it's fair for classified employees to receive less," she said.
But Neva Entrikn, in office supervisor at the art history department, said the increases for classified employees weren't as inequitable this year.
She said the cost-of-living and step increases combined were more than the 5 percent cost-of-living increase that unclassified non-teaching employees would receive, although as high as the increases proposed for faculty.
Teaching faculty would receive the 5 percent cost-of-living increase, plus a 2.8 percent Margin of Excellence
"It's not bad," she said of Hayden's plan.
KU instructor helps plan '88 presidential debates
Bv Kathleen Faddis
Kansan staff writer
When Diana Prentice earned her doctorate in communication studies, she never expected to be planning presidential debates.
"Definitely, it's a major honor," said Prentice. "I am the only midwester for all practical purposes."
Prentice was appointed in August. The Commission is a non-profit, bipartisan organization consisting of the chairmen of the Republican and Democratic national committees and eight elected officials.
But three years later, Prentice, KU instructor in communication studies, finds herself serving on the Advisory Board for Commission on Press-Info Debates.
Two independent studies recommended the involvement of both political parties because of problems in past years with cooperation from the candidates.
Prentice is one of 40 members of the advisory board to the Commission. Other members of the board include former Speaker of the House Tip O'Neill; Melvin Laird, secretary of defense in the Nixon administration; Lynda Johnson Robb, daughter of former President Lydon Johnson; and Jody Powell, former President Carter's press secretary.
debates as part of the general election, the parties needed to be involved," Prentice said.
"If we were going to have any chance of institutionalizing the
Prentice, a KU graduate in speech education, was hired by former Gov. John Carlin in 1983 as a part-time consultant. She became a full-time speech writer, until he left office in January 1987.
The board met once in October, and it will not meet again until March
"It was really kind of intimidating
waking into the first meeting," she said.
Prentice was married to the former governor in March. She was recommended to the board after
Prentice has been debating since high school, has written textbooks on debate, and she has conducted research on debate formats at the University of Nebraska. She is the only member of the board with an extensive background in speech and debate. "I'm really trying to represent the research and knowledge of everybody in this discipline," she said.
Carlin mentioned her background to Democratic National Committee Chairman Paul G. Kirk at a debate in July.
The Commission plans three presidential debates and one vice presidential debate. The Commission already has named Sept. 14 and 25 and Oct. 11 and 27 as dates for the debates and has secured commitments from major television networks.
All of the declared Republican and Democratic candidates have promised to keep those dates open so they could participate in the debates, Prentice said.
Seventeen cities bid to host the debates, including Kansas City, Mo., Lincoln, Neb., and Omaha, Neb.
At its first meeting, the advisory board discussed whether to continue to use the format of a press conference and whether to continue using journalists as questioners. The board also considered moving to a format closer to a real debate.
A standard format involves two teams debating a single issue with the debaters asking the questions.
There are advantages and disadvantages to using journalists as questioners. Prentice said.
"You do have people who are informed,have followed the elections and are plugged in." she said.
But she said that using journalists also could be negative. "They are so closely associated that the things they may be view as important may not necessarily be the public agenda."
Prentice said that three agendas
operated in a presidential debate: the press agenda, the public agenda and the candidate agenda.
"The odds of all three of those agendas always meeting up in a debate are not necessarily great," she said.
The board has talked about limiting each 1988 debate to a single broad issue like the economy, foreign policy or domestic issues, she said.
"They were invited to be a part of this Commission and declined the invitation." Prentice said.
The Commission's debates will not replace debates sponsored by the League of Women Voters. The League plans to sponsor four separate debates.
Marilyn Gaar, president of the Johnson County League of Women Voters, said that the League was completely non-partisan and believed it was better able to focus on issues, unlike political parties, whose main focus was putting people in positions of power.
THE NEW YORK TIMES
Diana Prentice
She said she hoped the two groups could resolve their differences so that there would not be two separate groups sponsoring debates.
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2
Thursday, January 21, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Weather Forecast
LAWRENCE
Sunshine
From the KU Weather Service
LAWRENCE
Sunshine
HIGH: 34°
LOW: 19°
Today will be mostly sunny with the high reaching the mid-30s. Tonight expect partly cloudy skies and a low dipping to 19°.
KEY
Rain T-Storms Snow Flurries Ice
REGIONAL
North Platte
34/17
Mostly sunny
Omaha
29/18
Mostly sunny
Goodland
31/15
Mostly sunny
Haye
31/15
Mostly sunny
Salina
34/19
Mostly sunny
Topokia
34/18
Mostly sunny
Kansas City
31/18
Mostly sunny
Columbia
30/20
Mostly sunny
St Louis
30/20
Mostly sunny
Dodge City
36/19
Mostly sunny
Wichita
31/18
Mostly sunny
Chanute
31/18
Mostly sunny
Springfield
31/20
Mostly sunny
Forecast by Dudley Muffin Temperature are today’s high and tonight’s low.
5-DAY
FRI
Partly cloudy
40/21
HIGH LOW
SAT
Partly cloudy
30/12
SUN
Mostly sunny
26/10
MON
Mostly sunny
32/20
TUE
Partly cloudy
38/22
Police Reports
A limited-edition silk screen print, valued at $3,000, was taken Tuesday from a business in the 2500 block of the street. Lawrence police reported
A motorcycle, valued at $1,500,
was taken Tuesday from a shed in the
200 block of Lyon Street, Lawrence police reported.
A video cassette recorder and two prerecorded tapes, valued together at $335, were taken Tuesday from a business in the 600 block of Lawrence Ave. Lawrence police reported.
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SUMMER JOBS CAMP OZARK
Christian sports and adventure camp for boys and girls ages 8-15, located in Mt. Ida, Arkansas is now accepting applications for counselor positions.
VIDEO PRESENTATION:
Thursday, January 21
8:00 p.m.
Kansas Union- Pine Room
Camp Ozark
SR 2, Box 190
Mt. Ida, Ark. 71957
(501) 867-2071
Bill would encourage help in state hospitals
TOPEKA — Medical students on state scholarships would be encouraged to serve part time in state hospitals and prisons after they graduate under a measure the House Appropriations Committee endorsed yesterday.
The bill, sent to the full house on a voice vote, would allow former medical students to avoid repaying the scholarship money to the state by serving in state institutions other than universities. They would have to work at least the equivalent of $2\frac{1}{2}$ days a week for the state.
Currently, students who accept one of the 50 scholarships to finance their educations at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., must return the money to the state if they do not enter into a practice in a medically underserved area in the state.
Generally, those who went through the medical school in four years owe the state about $40,000 in principal funds if they decide to pay the state back.
The program was started in 1979 to get more doctors to work in medically underserved counties. However, some lawmakers have questioned the program's success.
"We do believe it does represent a significant effort to address a social problem," said A.J. Yarmat, direc-tor of student affairs at the Med Center.
On Campus
The Student Assistance Center will present a foreign language study skills workshop at 7 p.m. today in 300 Strong Hall.
Campus Crusade for Christ will
Begins at the Yayakwah
Broom of the Kangas Union.
An environs meeting is scheduled for 4:30 p.m. today in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union, Kris Peace Corps and the Peace Corps in the Phillipines.
A brown-bag lunch adult development colloquium featuring Mary Michaelis, associate professor of pharmacology, is scheduled for 11:30 a.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries. 1204 Oread Ave. The tonic
is "Aging in the Brain.'
"aging in the brain."
Rue Cromwell, M. Erik Wright distinguished professor of psychology, will present "Behavioral Genetics of Schizophrenia: New Research Perspectives," at 8 p.m. today in Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas Union.
A health workshop for foreign students is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. today in the Daisy Hill Room of the Burge Union
- Latin American Solidarity will feature Rex Powell's speech, "Guzaapa: The Face of War in El Salvador," at 7 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
+ + + + +
ECM CENTER EVENTS
Jan. 22: Friday Free Movie "River's Edge" 7:30 p.m.
1204 Oread ECM Student Christian Center
Jan. 24: Sunday Evening Worship and Supper 5:30 p.m.
Student Discounts / Free Ticket Delivery
841. 94-1890 2721 West Sixth St, Suite C
Sponsored by
ECUMENIUS AND MARYSERHS
The United Methodist Church
The Presbyterian Church (USA)
The Church of Jesus Christ
The Church of the Bresthen
Jan. 26: Seminar "Christian Faith as Simplicity of Lifestyle" 4:30 p.m.
Jan. 27: University Forum "Guatemala Accord in Crisis"
Charles Stansifer
11:40 a.m. lunch
Noon: speaker
Seminar:
"Nuclear Weapons & National Security"
4:30 p.m.
TRAVEL
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- Saunas for Both Men and Women
- Muscle Shaping or Building
- Therapeutic Massage
Call for personal appointment:
NAUTILUS
ALVAMAR NAUTILUS FITNESS CENTER
4120 Clinton Pkwy. adjacent to club meet
CHECKERS PIZZA BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIAL
2214 Yale 841-8010
1 212" 2 topping pizzas $7.50 plus tax
2 16" 2 topping pizzas $11.99 plus tax
Offer good through Feb. 28,1988 (No coupon necessary)
--and up
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CHECKERS
湖 南
THE YOU FAMILY'S
Hunan Restaurant & Lounge
Lunch Specials ...$2.95
with egg roll or crab rangoon,
egg drop or hot and sour soup,
fried rice and fortune cookie,
hot tea is free when you order it.
Valentines Day Special $8.95 Please call for a reservation. per person
Polynesian Drink ... $2.95
Family Dinner...$6.95 per person
Carry Out
843-8222 1516 W.23rd St.
---
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, January 21, 1988
3
Kemp trial testimony:
Defendant had beaten victim, witnesses say
By Ric Brack
Kansan staff writer
A witness testified yesterday in the first-degree murder trial of Carl Kemp that she had seen Kemp hit his wife in August 1987.
Carl Kemp has been charged in Douglas County District Court in connection with the death of his wife, Judy. Her body was found in a wooden box in a shed outside the Kemps' trailer Sept. 9.
Ella Mau Holding of Lawrence said she had seen Carl Kemp strike Judy Kemp at the motel where Judy Kemp was working.
Another witness, Donovan Ford, the 12-year-old son of Judy Kemp, also testified that Carl Kemp had struck Judy Kemp. Ford clutched his hand to his forehead when assistant District Attorney Gerald Wells asked if he had ever seen Carl Kemp strike Father's mother.
"Yes." Ford said.
Wells asked if Carl Kemp hit her hard and whether she suffered any injuries during an attack.
Ford replied, "Yes, on her eyes." Ford also testified that Carl Kemp hit Judy Kemp with the butt of a 2-caliber rifle that he kept in the closet of the trailler where they lived in Izard County, Ark., and that she often hid from Carl Kemp in that same closet.
Carl Fleming, Carl Kemp's attorney, questioned in his cross-examination whether Ford was in Arkansas at the time of the alleged attack. Fleming noted that Ford had been in and out of foster homes during that time.
Fleming also asked Arkansas social worker Emma Jean Cooper, who had known Judy Kemp since 1974, whether Judy Kemp had told her about being beaten with a gun by Carl Kemp.
"No, she didn't," Cooper said. Bob Whitaker Jr., another witness, testified that he knew the Kemps from 1982 until 1986, when he was a sheriff's sergeant in Izard County.
Whitaker said he spoke to Judy Kemp three or four times between 1983 and 1985 about incidents of violence. He said she would call for him and set up meetings at her mother's house or at a phone booth.
"She would be very cautious for Carl not to know it, that's why she'd set it up to meet me," he said.
Whitaker said, "Carl had told her he was going to kill her and put her in a wooden box." He said Judy Kemp had said that twice, and that both times Judy Kemp had "a busted lip or a black eye."
Kenneth Kemp, Carl Kemp's second cousin, testified that a two-week stay with the Kemps stretched to approximately two months because Judy Kemp pleaded with him to stay.
"She said that since I'd been there Carl hadn't hit her or anything," he said.
Kenneth Kemp said that during the time he lived at the Kemps' trailer in Lawrence, Carl Kemp drank frequently.
Kenneth Kemp's wife, Tamala,
testified that on Aug. 25, 1987,
a woman came to her house in Eudora
and told her she was worried about
Judy Kemp. She said she went to Carl
和 Judy Kemp' s trailer about 8 p.m.
and found them sitting on the front porch.
She said she noticed "Judy's nose across the bridge was slightly dark and her eyes were dark a little bit."
While Tamala Kemp was at the trailer, a police officer arrived in response to a call from someone who was concerned because the Kemps weren't answering the telephone.
Tamala Kemp said a police officer came in, made a radio call to verify that he was to be checking on Judy Kemp and reported "she looks just fine to me. She's sitting right here."
Trying to cure alcoholics' seizures
KU professors try to make abandoning the bottle safe
By James Buckman
Kansan staff writer
For some chronic alcoholics, to quit drinking could mean death.
A small percentage of chronic alcoholics experience violent seizures 24 to 72 hours after they quit drinking. Seizures can prevent doctors from performing surgery, and can even lead to death.
Until recently, little progress had been made in finding a cause, let alone a cure.
Elias Michaelis said his research on the project started about 14 years ago at KU when he and William Freed, a graduate assistant at the time, became concerned with a nagging question.
The professor, Elias Michaelis, recently won a merit award from the National Institute of Health that will allow he and his wife, Mary, to do additional research on the project for eight years. Mary Michaelis, a co-principal investigator on the project and a KU associate professor of pharmacology and toxicology, is studying the effect of alcohol on calcium in the brain.
A University of Kansas professor of biochemistry, however, may have found the cause. And because of his research, science may be on the brink of being able to treat alcohol-related seizures.
At the time, Michaelis and Freed, who now is with the National Institute of Mental Health in Washington D.C., were working with glutamic acid, a chemical agent released by nerve cells that causes electrical activity in the brain. They were studying the receptors that recognized the acid
"Nobody was able to figure out why alcoholics had seizures," Michaelis said. "Everything that had been tried wasn't specific. They had looked at a variety of different chemicals in the brain which might be released or that was part of the pattern that was emerging that any one of those things was involved in the seizures."
and how the receptors became electrically excited.
Freed thought the acid might be involved with the excess brain activity during seizures. An investigation soon was underway.
"It started very simply." Michaelis said. "Just a hypothesis that maybe glutamic acid is involved in the seizures."
Michaelis examined the entire process of alcoholism, from the first drink to the last, to the point when the alcoholic experienced seizures, hallucinations or delirium.
Tests revealed that alcohol may block the activity of the glutamate receptors. That contributed to the "drunk" feeling alcohol causes. But Michaelis wondered why the effects of alcohol changed with extended use.
"When you take your first drink, you feel very differently than after you've been drinking for six months," he said. "It's easy to get drunk the first time you ever touch alcohol. But if you keep drinking much, it may take much larger amounts of alcohol before you feel drunk
"So obviously the brain is making an adaption."
That adaption was a key discovery in Michaelis' research. According to his hypothesis, the body adapts to the way alcohol blocks the receptors by making the additional receptors help overcome the deaminating effect, and it becomes harder to get drunk.
"Now, every time your brain releases glutamate, you have all the sensitive receptors, and you can feel everything until you start going into seizures.
"But if you suddenly stop drinking, you are sitting there with all those extra glutamate receptors," Michaelis said. "Alcohol, which is normally blocking them, is slowly getting out of your system."
SAMSUNG
"That excitation will eventually destroy the brain. Nerve cells die if you just keep driving them." he said.
Forrest MacDonald/KANSAN
Mary Michaelis, left, associate professor of pharmacology and toxicology, and Elias Michaelis, professor of biochemistry, research brain changes caused by long-term alcohol abuse.
Michaelis originally performed tests on laboratory mice. Later tests on human brain tissue sent from Washington by Freed substantiated the theory.
"The results were almost identical to what we had seen with experimental rats. It just followed the pattern perfectly. The alcohools had more glutamate receptors than the controls, the non-alcoholics," he said.
Michaelis said he now was probing into the mechanics of the cell to see exactly what caused the receptors to increase. When a cause is identified, a treatment can be found.
In addition, Michaelis said the brain tissue from a group of alcoholics who had experienced seizures showed an increase in receptors twice as great as other alcoholics.
"Hopefully, as drug treatments that can effect glutamate receptors are improving," he said. "we will have provided a strong scientific basis why one should be willing to try selective drugs in the treatment of alcoholics who have seizures."
Nancy Finnestad, a registered nurse at Bethany Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., said severe seizures were not a great problem in the rehabilitation of alcoholics because the seizures, if the symptoms were recognized early, could be managed.
But she said a treatment for the seizures could be especially helpful for the medical treatment of alcoholics.
If medical personnel aren't aware that they are dealing with an alcoholic, then they may not be the seizures as alcohol-related.
"That time is high-risk for alcoholics," she said.
Guidelines for research misconduct get FacEx OK
Bv Brenda Finnell
Kansan staff writer
The Faculty Senate Executive Committee has approved proposed guidelines for scientific and scholarly misconduct.
The Faculty Senate Research Committee had submitted the proposal to FacEx to get members' recommendations. FacEx approved it Tuesday with minor language changes, said Evelyn Swartz. FacEx chairman.
The guidelines consider misconduct to be falsifying research results, plagiarizing another's work, violat-
regulations or ethical codes for treatment of human and animal subjects or otherwise acting dishonestly in research.
If approved, the proposal would apply to faculty, staff, graduate students, student employees and students participating in research projects on KU's Lawrence campus.
Existing academic misconduct rules might take precedent when students are involved depending on the specific case, said Frances Horowitz, vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service and dean of the graduate school.
m misconduct policy was in the Faculty Handbook but that the new proposal was more specific. The National Institute of Health and the National Science Foundation, both federal granting agencies, are in the process of developing misconduct requirements for universities.
Horowitz said KU wanted to have a policy in place before the agencies' regulations were final.
The Faculty Senate Research Committee had adapted the proposal from a College of Health Sciences policy, making changes in the policy to make it compatible with the
Lawrence campus organizational structure, Horowitz said.
Cases of scientific and scholarly misconduct are rare at KU, Horowitz said.
Under the proposed guidelines, reports of misconduct would be reported to the chairman of the affected department, who would then report the incident to the accuser to determine whether further investigation would be necessary.
If it were, the vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service would be notified and would then notify appropriate administrators.
After consulting with the individuals involved, the vice chancellor and other appropriate university officials would name a five-member committee and a non-voting chairman to investigate the charges.
If the committee found no misconduct, the investigative file would be closed and no reference to it would appear in the individual's personnel record. The findings would be sent to all who knew of the allegations.
If the committee decided misconduct had occurred, it would recommend actions to the vice chancellor.
Horowitz said that an academic
The proposal says these recommendations might include sanctions
and steps to guarantee that KU would meet obligations to those affected by the misconduct, including collaborators and the scientific and scholarly community.
After considering the recommendations, the vice chancellor would send a decision to the chairman of the institute and to the accused individual.
The decision also would be reviewed in an interview with the accused. If the vice chancellor agreed misconduct had occurred, the vice chancellor would take action in accordance with University disciplinary policies.
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Thursday, January 21, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Athletes should not expect easier academic standards
College is a place where students can expect remedial coursework to make up for what they should have done in high school or junior college.
Well, it would be if basketball coach Larry Brown had his way. That way he wouldn't have to worry if his junior college transfers could not handle college work.
But whose fault is it?
It is no surprise that Brown is unhappy with the faculty after Marvin Branch was ruled ineligible. It is more of a surprise that a player who has spent three years at a junior college could not pass the eight hours of classes necessary to keep him eligible.
Brown blames the faculty and academic system at KU. He says that KU does not have a curriculum that gives students "who don't have a normal background" a chance to be successful.
KU is not a remedial learning institution. It is an institution of higher learning. If recruiters are not telling that to potential student-athletes, then the recruitment programs should be reworked.
Most student-athletes at KU are academically successful. They balance classes and practices, and many even make honor roll. But that is ignored when one ill-prepared student- athlete does not make the grade.
The Athletic Department provides academic support to the student-athletes who need it. If that support isn't adequate, then the fault lies with the Athletic Department and not with the faculty and academic program.
If the support is adequate, then perhaps that athlete should not be at KU. Large four-year universities often are not for everyone, especially universities with the academic challenge of KU.
Coach Brown should stick with what he knows best — coaching the basketball team. He also should consider recruiting players who are interested in a challenging education as well as playing for a challenging basketball program.
Jody Dickson for the editorial board
KU helps tarnish TV news
The recently released movie "Broadcast News" shows some unsavvy elements of television news, and a decision made by KU's School of Journalism has further tarnished the business' reputation.
Beginning in the fall, broadcast news majors will no longer be required to take Reporting I, the most fundamental class for any journalist. This decision was a mistake, and many journalism professors were opposed to it.
The first contact with reporting that broadcast news majors will have will be in a class called Broadcast News I. Although the description of this course mentions "reporting," it goes on to say that the emphasis is on audio tape recording, video camera shooting in the field and video editing. Reporting is clearly a secondary concern.
Broadcast majors then will move on to courses that offer "advanced study of reporting, writing and editing." How can so-called journalists practice advanced reporting without first learning the basics of interviewing, news writing and news judgment? They can't.
Broadcast majors argue that the skills in Reporting I do not apply to their professions. But good writing is good writing, and fundamental reporting skills are necessary whether a story appears in print or is read on the air.
By dropping the Reporting I requirement, the radio-TV sequence of the School of Journalism has reinforced the notion that broadcast news is mostly hairspray and makeup. Without basic reporting skills, broadcast news will become all style and no substance.
Alan Player for the editorial board
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
Other Voices
In a letter to the Atlanta Journal Constitution, Betty Simon of Canton, Ga. wrote:
A news item in your paper stated that the University of Kansas Student Senate president was going to prevent the spread of AIDS.
If the university students don't know what they're causing AIDS and can't buy their own condoms, don't you think they are too young to be away from it?
News staff
Allison Young...Editor
Todd Cohen...Managing editor
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Alan Player...Editorial editor
Joseph Rebello...Campus editor
Jennifer Rowland...Planning editor
Anne Luscombe...Sports editor
Stephen Wade...Photo editor
Richard Stewart...Graphics editor
Tom Eblen...General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Kelly Scherer ... Business manager
Clark Massad ... Retail sales manager
Brad Lenhart ... Campus sales manager
Robert Hughes ... Marketing manager
Kurt Messermissman ... Production manager
Greg Knipp ... National manager
Kris Schohorn ... Traffic manager
Jannie Brown ... Classified manager
Jeanne Hines ... Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and less than 200 words and must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University of Kansas, please include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
Letters, guest columns and columns are the opinion of the writer and do not influence the editorial board. University Daly Kansan, Editorialists are the opinion of the Kansas editorial board.
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MR. TAKESHITA
PROMISES HE'LL
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FAIR
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Parallels exist between U.S., Israel
Treatment of Palestinians is similar to actions against American Indians
"Will the meeting come to order?" said the chairman of the United Nations Security Council subcommittee on miscellaneous issues.
"Let the record show that we have convened to review a petition submitted by the Friends of the Native Americans to condemn the United States of America in N.A.A. is being represented by Mr. Snabb."
"I know this is a little late," Mr. Smith said. "But after hearing that the U.S. joined in the condemnation of Israel's handling of the Palestinian question, we'd like to see the UN pass a retroactive resolution condemning the U.S. for its handling of Native Americans."
The committee chairman suppressed a yawn. "This is highly irregular; it has been over one hundred years."
"We are aware of that, Mr. Chairman, but we believe that the U.S. occupation of our land was illegal and that excessive force was used to suppress our demonstrations of displeasure."
"I see that there are some parallels between the Palestinians and the Indians... live ammunition was used in both cases."
Smith said, "Not only that, but we tried to come to peaceful agreement with the white man on
"Do you have oil?" the chairman asked
"OK?" Smith said.
"Yes, oil — high grade, Texas crude, Arabian gold — oil?"
"Not really. Mr. Chairman."
"How about friends with oil?" the chairman went on.
"A good point, Mr. Smith, but also a naive one,"
'No sir, I don't think so.'
"Well, Mr. Arrow Smith, between you and me, that's where I think your problem began: You and your people lacked leverage."
"But all of the land belonged to us. Why would we need oil or friends with oil if we were morally
CHEESEMAN
Van
Jenerette
Staff Columnist
the chairman said. "Right is used as an argument to support a position taken on behalf of a person who has political or economic leverage. The way I read your petition, the American Indians didn't have either."
"But the occupation of our lands was clearly illegal under international law, wasn't it?" implored Smith.
The chairman picked up the petition and used it as a fan while he spoke. "Mr. Smith, it think's only fair to point out that it is the opinion of this committee that the tactics used by the American Indians in opposition to the occupation of their territory was flawed."
"Flawed tactics?" Smith asked.
"The records showed that your person signed numerous treaties with the white man, correct?"
"And if I read this properly, you promised to live alongside the white man in peace, as brothers, for as long as the rivers ran with water," the chairman said.
"That's correct, Mr. Chairman, but nearly
what was broken was the ink did war. "Smith said.
"Tactics, Mr. Smith, tactics," the chairman repeated impatiently. "The PLO never signed one treaty with and swears to deny the Jews the right to exist — for as long as the rivers run with
"But we wanted to live in peace. Is that so wrong?"
"Look where that position got you and your people. Mr. Smith," the chairman said. "Your
tactics were flawed."
"Mr. Chairman, we fought long and hard against occupation."
The chairman stopped him in mid-sentence. "Excuse me, but that brings up another tactical error on the Native Americans' part. You Indians always tried to keep your women and children out of the way during battles with the soldiers, correct?"
"Well, if you had been watching the news from the Gaza Strip or the West Bank you would have noticed that the Palestinians have put their women and children in the front ranks, face to face with the Israeli army — good tactics."
"We are not sure where all of them are, but we know that many Palestinian men have decided that it would be better if they used machine guns and grenades on unarmed tourists at the airports and on old men in wheelchairs on cruise ships," the chairman said. "They leave rocks and bottles for their women and children to use in fighting Israeli soldiers."
Smith looked confused. "That seems a little backward to me. Mr. Chairman."
"But very effective for prime time news, Mr. Smith. Very effective."
"So it's a lost cause then?"
The chairman stood up. "I'm very sorry, but I don't see how a United Nations mandate can undo Manifest Destiny. Besides, if no one wanted the four Palestinians that Israel deported, who do you think would want to make a homeland for 240 million non-Native Americans?"
"I suppose that we're stuck with them, then?" Smith said closing his briefcase.
"Bingo," the chair replied over his shoulder as he left the room. "Bingo, Mr. Smith."
Van Jeneteris is a Lawrence graduate student majoring in journalism.
K·A·N·S·A·N MAILBOX Drop classes early
Drop classes early
Alan Player's editorial in the Jan. 15 University Daily Kansan concerning the University Senate Executive Committee add-drop proposal reaffirms my conviction that there is a Burger King philosophy operating for a good number of students at KU; they want it their way.
Player seems to use "class choices" as a euphemism for "teacher choices," but nowhere in his article does he suggest an equal opportunity for instructors to have two weeks to make "students choices" for those they feel don't belong in their classes.
Player presents, as we might expect, only the students' view; he does not flip the coin to examine the situation from the teachers' perspective, nor does he get down to the hamburger issue of students who see add-drop as a period to "shop" for teachers who they will feel
be easy graders, or entertaining, or ignore attendance, or not assign homework, etc. If college is supposed to prepare young adults for the real world, one of the lessons must be that you don't always get what you want, when you want it, the way you want it.
Missing two weeks of class for post-enrollment sales is not a good way to start a semester, and it sends a message that pre-enrollment is not working, or it is taken seriously, apparently, by at least a portion of the student population. If students have been properly advised as to the courses they need in a given semester, and have been able to pre-enroll in those classes, then drop-add should only be necessary as a means of adjusting schedules to reflect unforeseen changes such as employee furloughing, adding classes that are not available during pre-enrollment, re-enrolling in prerequisite classes they failed, or temporary physical impairment (i.e., a broken leg) and a one week drop-add period should take care of that.
Do students achieve some kind of high by standing in line at Strong Hall once, twice, three times or more to rearrange their schedules, meanwhile missing classes they do plan to attend — eventually? Or does this deranged
behavior merely reflect the "Sledge Hammer!" mentality of politicians, bureaucrats, game show hosts and TV commercials they are exposed to? Isn't a class schedule thoughtfully established during pre-enrollment preferable?
Teachers have every right to expect classes to begin with a stable population on the first day of school.
Until the state provides adequate funding to hire (and pay well) enough teachers, build additional classrooms and offer a suitable number of courses, we're all eating hamburgers without the extras. Departments and professional schools, by the way, might consider "P" coding certain classes required for their majors and issuing Special Permission/ Approval Cards to insure these enrollments.
One last observation: we have been appalled at the rudeness and outrageous demands of many students our department has encountered this semester. We do not respond positively to "gimmees," "I wants" or "I got haves." Maybe a little "special sauce" of courtesy, patience and understanding is an extra we could stir up right here on campus.
Barbara M. Paris Administrative Officer I Department of English
BLOOM COUNTY
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, January 21, 1988
Health
5
The cold, hard facts about the common cold Symptoms can be eased,but the sickness leaves only in its own good time
By Regan Brown
Kansan staff writer
You can guzzle all the chicken noodle soup you want. You can doze yourself with Vitamin C and antihistamines. You can wear the warmest caps and mittens you have all winter long.
But you'll probably catch two to four colds a year, no matter what you do.
Although there's no cure in sight for the common cold, largely because stuffy heads and drippy noses are brought on by one of at least 200 different cold viruses, there are steps you can take to keep from catching a cold as often. And there are all kinds of ways to make you feel better after you catch one.
"Even if you do all the right things and avoid all the wrong things, you will still catch colds," said Charles Watkins Hospital. "No one is immune."
But take note, cold sufferers. A cold will probably last seven to 10 days, no matter what you do, because whatever virus is bugging you needs to run its course.
Colds are treatable but not curable.
Voycey said. The best way to treat a
cold is to rest and stay hydrated.
"But then, to quote 'Voltaire',
Yorkshire's common sense is not so
common. it is'."
Uncommon cures
A cold is an infection of the upper respiratory tract, caused by a virus. The all-too-familiar symptoms can include sneezing and coughing, a runny nose and watery eyes, a stuffy nose, general body aches, a scratchy and sore throat, a headache, and a temperature of 101 degrees or less.
We all know what colds feel like. The common cold is truly a common bond between many times and cultures. Through the ages, people have tried just about everything to ward off the sniffles.
of virology developed within the last 40 years, diagnosing and treating colds was almost impossible, said Robert P. Hudson, chairman of the department of the history of medicine at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
Differentiating colds from flu and other upper-respiratory-tra infections was impossible as well. Thus, a look at colds throughout history is inevitably imprecise.
Current research tells us that a strong immune system is the body's best defense against colds, but rumors and folklore from various cultures have credited everything from garlic to buttermilk with preventive powers where the common cold is concerned.
German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche had slightly different views on how to ward off a cold. "Contentment preserves one even from catching cold," he wrote in 1888. "Has a woman died, and she was well grooved ever caught? No, not even when she had scarcely a rag to her back."
Hot beer with camphor, garlic with sour pickles, raw peanuts, onion poullets, standing on the head underwater, rubbing socks with anions every day — all have been washed off. Hot beer with onion poullets, anything that pungent may well have kept cold at bay simply by repelling germ-bearers.
Humorist Robert Benchely advised frequent naps, steak dinners, and trips to Palm Springs to anyone serious about avoiding colds. He cautioned readers not to breathe through their mouths or noses and to avoid crowds by locking themselves in their rooms all day.
The truth, Yockey said, is that a strong immune system will ward off
'Even if you do all the right things and avoid all the wrong things,you will still catch colds.'
'E
Charles Yockey
infection.
chief of staff at Watkins Hospital
This means getting plenty of sleep and exercise; avoiding alcohol and nicotine, both of which suppress white blood cell functioning; and minimizing stress.
"Any kind of stress will weaken the immune system," he said. "Rapid weight loss, depression, a death in the family, pulling all-nighters."
"Shaking hands, touching, kissing and sharing a Coke are all good ways to transmit," he said. Coughing and sneezing are the second most common way to spread cold germs.
There are steps you can take to feel better, though. And there are signs to watch for just in case the viral infection that caused your cold turns into a more serious bacterial infection.
When it comes to fighting the cold war, there isn't a strategic maneuver known that will keep you from losing out to a cold every now and then. Once your immunities succumb, you're doomed to suffer until the virus is through with you.
Frequent handwashing will keep down the spread of cold-causing viruses, Yockey said, since the most susceptible person's transmission is hand-to-hand contact.
"The bottom line is that everyone is exposed," he said. "And you are at your most contagious a day or so before you get sick."
Winning the cold war
You've heard the cold-cure ititany a million times, but take heed if you wish to decrease the severity of a cold. Get plenty of rest. Drink plenty of water. Cockey, but avoid dairy products since they thicken nasal secretions.
Annh Kohl, registered dietitian at
Hoboken University, also stressed
drinking lots of fluids.
"Fruit juices are better than pop," well get some more juice, yellower.
Kohl cautioned against alcohol and caffeine because both are diuretics, which rob the system of badly needed fluids.
Aspirin will relieve your body aches and fever, said Yockey. And stay off the alcohol: "Booze will prolong your illness." he said.
Cold sufferers should eat three soups meals a day. Yokohama said.
Foods such as soup and fruit are easy to digest and help restore lost fluids and sodium, Kohl said. High-fat or fried foods — especially fatty cheese — are worth avoiding, she said, because they're so hard to digest.
Questionable cures
"Feed a cold, starve a fever' is baloney, by the way," he said.
Yockey cautioned cold sufferers about many remedies sold in health food stores, such as zinc tablets and
megadoses of vitamin C. He said that both were harmless in small doses but that larger amounts can be toxic.
"Too much C causes kidney stones. And zinc toxicity can lead to death," he said.
Kohl does not recommend zinc because it is fairly new on the market and relatively unproven so far.
As for vitamin C treatment, she said, "I don't think there's evidence that it will prevent a cold."
High doses — 10 times or more the recommended daily allowance of 65 milligrams can cause kidney damage if the vitamin is water soluble, she said.
However, the owner of a local health food store said that zinc lozenges and vitamin C tablets are popular with his student customers.
Bob Johnson, owner of Nature's Best Health Foods, 711 W. 23 St., said that zinc lozenges could relieve sore throats and upper congestion. The lozenges dissolve after being placed on the tongue.
"It's important to build our systems up," he said. "The chemicals and preservatives in what we eat stress our systems and make them break down."
Other cold remedies include an herb called golden seal, which Johnson termed a natural antibiotic, and odorless garlic tablets.
You should be able to treat most colds at home, but don't ignore your symptoms. A common cold is still nothing to sneeze at.
Treat your cold
Wise sufferers will steer clear of dubious folk remedies like the "two-hat cure." That's the one where a cold victim puts two hats at the foot of the bed, drinks whiskey until there's only one hat, and then sleeps
it off. But alcohol will only dehydrate you.
If rubbing Vicks on your chest like Mom used to do will make you feel better, by all means do so, said Yockey. It will serve as a decongestant, even though it can't be absorbed through the skin.
You should seek medical attention if you notice green or yellow drainage from your nose or lungs. This may indicate a bronchial infection; cold secretions are clear.
Other warning signs to watch for are intense sinus pain, which could mean a sinus infection, and high fever, which, along with a sore throat, could indicate strep throat, said Vockey.
Flu is marked by high fever and intense body aches, especially along the back. Yockey encouraged flu sufferers to seek treatment. A drug can shorten the duration and decrease the severity of flu.
Tips for preventing and surviving a cold can be cold comfort indeed — especially if you're halfway through the wheezing, sneezing misery of one. Nothing could be worse, right? Not according to Ann Adams, a local yoga instructor and co-director of Yoga Midwest, 1027 Massachusetts县.
As Adams sees it, we should be grateful for colds.
"The yogic view of a cold is that it is enforced meditation," she said. A cold forces you to rest and meditate on something in order into doing something for yourself."
By changing your attitude to a more positive one, a cold becomes a healthy thing, she said.
So next time a cold strikes you,
just remember it's all in your head.
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Thursday, January 21, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
NationWorld
Jerusalem citizens may face curfew
The Associated Press
JERUSALEM — The Israeli government said Wednesday that it might use curfews for the first time to quell riots in Arab East Jerusalem, where a police jeep stoned by children ran down a protester and crashed, injuring two officers.
Increasing numbers of Jerusalem's Arabs have been caught up in the nationalist fervor generated by six weeks of violence in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip, in which
Israeli gunfire has killed at least 36 Palestinians.
The government had previously said that such emergency measures as curfews could not be used in Jerusalem because the city, unlike the West Bank and Gaza, had been annexed and was subject to Israeli law. Israel captured East Jerusalem and the occupied territories in the 1967 Middle East war.
Political sources said privately that the Cabinet, at a meeting earlier
in the week, made an unannounced decision authorizing police to use curfews in Jerusalem at their discretion and with the approval of Maj. Gen. Amram Mitzna, head of the central military command.
Meanwhile the violence continued elsewhere. In northern Israel, soldiers killed three Palestinians who infiltrated the country from Lebanon with grenades and automatic rifles in an apparent attempt to raid a civilian settlement, according to an army
report. An Israeli soldier was reported wounded.
A stone smashed a window of a bus approaching Tel Aviv on Wednesday night, causing no injuries.
United Nations officials in the Gaza Strip reported that at least seven Arabs had been hospitalized with beating injuries. On Tuesday, Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin said he was ordering soldiers to answer protesters with beatings rather than bullets.
Hart campaign stunned by improper financing rumors
KEENE, N.H. — Gary Hart yesterday pledged to hold himself responsible after his campaign was rocked by reports that Hollywood video producer Stuart Karl may have improperly contributed to Hart's two presidential campaigns.
The Associated Press
Hart said he knew nothing of the details of the arrangement, which may have violated federal election regulations that limit individuals to a $1,000 contribution to a presidential candidate and forbid corporations from making any contribution.
News Roundup
"I will hold myself responsible for whatever happened and not shift any blame to anyone else," Hart said. "Obviously a candidate cannot know every detail."
The Miami Herald reported yesterday that Karl had chauffeured Hart in Lear jets and helicopters, had paid a monthly salary of $3,000 to Walto when the aid was traveling with the candidate in 1986 and early 1987, and had covered 1984 campaign expenses such as car rentals, printing and sign costs.
INFLATION RISES: Consumer inflation rose 4.4 percent in 1987, according to a government report issued yesterday. Although considered modest by economists, the increase was four times 1986's 1.1 percent rise.
CRASH SURVIVORS: Seven survivors of a commuter air crash that killed nine people Tuesday night near Durango, Colo. walked 1½ miles through brushland and waist-deep snow to safety.
BLOOD TEST: A new blood test can identify alcohols even if they haven't had a drink for years, and may be able to spot children with a high risk of becoming alcohols, researchers report.
CRASH VICTIM: A cargo plane flown by a suburban Kansas City man who was trying to return to Garden City because of engine trouble crashed and burned Tuesday night, killing the pilot, officials said.
TERRORISM SUPPORTER: The State Department yesterday branded North Korea a supporter of terrorism, based largely on the bombing of a South Korean jetliner that killed 115 people in November.
ON CAMPUS...please see pg.2
Kansan Fact:
KU students spend over $4 million a month on discretionary items.
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8.00 p.m.
Tuesday, January 26, 1988
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Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reserved For reservations, call 913-864-3982
Public: $14 & $12; KU & K-12 Students: $7 & $6; Senior
Citizens & Other Students: $13 & $11
Funded, in part, by the Kansas Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts through their affiliation with the Mid-America Arts Alliance, a regional arts organization; additional support provided by the KU Student ActivityFee. Swearthout Society, and the KU Endowment Association; a University Arts Festival event.
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THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 7 p.m.
Robinson Gymnasium, Room 130
Classes will meet on Tuesdays and Thursdays
First day of class: Tuesday, January 26
First day of class: Tuesday, January 26
Beginners at 5:30, Advanced at 6:30
Robinson Gymnasium, Room 130
The KU KARATE CLUB studies a traditional style of karate known as
OKINAWAN GOJU RYU
KARATE TEACHES: SELF DEFENSE, SELF CONFIDENCE, SELF AWARENESS
For more information contact Doug Sikora, 749-0361
Sports
Universit Daily Kansan / Thursday, January 21, 1988
7
Broncos, Redskins take day off to map strategy
Denver coach questions strength of his defense
The Associated Press
DENVER — Denver Broncos coach Dan Reeves has played or coached in six Super Bowls.
Heading into his seventh — against the Washington Redskins on Jan. 31 in San Diego — he has a pretty good idea what it takes to take, and wonders if his team might be weak in one particular area.
"Cleveland scored touchdowns on four straight possessions against us. I can't remember anyone ever doing that to our defense," he said.
"Our defense didn't play well in the second half," Reeves said of the 38-33 triumph Sunday over Cleveland in the AFC title game.
Denver's defense bears little resemblance to units of recent years. For one thing, such stalwarts as Louis Wright, Steve Foley, Tom Jackson and Rubin Carter have retired. Injuries have sidelined defensive backs Mike Harden and, until recently, Dennis Smith and
"Championship games are won by great defenses," Reeves said. "Washington played great defense on Sunday." The Redskins defeated Minnesota in the NFC championship game, 17-10.
Randy Robbins.
Somehow, the defense has held together, even managing a few outstanding efforts this season. But its vulnerability was exposed by the Browns.
"I never try to figure out those things," he said. "The game looks like a toss-up to me."
While the Bronco players took their second straight day off Wednesday, Reeves and his assistant coaches studied film of the Minnesota-Washington game, as well as recent Redskin games against Miami and Dallas and a 1986 game with Denver, won by the Broncos 31-30 in Mile High Stadium.
"The one thing that stands out about the Redskins is they're very well coached," Reeves said. "If I could vote year in and year out for a guy doing a great job, it would be Joe Gibbs. He's won over 70 percent of his games playing in a tough division. Richie Petitbon does a great job with their defense, too."
Without a stault defense, Reeves wonders how the Broncos can be three-point favorites in the Super Bowl.
ON TO THE Super BOWL
Washington Redskins
vs.
Denver Broncos
Redskins coach plotting to stop Denver's Elway
HERNDON, Va. — It was strategy day. The plotters: Washington Redskins coaches. The target: John Elway. The objective: stopping him in the Super Bowl.
"Elway's the key feature in the game plan, obviously," Redskins linebacker coach Larry Peccatelli said. "We'll be conservative at times and at other times we'll be aggressive, but you've got to mix it up when you play against a guy of his caliber."
The Associated Press
While the players enjoyed their second straight day off Wednesday, Redskins coaches huddled inside the team's practice facility, watching films and devising strategy against the quarterback for the Denver Broncos.
Players will get their first look at the game plan Thursday when they report for practice for the first time this week.
The last time Denver played the Redskins, in December 1986, Elway threw for 282 yards to rally the Broncos from a 13-0 deficit to a 31-30 victory. Washington is working to keep him from pulling off an encre in the Super Bowl on Jan. 31.
The Redskins' offensive strategy also is influenced by Elway, who has been called a "one-man gang" by Washington coach Joe Gibbs.
"We have to get a good job from our offense so we can keep their offense off the field," Gibbs said. "If we can control the ball, we can keep it away from Elway.
"He's one of the best quarterbacks who's ever played," Gibbs said. "He got off to a slow start last time we played Denver, and he still got them 31 points."
Elway's scrambling tactics put additional pressure on the Washington defensive line, which has had trouble against fleet-footed quarter-backs.
"You've got to get pressure on him and keep him in the pocket," line coach LaVern Torgeson said. "That makes it tough because you have to be aggressive, yet you can't leave your lanes because he'll run right by you."
Torgeson said that the Redskins planned to add a few wrinkles for stopping Elway.
"You have to. He's one of the great ones." Torgeson said.
Jayhawks edge Lady Buffs; Martin sidelined by injury
Bv Keith Stroker
Kansan sports writer
Guard Lisa Braddy hit two free throws with 15 seconds left in helping lead the Kansas women's basketball team to a 72-71 road victory over the Colorado Lady Bufs last night.
In the process, the Jayhawks lost forward Jackie Martin for the rest of the season. At the 15-minute mark of the second half, Martin ruptured her achilles tendon. She finished with six points.
The team was upset when it heard that Martin would be lost for the season.
Braddy, who hit just one of 13 shots in two previous Big Eight Conference games, scored a game-high 19 points, including 11 of 12 from the free-throw line. She also led Kansas with seven assists.
The Jayhawks started sophomore center Lynn Page, and she responded by scoring 13 points and grabbing 11
rebounds. Coach Marian Washington said Page turned in a tremendous effort.
"She is a sophomore starting to show tremendous progress," Washington said. "Lynn came through when we needed her most."
Kansas, 11-5 overall and 1-2 in the conference, led 37-32 at halftime. After the Lady Buffs scored the first two Hawks caught up, and the lead changed hands several times in the opening period.
The Jayhawks' victory stopped a two-game losing streak at Boulder. Last year its 83-65 victory by the Lady Buffs was sparked by forward Tracy Tripr's 25 points and forward Gretchen DeWitt's 18. Last night, the Jayhawks held Tripp to eight points and DeWitt to two.
Kansas held its biggest lead, 57-48,
with 9 minutes left in the game.
Colorado, 10-4 overall and 3-0 in the
conference, pulled to within one, 68-67,
at the 2:03 mark, but could never
regain the lead.
Washington said the Jayhawks allowed some things to happen defensively that she didn't want, but the team held its poise and was excellent at the free-throw line.
The Jayhawks' next game is 11 a.m. Saturday, at home against the Nebraska Cornhuskers.
Kansas 72. Colorado 71
Kansas (72)
Martin 1 4-6-6, Shaw 5-0 12, Brady 4 11-12-19,
Baker 4 8-0 0, Bougher 4 0-2 4, Stroughef 5-0 10-
Page 1 2-13, Jackson 0 0 0, Arnold 0 0 Nelson 0
0-2.0. Totals 27 16-27 22.
Wampler 0-0-0, 5 Oarks 3-1-3, 7 Ford 2-12-16
Turner 3-8-1, Carson 2-4-7, Woodford 1-0-2
DeWitte 1.0-2, Stephens 5-4-4, Wilson 1-0-2
Hallahan 2-3-27, Hallsen 2-3-27.
Hatline: Kashane 37-23
Female ump given her chance to make it in the major leagues
The Associated Press
"The they want to give her a chance," said Barney Deary, head of umpire development for the minor leagues. "She's paid her dues. I think she deserves a shot."
NEW YORK — Pam Postema, the only female umpire in professional baseball, will work National League games during spring training and could be in the majors this season, officials said.
No woman has ever umpired in the majors. Postma has advanced to third place.
Postema, 34, has been in the minors for 11 seasons. She has been at the Class AAA level for five years and spent last season in the American Association.
"It's our intention . . . to give her as long and serious a look as possible on her merits," league President Bart Giamatti told the Miami Herald. "I want to give her a chance."
Postema's opportunity comes at a
time when Commissioner Peter Ueberroth has pushed for more minority hiring, particularly for blacks and Hispanics. The National League is downplaying Postema's gender, although promoting her would fulfill baseball's goal.
Postema worked a handful of spring training games for the American League in 1984 and 1985. She was the plate umpire at last year's Hall of Fame game in Cooperstown, N.Y., and got high marks from her supervisors.
It is unlikely Postema would begin the season at the major league level. The National League already has four minor league umpires under contract, but Postema could get one of two openings for the relief pool, which fills in because of vacations and illness.
"There's a chance, if she does well, she could get one of those positions," said league spokeswoman Katy Feeney.
Postemia would probably work in Florida during March, Feeney said. Ed Vargo, the director of umpire development for the league, will spend most of spring training in Florida and can watch her.
"It's always good to know they're interested," Postta told the Herald from Phoenix, where she works off-season as a driver for UniParcel Service. "But I can't give you any indication of what they're thinking."
"You're always an inch away from being moved up to the big leagues and an inch from being released. But you never know," she said.
The National League has two vacancies on its umpiring staff because of the death of veteran Dick Stello in a November automobile accident. He is also by WilliamS.
Postemna went to the Instructional League in the winter at Vargo's request. She spent the time not working games but learning the fine points of acting like a big-league umpire.
'Tired' Flores quits Raiders
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — Tom Flores,
saying he was worn out after nine
years in the pressure cooker, retired
as coach of the Los Angeles Raiders
on Wednesday.
"I've won. I think it's time to smell the roses. It's time for me to step aside." Flores said. "I have no idea how much we need just about everything you can."
Flores, 50, guided the Raiders to a 5-10 record in 1987, their worst showing in 25 years.
Overall, his teams had an 83-53 regular-season record. They won three AFC West championships in his nine games and in the postseason his six. His teams were 8-3.
But the Raiders, who managed the only two Super Bowl victories by AFC teams in the 1980s, lost 14 of their last 19 games. They were 8-4 in 1986 before losing their last four games to fall out of playoff contention.
"I'm not burned out. I'm just tired," Flores said at a packed news conference. "It's time to go on to another challenge. obviously by the time you're finished, we have worn me out a little bit, so I'm going to take a little rest."
Team owner Al Davis said it was Flores' decision to step down and indicated it would be a while before he would name a replacement, although it has been speculated that he might hire a black.
"No one asked Tom Flores to retire," Davis said. "This is what he wanted to do. Tom will continue to serve the Raiders as an adviser, special projects, and will always be a part of our organization."
would hope that the Raiders would have a new coach by the league meetings in March. I haven't thought about it and I won't discuss it. The last time it took about a month. It's a very big, a very tough decision."
"I would say that with all our great records, one characteristic of the Raiders is that race, color, creed and even sex have never interfered," he replied. "I'm going to choose the best person who can lead the Raiders."
Davis was asked about the possibility of hiring a black coach.
If a black is hired by the Raiders, he would be the first of his race to be
Black coach
a coach in the modern-day NFL.
About Flores, Davis said, "Tom ranks as one of the greatest head coaches. In 1979, I told him that no one could do it (coach) for more than 10 years. If this sounds like a star, Flores like a Canton, Ohio, it's not how, but it may be someday. He was, and is, a star among stars."
Among those rumored as possible successors are San Francisco assistant Dennis Green, Raiders assistants Charlie Sumner, Art Shell and Willie Brown, and Pittsburgh assistants Tony Dungy. Only Sumner is white.
Flores, the NFL coach of the year in 1982, spent 13 seasons with the Raiders as a quarterback and assistant coach before replacing John Madden as coach in 1979.
The Raiders won the Super Bowl following the 1980 and 1983 seasons, but went through hard times in recent years. They haven't won a victory since overpowering Washington 38-9 in the Super Bowl in January of 1984.
Quarterback problems
The club's major weakness has been at quarterback. Veteran Jim Plunkett, who quarterbacked the Raiders to their two Super Bowl victories this decade, has been hampered by injuries, and neither Marc Wilson nor Rusty Hilger has been able to provide any consistency.
The Raiders also were hit this season by many injuries to their offensive line, and their running game and pass protection suffered.
Also, Davis, who watchs Raider games from the press box, often was heard loudly questioning some of the coach's play-calling this season.
"I'm a sore loser, there no question about it," Davis said. "You cannot confuse questioning something with negative dissent. We've had dissent here. I think all this stuff is more of problems that I consider portral."
Asked if he would ever consider coaching again. Flores said:
"Don't put anything in granite. Right now, coaching is history. But you don't know what lies around the bend."
Distractions
In addition to the quarterback problems, Flores and the Raiders
have been through some off-the-field distractions.
Davis, who shifted the franchise from Oakland to Los Angeles in 1982 after winning a lengthy antitrust suit against the NFL, has announced his intention to move the club from the Los Angeles Coliseum to a proposed stadium in suburban Irwindale.
Flores' wife, Barbara, said she wanted her husband to retire.
"I feel very happy, relieved," she said. "I think that this is really the best time for Tom to do this. He's been very tired. Each year it's become more. I think stress is like that, don't you?
"We're going to Palm Springs tomorrow. Now we can go somewhere for more than four days," she said.
Players' feelings
Plunkett was one of several current and former Raiders who attended Wednesday's news conference.
"Iwould characterize him as a fine coach and a good friend," Plunket said of Flores. "Ikind of hate to see him step down. It's obviously gotten to him. He's doing what's best for Tom right now."
Said All-Pro defensive end Howie Long: "He's been the only head coach I've ever had. There were times early in my career where I didn't think I was good enough to play in the NFL. He pushed me in the right direction, gave me confidence. I admire him for his honesty, the way he handled himself, his dignity."
In his second season, Flores guided the Raiders to a 27-10 Super Bowl victory over the Philadelphia Eagles. On Wednesday, he said that was probably his biggest thrill and accomplishment because the Raiders were a wild-card team in the playoffs.
Flores spent seven seasons as an assistant under Madden before being selected by Davis about a month after he announced his retirement in early 1979.
They won the Super Bowl again after the 1983 season when they beat the Redskins.
Flores earlier earned a Super Bowl ring as a player, as backup quarterback with the Kansas City Chiefs and as an assistant with the Raiders in Oakland.
Mizzou pounds Chicago State; Wolfpack, Kentucky upset
The Associated Press
Missouri 84
Missouri 64 Chicago St. 56
Doug Smith scored 19 points and Lee Coward added 17 for the Tigers, who raised their record to 10-4. The loss dropped the Cougars to 5-12.
COLUMBIA, Mo. — Byron Irvin's 20 points led Missouri to an 84-5 victory over Chicago State on Wednesday night
Missouri widened a 38-33 halftime lead by outscoring the Cougars 22-7 in the first seven minutes of the second half. Irvin, an junior forward, had eight of the Tigers' points in that stretch, including two three-pointers.
The Tigers raced to a 9-10 lead in the first two minutes of the game, with four different players scoring. Coward started the run, hitting a three-point shot 29 seconds into the game.
Junior center Laurent Crawford and senior guard Kenton Terrell, each with 12 points, paced the Cougar attack. All of Terrell's points came from three-point range.
Terrell's three-point shot with less than four minutes to play in the first half made it 31-27. It was as close as Dougars came the rest of the game.
GREENSBORO, N.C. — Cal Boyd hit a three-point jump with 20 seconds left and added two free throws with four seconds to play in leading Wake Forest to a 71-67 upset of No. 20 North Carolina State in an Atlantic Coast Conference game last night.
Wake Forest 71 North Carolina St.67
Boyd's jumper came after Chris
Corchiani missed the first shot of a one-and-one with 32 seconds left. After Boyd's basket, Vinny Del Negro attempted a shot from the right side that bounced off the rim. Boyd came up with the loose ball and hit the throw after Del Negro intentionally fouled him.
David Carlyle was fouled on the ensuing inbounds pass and made one more free throw with two seconds left.
The Demon Deacons hit 12 of 14 free throws in the last 6:37. Boyd's game-winning jumper was the only field goal in that stretch.
The Wolfpack led by 67-62 after two free throws by Del Negro at 1:31, but a free throw by Boyd and two more by Sam Iv helped set up the finish.
N. C. State was taken out of its running game by Wake Forest's quick defense and hot shooting. Also,
a 2-for-9 start in field goals by the Wolfpack helped Wake Forest pull away to a 31-20 lead in the first half. But Del Negro sparked a 9-2 run in the final four minutes that pulled N.C. State to within 33-29 at halftime.
Iowa St. 114
Nebraska 76
AMES, Iowa — Jeff Grayer's 37 points powered No. 10 Iowa State to a 114-76 Big Eight Conference victory over Nebraska on Wednesday night. It was the Cyclones' largest scoring margin ever in a regular league game.
The margin equaled the 38-point bulge registered against Colorado in a 1957 conference tournament.
Lafester Rhodes, who along with Elmer Robinson did not start for being late to the arena, added 23 points off the bench as ISU topped the
Robinson added 11 and Gary
Thompkins and Terry Woods had 10
century mark for a team record seventh time this season.
Jeff Reekewg and Pete Manning had 14 apiece for the Cornhuskers.
Grayer, with 12 points in the next five minutes, pressed the Cyclones back to a commanding 105-72 advantage with three minutes to play.
The Cyclones jumped to an 18-3 lead before Rhodes and Robinson entered the lineup. Iowa State built the margin to 42-15 with five minutes left in the half on successive three-point goals by Grayer, Rhodes and Mike Born.
Iowa State, 16-2 overall and 2-0 in the conference, led 56-31 at haftime. Nebraska, 9-8 and 1-1, closed to Iowa State eight minutes of the second period.
Florida 58
Kentucky 56
LEXINGTON, Ky. — Vernon Maxwell scored 19 points and Dwayne Schintzius added 18 as Florida defeated No. 4 Kentucky 58-56 despite going scoreless over the final 3:24 in Southeastern Conference basketball Wednesday night.
Florida used a 2-1-2 zone that allowed Kentucky to make only 16 of 57 shots for 28.1 percent.
---
Sinhitzius' wide-open slam dunk with 3:24 to go give Florida a 58-51 lead before Kentucky's foultry run.
Richard Madison hit a five-footer at 2:33 and Winston Bennett completed a three-point play off an inside power move with 1:20 to go in slicing Florida's lead to the final margin.
8
Thursday, January 21, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Muslims will march in protest of Israel
By a Kansan reporter
Recent violence in the Israeli-occupied territories of the Gaza Strip and the West Bank has led a local Muslim organization to plan a protest march against the Israeli government.
Members of the Islamic Center of Lawrence will march at 2:30 p.m. Friday from the Kansas Union to Strong Hall and back to protest what they call recent Israeli atrocities against Palestinians in the occupied areas.
For the past six weeks, Palestinians in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip have been protesting Israeli occupation. The protests and the
IODA & FRIENDS
Israeli reaction to the protests often have been violent.
Shehdeh Fareh, president of the Islamic Center of Lawrence, said the Israeli reaction to the protesters had been severe.
"The protest is to let people know what's on going there," Fareh said, "and to express our feelings of cooperation with the Palestinians and to condemn the Israeli savage activities."
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Moshe Oppenheimer, a graduate student from Tel Aviv, Israel, said the recent violence in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank was unfortunate. But he said that Israel had no choice to react to the violent protests.
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CORRECTION
KU KARATE CLUB
OKINAWAN
GOJU RYU
Free demonstration and opening meeting
is THURSDAY,
JANUARY
21st at 7 p.m.
NOT
JANUARY 29th
as printed in
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any inconvenience.
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New shipment of hand-coiled pottery from Santa Barbara Peru the peruvian connection Ltd.
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Monday through Saturday, 10:00 to 5:00; Sundays, 12:30 to 5:00
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12:00 Noon-The Holy Eucharist-Danforth Chapel
and Sundays
5:00 p.m.-St. Anselm's Chapel-1116 Louisiana The Holy Eucharist; dinner follows.
Canterbury House The Episcopal Church at KU
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JAMES STEWART IN ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S
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LAST CHANCE TONIGHT!
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Woodruff Auditorium/KS Union
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THIS WEEKEND
Jan. 22, 23, 24
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Welcome Back Students!
Just because you're back at school doesn't mean you can't eat well!
Enjoy our Chinese cuisine during the week and get an order of crab rangoon free. Or, on Sundays with our All-youcan-eat-buffet, receive 10% off Enjoy!
HuPEI
Open daily:
Lunch 11:30-2:30 p.m.
Dinner 4:30-9:30 p.m.
Fat. & Sat. 't11 10:30 p.m.
图示:身着传统服饰的女性形象,双手捧扇,姿态优雅。
Enjoy!
2907 W. 6th next to Econolodge 843-8070
10% off Sunday Buffet
All you can eat!
Offer expires March 15, 1988.
Offer not in conjunction with any other coupon.
12-9 p.m.
FREE Crab Rangoon with any dine-in dinner.
Offer not in conjunction with any other coupon.
Offer expires March 15, 1988.
K.U.
Kempo Karate
and
Self-Defense Club
Traditional Instruction in Hawaiian Kempo
Basic Drills Self-Defense Kata (forms)
Kumite (light contact sparring)
men, women, and children
when: Mondays and Wednesdays
5:30-6:30 p.m. Beginning
6:30-8:30 p.m. Advanced
where: Room 130
where: Rm 130 Robinson Gym
instructor: SENSEI Caren Wallace,
First Degree Black
Contact: Betsy Boyce 842-0389 Randy Erickson 749-0323
X
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, January 21. 1988
9
STORY or PHOTO IDEA? Call 864-4810
SAFE SEX?
Can one play it "safe'"?
SEX is not a game
but a wonderful gift from God
Lutheran Campus Ministrv
1204 Oread
Sunday Worship: 10:30 a.m.
843-4948
Classified Ads
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Conversational English A course of study for those who have mastered the basics of speaking and understanding English as a second language. The course includes an introduction to contemporary idiomatic expressions through conversation English syntax and semantics. Further information call the Lawrence Continuing Education Center #926243 Class will be delivered by Lorraine, KU staff, see 926 plus supplies. 7.9 p.m. Wednesday
Bob Dole Needs KU Students!
To help with his presidential nominee
*Organizational meeting at 7 p.m. Thursday, Jan 21 at 8:30 a.m. on the Kansas Union, or call Brett 864-7114 for more information.
Don't forget Pepsi half time between 3 and 4
pm. Soft drinks on $1.35 at Bucky's Drive-In
862-799-2100
LISTENING AND NOTETAKING INTENSIVE WORKSHOP. Tuesday, January 26, 7 p.m.-p. m. Strong Hall Learn to listen carefully, taking notes during a Assistance Center, 121 Strom Hall 843-4044
MUSIC ******************* MUSIC ******************* MUSIC
Red House Audio - Part music, 8-track studio
P.A. and lights, Maximum Audio Wizadry, Call
J Brad 749-1275.
ballot, call 842-113
Paid for by Kansas for Hart
(Don Stroll & Vicki Shipling)
If you would like to help GARY HART
help GARY HART qualify for the Kansas
QUALITY PRESCCHOOL. Age 2/12-5. Extended care 7 - 35/h. Easy access of 10th or 23rd.
Large playground. Limited spaces! Sunshine acres 92-ABCD
THANK-YOU
READING FOR COMPREHENSION AND SPEED WORKSHOP WEDNESDAY, January 25. February 1 and 8, a 7:30 p.m. Materials fee $15
Monday, February 19 and 26, a 10:30 a.m. Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hill 864 4064
You are the greatest
Spencer Museum Staff
could want.
To the thousands of students who helped us celebrate the tenth birthday of Spencer Museum—
- powerBooks and Webbery, Lawrence's women's, children's, ladies, lesbian and feminist bookstores and resource center welcomes KU students back to town. Drop by for a fun book, button, album or cup of tea (Th. 6-8 p.m.) Open on Monday through Saturday 10 a.m./12 o'clock, St. Suite 4, D&B Str Entrance.
Hillel
EVENTS
Thursday, Jan. 21
Exec. Board Meeting
6:00 p.m.
Gen. Board Meeting
7:00 p.m.
Hillel House
940 Miss.
Friday, Jan. 22
Shabbat Dinner
6:00 p.m.
Hillel House
RSVP Thursday, Jan. 21
For more info.
call 749-4242
ENTERTAINMENT
GET INTO THE GROOVE Metropolitan Mobile
Ground Station CDJ radio DJ's. Hot spin. Majority Party
J 8 M FAVORS AND FLASHBACK FOTO. The combo quality. Party favors and fast party pics. Call 843-8770 or 841-8349 to book your next party.
AT YOUR REQUEST
D. J. Sound & Lighting for any occasion Professional and Affordable! 841-1405
FOR RENT
HARVARD SQUARE. Now available large 2-bedroom apartment with gas, heat and water paid. Excellent location and on bus route. Call 841-6080 for information.
If you saw a great ad last week for a roommate suite, please call us to book them to campus, with vacant private bedroom, access to microwave, plus January rent paid, we're sorry the number was disconnected - please call 455-321-7600.
Immediate opening in house close to campus.
Female prefered. Fully furnished. Country
home style.
2 bedroom townhouse, furnished. On KU bus
route. Call宴会厅 (913) 681-8116 (call collect).
Apartment. No security deposit; January free!
bedroom, large living room, new paint, new
carpet. $300/Mo. You keep present deposit at the
end of the lease. $300 is yours. Call 812-4709 or
email:宴会厅@kus.edu.
Beautiful 2-birm apartment with bath and cozy fireplace. Very a special and a pop-up live to. OK on KU bus route. $400/0 mo. mini utilities. On Michigan, Calligan. 814-1899 or 8437-8109 any time.
Clean rooms furnished, 5 minute walk from campers, sing in room suite, share utilities, kitchens, bathrooms.
Completely Furnished Studios. 1-2-3 & 4 bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you. Call Mastercraft 62825, or 749-2415. Mastercraft Management
Duplex, one bedroom, within walking distance of KU. Low utilities $265/Mo 843-4798
Female roommate, preferably quiet and no smoker, needed to share 2 bedroom apt. with female Grade. student at Spanish Crest ApT., 2021 W7 onth bus route: 1855 + plus utilities. Promotes graduate students in grounds. If interested, call 643-9424 and ask for Elzabeth or Spanish Crest ApT. at 841-6888.
Female roommate wanted to share 1/2 story townhouse with other females. New townhouse A 1/2 bath plus A 1/2 bus plus. Located close to campus next to bus route. Low rent. Live and call 842-8563.
Female roommate wanted to 2 bedroom.
Near campus, $180 / 1/2 utilities. 749-3809.
FREE RENTAL ASSISTANCE - For studio 1 and 3 bedroom apartments and duplexes. All in good campuses locations or on bus route. Immense facilities. Kaw Valley Management, 90 Kentucky, HI-810-688-9721
Furnished room for rent, most utilities paid, with off street parking, two blocks from university, quiet, studious atmosphere, and no pets please. 841-500
NAISMITHHALL
Nowhere at KU will you find a residence hall with the advantages of Naismith Hall. Applications for fall/spring semester are now being accepted while space remains.
ADVANTAGES
Need to sublease a one bedroom, unfurnished apartment at a colony Woods, starting in October 2014.
MASTERCHAPT offers beautifully furnished apartments, various sizes, all great locations! Designed with the K.U. student in mind. Call 841-1212, 841-5255 or 749-4262.
I NEED A ROMMATE BAD! Own bedroom.
843-3800 pwd $290 will negotiate.
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 60044
913-843-8559
New 1 and 2 bedroom apartments, 842-5237
New 1 and 2 bedroom townhouses, 842-5237
Onetown inn in nineteenth house on Lawnville Ave.
Nincoln township inn in nineteenth house on Lawnville Ave.
Responsible, non-smoking vegetarian woman to
share house. 60+ plus 17/7 uses 798
***
***
***
Quiet, non-smoking, female wanted with room 2
upperclassmen in a br 'duplex' $131 +1/4
room 3
Nice 1 bed apartment. Must sublease
info on the floor. Have Place
841-1212 or Jennifer 749-7671.
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Not satisfied with where you're living? Naimath Hall has one female space available for intérieur, and a second individual lease liability, excellent "A1-BU-Cat" meals, paid utilities, weekly maid service, and security. We also offer best housing options at KU! For more info, call or visit by Naimath Hall, 1803 Nandhiville Drive, 843-859.
Roommate wanted: Great Ap! just seconds away from Kansas University! Full/No/$m. More
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
- 10 or 12 month
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
24th & Eddingham (next to Gammons)
- Exercise Weightroom
- Swimming pool
- Swimming pool
* Free Showtime
- Laundry room
- Free Showtime Satellite T.V.
- Fire place
* Energy efficient
841-5444
- On-Site Management
Professionally managed by
Raw Value Management, Inc.
SHANNON PLAZA CLUB APARTMENTS on KU u.bus路. Washer/dryer included, water, trash paid. Dishwasher, microwave, ceiling fan. Basketball courts. 6 or 12 month lease. 841-7739.
T cooperative living. SUNFLOWER HOUSE. 749-0871, ask for Ann, Dev, or Tom.
Sunflower House has private rooms, low
rooms, and a great location. Call evenings.
749-086-2315
Sublease. Duplex two bedrooms, i. bath. 184H.
Missouri, great location for KU student, $300/m.
Fully furnished, located in Southwest Atlanta.
Wanted: female roommate to share furnished
room with friend. Roommates must be
wanted preferably two female roommates. Campus
convenience. Two rooms available. $190 or
$150 per month. No utilities. George at Lake
Umpqua.
Sublease: Furnished studio in Meadowbrook,
$720/Mo. Water and cable included. Call
(800) 536-1292.
Villa26
1 Bedroom Apartments
BRAND NEW
Apartments -Townhomes
- Microwave
- Energy Efficient
- On KU Bus Route
- Excellent Location
- Open Daily
- Washer Dryer Hook-ups
- Move In Today
2201 W. 26th/Apt. E-102
—phones—
842-5227 * 842-6454
841-6080
Rock-n-roll-Thousands of used and rare albums
10 a.m. to p. e every day and Sunda
3 p.m. to p. e every day and Sandra
Hawkins, head of New York Harbor
KU Basketball tickets for sale. Call 849-1028.
*** MOTHALL GOOD USED FURNITURE. **
Monday-Friday 10:50 p.m. on Saturday 10:2 p.m.
512 E. 9th, 749-891.
1888 Chevrolet Cavalier Z2 $49,957; Camaro IZ-2 $10,447; Monte Carlo as Car $13,258; Ford Mondeo as Car $13,258; Mazda 6 Turbo $14,791; 1888 Mercury Coupe XR $19,355; 1888 Pontiac Fiero Coupe $48,696; Firebird $8,322
Trans AM $12,501; FACTORY warranties
you choose. You choose options
colors you want $84-34,949
AUTO SALES
NAISMITH PLACE
- Two Bedroom
- Furnished or Infurnished
- an apartment with:
- Private balcony or porches
- Laundry Facilities
- Furnished or Unfurnished
- Open the doors to
- Fully equipped Kitchen
- Satellite TV
FOR SALE
an absolutely Awesome Array of Antiques, collectibles and neat stuff we have; hardback and 1/2 price paper book books, full line of new comic books, art books, antique dresses, Indian, clad, costume jewelry (glitter and good stuff), the right vintage clothes for any occasion, antique toys, fine art glass, doll house furniture, fine art accessories, antique furniture in the area. Quintella Frye Market, 811 New Hampshire, Open Sat & Sun
'81 Honda moped - reasonable price, 796-6465
- Satellite TV
- Private halcony or porches
Naismith Place Apts.
BERTONG X19-7/1984. 1848. 338. Excellent condition.
BERTONG X19-7/1984. 1848. 541-609 weekday.
33-872 weekdays. 432-874 weekdays.
- Large Jacuzzi
Coke Machine - Why rent - dispense cans soda or beer; tape recorder reel - to - reel, aku 18000; playgrid1 and playboy magazines after 5, (913) 727-1900
... and much more!
Naismith Place Apts.
25th Court & Ousdahl
041-1915
Drafting tools, beds,lampe, chest of drawers,
Everything But Ice, 616 Vermont.
Aplique1 2 - string guitar for sale. Excellent condition! Call after 5, 749-3244.
Bike Sale 20%, off all 181 bikes 10-speed
bike from $95.00 mountain bikes from $19.90.
Mountain bike from $79.90.
BE A REFEEER. Intramural Officials are needed for basketball leagues forming now. Attend the meeting Wednesday, January 27 at 6:30 p.m.
'n15 Robinson
Car won't start? Mobile repair service on foreign cars. Call Aaron at 814-4699.
Beautiful sleather-leather bomber jacket, brand
worn, twice size, two 40 reg. 825, 748-1901
FOR SALE: **Fallen** by Nagel, Warbald and Monet, at refractors *Call Robert 842-4067*. 2 Full Tuiton. Have been cared for 60 each. Queen. Call 841-5727 between 9-5 p. m. Jennifer.
For sale, limited edition prints by such artists as Fire, Sale, and Nate Berger. Love and Fernand. Contact Robert 842-696-7367.
Red Hot Bargain! Drug dealers' cars, boats,
beds. (800) 975-6000 s. 3707
guide. (800) 975-6000
HELP WANTED
FUTON FRAME Full size sae - sleeper $220 (T).
Blurte Duro 718 (T) #81-4675.
Kodak Rapid RC paper approx. 90 sheets: $30.00,
Lloyds Bukler Loader containing 50 ft. of Kodak Ectracoute
$50 - $0.50, close-up lenses: 1, 2, 4,
55mm, used once. $30.00 - 841-6733.
Bucky's Drive-In is now taking applications for part time employment. Flexible hours. Hall of fame. Don't miss at *Bucky's Park in 6th and 10th*. Thank you.
Cash for sketches of 21st Century autos and
Are you skilled with woodworking or solving mechanical problems on smaller projects? Previous experience needed. Paid. 841-2382.
BE A REFEREED International Officers are needed.
CHILD - CARE NEEDED for 1 year old in our
3-Hr nursery/1-Hr airplane transportation. Call 843-8241.
- day of Lawrence, equal opportunity employer M/S/H. Part time vacancies. Stilmaste instructor. $7.00 per hour. Requirements. degree in physical education or related area. Must have ability to teach an exercise class for men and women. Bachelors or equiv. and loning of all muscle groups. $7.50 per hour.
Consultant positions for Small Business Development Center are available. Positions are paid above minimum wage, hours are flexible, work varies by department, and graduate students needed in the areas of business, engineering, law, and computer science. If interested, apply at 942 E. Summerfield Hall.
Job Service Center, RB3 Ohio, prior to making applications. Requirements: High school grad, diploma or equivalent with knowledge preferred, but not required. Tremendous amount of public contact by telephone and in person; calls to the office through January 26, 1988, at Personnel, 6th and Maza, 2nd floor, City Hall, Lawrence, KS 69044
Creative person for sketching 21st Century life
original work only 841-282 Lease
Leave room for new ideas
Faculty couple needs aidshelf school with 4 kills, 8-13 years old. M-F 3:15-6:00. Responsibilities: transportation light house keeping, meal references. For interviews, Call 842.7288, $3.25/Hr.
Evening line person, part time. $3.50; Hr. Apply
on at Borderido, Banda 18W. 6th h
GOVERNMENT JOBS $10,040-$25,920. Jr. www.
GOVERNMENTJOB.SCOTED.COM 878-607-0000. If 8785
for current Federal List.
GOVERNMENT JOBS $10.040-$25.020/vr. 390
MORTENMENT EMPLOYMENT $87.007-6000 usel. IE-9758 for
current Federal List.
Local marketing firm seeks several weeknights). Call Jim 749-7666.
Math instructors for GMAT, GRE, ACT review courses. Qualifications-excellent test scores, top 10% on GRE or GMAT. 3.5 undergraduate education. Communication skills. ability to studentize. willing to put in initial time for successful class. Call 492-6442.
Part time house cleaners wanted. Day and evening hours await. If you enjoy cleaning and are meticulous, Buckingham Palace is interested in providing transportation. Must be available over breaks.
Pizza Delivery Drivers Wanted. Must be 18 or
older, have own car and ins. $3.60 hr plus
commission and training. Apply in person, Checker's Piz?
ziara. 2214 Yale Rd.
Pastel Jobls: $20.06* Start1 | Prepare Now!
Experiment Exam
Workshop (919-1044) Ext1 135
***
PROFREADER Student needed part time, Monday thru Friday, 7 a.m.-11 a.m., 2-4 days a week. The University Daily Kansan has a position available for a student to proofread advertisements and articles. This includes grammar and a fundamental understanding of the aesthetics of layout. Since our advertisers
the aesthetics of layout. You'll need the advertisers will be depending on you, you'll need to be reliable and responsible. We prefer a startner. You'll work during class time, but you must be and be off when we don't (like exam week, when you need the study to study). $4.00 per hour. Call Tom Eblen, General Mgr. 844-3538.
Preschool aid After school 4-5 Sunny Early experience 842-423 or 793-523
Qualified individuals earn up to $340/m Fr./Sophs and $700/m Jr/Sr years. Requirements: Full time student, physically fit, willing to join the AROTC-SMP program.
Rewarding Summer for sophomore and older children, teens and working with children. Backpacking, hike back to wildlife, many outdoor programs. Write now; include program interests and goals. Sanborn
Service Technician IBM 1 Computer Store seeks to test and assemble IBM, Tandon, Leading Information Technology with micro preferred. Growth potential and flexible hours. Send resume or credentials by email.
Photo Idea?
Call 864-4810
Story Idea? Call 864-4810
The Adams Alumni Center is now hiring a m.p. and p.m. dishwashers (tuns) for a variety of job positions. Applications have experience. Applications are available at reception between 8 and 11 a.m. or by calling the university employee.
Secret grade point increasing techniques revealed.
Results guaranteed: Free details for Dean's
Little Dreamers Writie. Report Card Rambombing,
P.O. Box 315-UK, Sun Amelio, Ca.
9a.9900
Nurses needed in all subjects. Requirements: 3.0 GPA, 15 hrs in subject, good communication skills. Apply at Supportive Educational Services 863-3971
GRADUATIN SENIOR SEEKING COMPANION FOR EXCICTING TRIP TO THE BAHAMAS! ENJOY SAILING SCUBA DIVING, ISLAND HOPPING AND MORE IN FREEBORO ON THE WATER. YOU MUST BE 21 WITH JUNGLE FEER. CALL TROPICAL BROOK 843-3923.
Molly, you're the best friend anyone could ever have, thanks for being mine. I Love You and I love you too.
PERSONAL
Volunteers needed: Headquarters Counseling Center; Sunday nights Information meetings, Wednesday 20th or Sunday 24th, 8-9 p.m. 1419 Massachusetts
Female roommate wants to share 1/2 story
of a kitchen with laundry room,
with modern conveniences, micro, dishwasher,
AC; 1/2 bath plus. Located close to campus
north route. Low route. Utility. Call 842 8250
6867.
Lori,
Happy Birthday!
I Love You
Forever
Josh
Well, I am back. Thanks you guys for being so supportive. Thanks for all your help Kimi, Tami and Scott. You all are such good friends. Loye, P.S. Hey Kim you got a pet. Loye, P.S. Hey Kim you got a pet.
IULIE-
Hey sorority girl! Where have you been?
We still have to see Room 8400!
00000000000000000000000000000000
Wanted: At Alvaquer Country Club. Housekeeping position. 30 flexible hours. App. in person.
Warm caring phones - who like children ages 3-5
and are not vaccinated. Call for minimum of 2 bres per day, one day per week from 7:30 and 3:30 M-F. Dear care volunteers
from 12:30-16:30. For more information call 843-2787.
Do you like John Cougar, I hope so Call me. 864-6686-leff.
BUS. PERSONAL
Hide a secret message inside of a jazped up balloon bouquet. Call University Balloons today
$80 Value when presented toward new patient ser-
ient. $25 Value when presented toward old patient ser-
ient. **Spinal Exam** Dr Johnson, Chiropristocrat.
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-8421. Confidential help/free pregnancy
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by Headquarters.
We're here because we care.
841-2345 1419 Mass.
We're always open.
Attorney at Law
• DWI's, fake IDs, and other alcohol related offences
• Medical, Emergency Medical Practice,
Product Lawsuit
• Other legal matters related to students
MISCELLANEOUS
DONALD G. STROLE
For the best in world and national news, complete business section, and extensive coverage of sports, movies, books, etc..
New York Times
only 25¢ per copy Mon.-Fri.
by subscription.
jan.18-May 12: $20.90
jan.25-May 12: $19.59
send to: N.Y. Times
P.O. Box 1721
Lawrence KS 66044
National Edition
for Sunday Service
or more info call
841-5073
SERVICES OFFERED
Become a Valentine always remembered, with a heartfelt message. For more information about "Photo's Pal" 749-700-7967. Free consultation.
photo.Phys. 749-7076. Free contact.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years. Driver's license available; transportation
Hair CUTS 2 off with KUID for the months of January and February. Ask for experienced hair stylist, Ann Reauy at Standing Ovation, 14 E Ace, 249-0717
**HELP!**: Frumratet by red tape. Needing a password.
**HELP!**: Call the UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER.
KP KHOGIPHAGIC SERVICES: Ektachrome
processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W services.
PASSPORT $6.00 Art & Design Building,
Room 206.844-4767
Kim's Allergen-Quick Service Suits, coats,
220 w Ice Pants (Jalapeño) and 100 w
(Beef Popcorn) (Jalapeño Food 4 Leaves).
KU Photographic Services: Elektrachome processing within 24 hrs. Complete B/W services.
Passport $6.00. Art and Design building, rn 206.
844-7677
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., 48/hr, 843-9032
(p.m.).
THE FAR SIDE
Prev contraction and abrasion tests
Prevention contraception and abrasion tests in Lawrence 841-5716
MATH TUTOR 6yrs. experience.
group rates. 841-0148
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park...913) 459-8678
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-2316
1-A: Relieving Typing Service Tern paper.
2-B: Synchronizing typed type, typical IBM
Ethernet Typewriter 842-3246
The college of Liberal Arts and Sciences offers tutoring in math, english, business, and economics courses at a reasonable charge. The college's Business Services apply to SES BUILDING. 864-3971.
For professional typing/word processing, call
yayra b74-800. Special spring special 12, page double.
9-12pm.
1-per Woman Word processing. Former editor transforms your screens into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of text. You'll be able to 34th grade course. Fast professional word pro-
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing.
Term papers, maps, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter quality printing, spelling corrected. 482-7247.
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in Select papers, thesis, mice. Incorrect Select papers, thesis, mice.
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS
MOMMY S TYSPING, one day service available
849.3278 n 9 m. n.
biblio.com
Quality typing. Includes excellent spelling, gram-
matical correctness and service
upick delivery. 843-0274
UPS pick delivery. 843-0274
TYPHING PLUS assistance with composition, design and presentation of dissertations, papers, letters, applications, etc.
FAST, ACCURATE, DEPENDABLE. Letter
TOP-NETCH SERVICES 859-2100, spell check
Typing at a reasonable rate. Call Holly at 843.0111
WANTED
Female nonsmoking room: 2 Br Apt, close to campus | $17.39/mo. plus elect. No deposit required.
Female roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom
Female roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom
Female roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom
Female roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom
Female roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom
Roommate female wanted for nice two bedroom
on bag路. 160/Mo. Plus 1/2 utilities. Call
1-800-345-7890
Hiring! **Government Jobs your area.** $15,000.
682.00 Call 602.188 3381 ext 4055
Female roommate needed to share huge room 7,
10' x 8' x 4' 1/2' USFT. 12' usft. Short walk to school. 749-5120
www.nest.com
Male roommate wanted to share Alvaram Condo $25/Mo plus utilities. Washers, dryer, fireplace, tennis, swim, private bath/bedroom. Call 841-406. References and deposit required.
Needed female non-smoking roommate at Pincrest. Oven room. 165 plus utilities. 842-258-260. Need rest-play aids right for lunch or one for a day. M-F. Hilltown behind Smith Street.
January rent paid. Non-smoking male roommate wants to share 4 bedrooms house. For more info call (212) 350-7982.
ROOMMATE WANTED FOR SUNRISE
401-755-6829
utilities, January rent charge Chris 749-600-
Responsible male roommate needed for 2 br.
apartment at Graystone, adjacent to Trailride
on bus route. Non-smoker $180/mo plus 1
utilities. Reference helpful. Eric 749-285.
Roommate wanted Unique 2 br apartment. 1 block of campus $25 plus utilities. Price range $10-$20.
Roommate: 4 Br. 3 bath, 3 story closet close to
$170/month plus utilities and deposit
$25/month.
Room needed to share large beautiful home
$275/Mo. Call Erie at 841-7272 or 864-5143.
**STUDENT ASSISTANCE** (Half-time) The student time to student serve as a advisor to the Interfraternity Council and member fraternities. Required prior to enrollment in the 1988 as graduate school or fifth year senior with 2.70 F.P.A. Prior experience in fraternity leader positions and Activities Center, 864-861. Submit a letter of recommendation available at Organizations and Activities Center, 864-861. Submit a letter of reference to Danny Kiser, Assistant Director, Organizations and Activities Center, 105 Burge Campus, 60445. Position available immediately. EEO
Wanted: Female coacheur, non-smoker to
choose from the following:
C to close campus;水cable paid; grad student
D to choose from the following:
C to close campus; watercable paid; grad student
Wanted non-student basketball tickets. 842-6738.
Wanted to share spacious, clean, warm 3-bedroom house with professional woman. 29
Prefer graduate student or working person. Walk 2 blocks to KU. Central heat and air conditioning.
$175 rm plus 1/2 of reasonable utilities. 842-8351.
By GARY LARSON
Dang! Look at the time!... And I gotta be in little Billy Harrison's closet before nightfall!
1988 Universal Press Syndicate
Monster jobs
Jarom
10
Thursday, January 21, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Needs for special education Annual study cites shortage of instructors in Kansas area
By Stacy Foster
Kansan staff writer
A shortage of special education teachers continues to plague Kansas school districts, according to an annual education study by Emporia State University.
Jack Skillett, dean of education at Emporia State, said the reasons for the lack of teachers in the field could be that it was such a demanding position and that there was a lack of people interested in special education.
"I'ta a very demanding job, even though you work with a few number of children. After a four- or five-year child, I don't wear on the teacher," Skillt said.
Special education has a high teacher turnover rate. After teaching for a few years, many special education teachers are in a regular classroom, Skilllet said.
"I think there will be more movement with special education teachers and we can expect that to continue." Skillett said.
P
PROP & WHEEL
HOBBIES
Bryan Sorenson
749.0287
749-0287
2201 W. 25th M-F 10-6
Suite B Sat 10-3
Edward Meyen, dean of education at KU, said that many rural communities had difficulties in recruiting teachers and that it was especially difficult in a field like special education.
"We are better off than we were nine years ago, but not quite as well off as five years ago," Skillett said.
The level of the special education teacher shortage has been about the same for the past three years.
Gary Clark, professor of special education, said some communities without special education programs had formed special education cooperatives.
Jim Wheeler is director of such a cooperative in Oskaloosa.
The Atchison-Jefferson Educational Cooperative in Oskaloosa covers seven school districts within those counties.
Cooperatives share their resources and enable many rural communities to have special education instruction when they otherwise might not have had ample resources, Wheeler said.
Wheeler is working on his doctorate degree at KU. He has been in the special education field for about 14 years.
"Most of the people that get and stay involved in special education are dedicated to helping the kids, and that is why I've stayed so long," Wheeler said.
Places like California are more attractive than Kansas to some graduates, Clark said. That could also explain the shortage of available teachers.
Clark said that KU had one of the best special education doctorate programs in the United States.
A study that appeared in the 1966 Journal of Special Education ranked KU's special education doctoral program as the best in the country, according to faculty members of special education schools.
KU, however, does not have a program at the undergraduate level. Clark said that the department had drafted a proposal for a special education undergraduate program.
---
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Friday January 22,1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 80 (USPS 650-640)
Smaller contra proposal might meet resistance
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Reagan plans to ask next week for a watered-down military aid package for Nicaragua's contras, but congressional Democrats said yesterday that even the scaled-back request would provoke a confrontation over U.S. policy when it came to a vote in two weeks.
A senior administration official said yesterday that Reagan would argue for a $50 million aid request in his State of the Union speech Monday, with the bulk of that amount earmarked for non-lethal items.
Other officials in the administration and on Capitol Hill said only about 10 percent of the package would be for lethal supplies. The reason, these officials said, is that there were no additional earlier $70 million in lethal aid and that their need now was primarily for ammunition, which is cheaper.
One administration source, speaking on condition of anonymity, called the request a sustainment package which would not enhance the rebels' warming capability. Much of the equipment and transportation and communication equipment, food and medical supplies, the official said.
White House spokesman Martin Fitzwater said no final decision had been made on the amount to be sought, and he cautioned reporters against using a $50 million figure.
Nonetheless, any such amount would be far less than the $270 million military aid package the administration prepared last year and aban- dant with the aid of a five-in- ten Central American peace accord signed Aug. 7.
Congressional strategists in both parties said the White House appeared to be searching for a package that would sustain the rebels but that would appear innocuous enough to win a majority vote. The issue of how Congress could most closely divided matters Congress has dealt with in recent years.
Briefing reporters at the White House. Fitzwater said, "I would
guide people away from that specific figure (of $50 million), and I do remind you that the final decision has not been made and I do caution you that both higher and lower numbers are being considered.
"The $270 million has been pretty much overtaken by events down there (in Central America)," he said. "We want to tailor our request to the situation we find ourselves in Nicaragua, so we would be tailoring
ourselves to keep the (contra) resistance as a viable force and would seek to do that with as much humanitarian aid as possible and as little lethal aid as possible."
Reagan told backers Wednesday at the White House, "The majority of the aid that I will be requesting from Congress is for non-lethal assistance to keep the freedom fighters a viable force until democracy is irreversible in Nicaragua."
Rebels OK talks
The Associated Press
SANJOSE, Costa Rica — Contra leaders met with peace mediator Cardinal Miguel Obando y Bravo yesterday and then announced they would open direct cease-fire talks as planned Thursday with Nicaragua's Sandinista government.
Also yesterday, a Nicaraguan official called for an international commission to monitor an amnesty for the contras. But the proposal was conditioned on the leftist government reaching a house-fire ban against U.S.-backed rebels in talks next week, which appears unlikely.
The peace talks, the first face to face negotiations between the two sides, are being held the day after President Reagan is expected to ask Congress for more aid for the contrast.
Contra leaders assailed the Sandinistas yesterday for sending their negotiating team a week before the talks.
The Sandinista group, led by Deputy Foreign Minister Victor Hugo Tinoco, said it came to Costa Rica to begin immediate negotiations with the contrasts.
Adolfo Calero, a director of the rebel umbrella group known as the Nicaraguan Resistance, told a
news conference following the contras' two-hour meeting with Obano v Bravo:
"The cardinal had no knowledge that the Sandinista commission would be here. We do not know and the cardinal did not know how this confusion occurred."
But Tinoco said at a later news conference, "This wasn't a surprise visit." He said the Nicaraguan government had discussed its plans Wednesday with the caribbean envoy Oscar Arias of Costa Rica.
Alfredo Cesar, another Resistance director, said yesterday of the early arrival, "They (the Sandinistas) are simply playing games around a serious subject — the gaining of peace in Nicaragua."
At his news conference, Tincoo called for an international commission including representatives of the U.S. Republican and Democrat parties to guarantee that full civil and political liberties were granted to any contrasts who lay down their arms, accept amnesty and rejoin civilian life in Nicaragua.
He said the commission should also include delegates from the United Nations, the Organization of American States and the eight Contadora nations.
PARK
Jeff Klein/KANSAN
Icv lion
The cold froze the water out of the lion's mouth yesterday at the top of Strong Hall across from the Spencer Research Library.
'Airplane nut' gains respect
Kansan staff writer
By Michael Carolan
He calls himself an airplane nut.
By the looks of his office — paintings of World War II bombers and fighters on its office walls and about three dozen model planes and helicopters on his shelves — it's obvious that Jan Roskam loves everything about airplanes.
"It began one Sunday morning in 1940 at the Hague in the Netherlands when I was a
MICHAEL MARTIN
boy of 10," said Roskam, Deane E. Ackers distinguished professor of aerospace engineering. "I dressed, went outside and saw smoke, bombs, machine guns, all over the sky.
"It was then I knew I had to get into aeronautics."
And he did, in a big way.
Jan Roskam
"It is the best thing that an aerospace professional can have happen to him, the ultimate recognition," Roskam said. "It can't help but flatter one's ego, and I'm extremely pleased."
This month, his peers recognized Roskam with the highest honor a U.S. aerospace engineer could receive. Roskam was named an American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics Fellow.
Vincent Muirhead, chairman of the department of aerospace engineering, said the school was reserved for students who had made outstanding contributions in the field.
There are 32 AIAA Fellows in the United States, roughly three percent of the total membership in the organization, said James Harford, executive director of AIAA. He said several peer groups proposed candidates to a selection committee and the AIAA board of directors made the final choice.
"It is a very rigorous process that one goes through," Harford said. "Dr. Roskam has made a great and well known contribution to the profession, to AIAA and to education. He has been quite an inspiration to his students."
"And Professor Roskam has made a number of them. This recognition is richly deserved." he said.
On Wednesday, a student entered his office to see when Roskam could review his project. Roskam answered him quickly and set up an appointment for him before a Master's exam he had to give later in the afternoon.
The 57-year-old, Dutch-born professor, who has consulted, researched and designed aircraft for NASA and for virtually every major aircraft manufacturer in the United States, hardly has time to think about the honor.
The phone rang; Roskam answered and swiftly replied in a distinct Dutch accent.
Later, Roskam shuffled some papers and explained that he returned recently from a two-week trip during which he taught flight dynamics and consulted with NASA on a high-speed transport project designed by his students. His work took him to Wichita, Norfolk, Va., and Pasedena, Calif.
In the middle of the trip, he flew to Reno, Nev., and received the John Lee Atwood award for excellence in design education, a $20,000 research grant for the school of engineering from General Dynamics Corporation, and the AIAA fellowship.
That project, financed by NASA, includes designing two high-speed transPacific aircraft that can carry 300 passengers each and travel from Los Angeles to Tokyo in three hours.
Although constantly busy, Roskam asked about his students' current project.
That flight now takes about 12 hours, Roskam said.
See ROSKAM, p. 6, col. 1
Senators urge protest of shorter add period
By Kevin Dilmore
Kansan staff writer
Several student senators plan to pass out fliers on campus today in an effort to get students to speak out against a two-week add-dron period.
Student senators plan to distribute the flier to students at the enrollment center in Strong Hall who are waiting to change their schedules. The fliers explain the possible changes in KU add-drop policy, which will be considered by University Council on Thursday.
The policy change proposed before University Council states that the add-drop period, the time in which a student can cancel courses after a semester beings, be reduced from five to two weeks. Courses dropped after the two-week period would be marked on a transcript with a "W" grade.
The period to add a class would also be reduced to two weeks.
The proposal passed the Senate Executive Committee on Tuesday and must now pass the University Council. The votes of the two organizations serve as recommendations to the University Senate, which will give consideration to the plan later this spring. If the University Senate approves the plan, it must be approved by the chancellor before it can take effect.
Amy Randles, Olathe junior, and Laura Amber, Lawrence junior, are student senators who oppose the proposal. They said they hoped the filers generated enough interest among students to draw them to the University Council meeting next week.
"We think students need more time to decide about dropping a class than two
weeks." Randles said yesterday
Ambler is co-chairman of the Student Senate Academic Sub-Committee, which submitted an alternative to the present add-drop policy. The subcommittee's proposal asked for a three-week drop period and a three-week and two-day add period.
Ambler said yesterday she thought a three-week system was a better system.
"We agree that five weeks is much too long," she said, "but we felt that a long adddrop was just to compensate for poor advising, especially at the freshman and sophomore levels."
"But two weeks is just too short," she said.
"But two weeks is just too short, she said. Felix Moos, professor of anthropology and a member of the University Council, said yesterday that he thought an add-drop period longer than two weeks could be a disadvantage to students.
"Students that add a class after three or four weeks have a very difficult time catching up." he said.
"I think students should have a chance for as liberal an add-drop policy as possible," Moos said, "but it is also against a student's interest to have a period that is too long."
Randles said a two-week add-drop period was undesirable because students wouldn't get settled into their classes until after the add-drop period was over.
"Teachers are becoming better about having syllabi ready on the first day of classes, but some are not doing it," she said. "So some students could get into classes, then realize they aren't ready to handle them only after the drop period has expired."
Black history of Kansas preserved at Spencer Research Library
By Brenda Finnell
Kansan staff writer
Feb. 12, 1950 was a cool and misty Sunday
Six visitors were part of the 101 people attending the morning service at St. John African Methodist Episcopal church of Topeka, according to the handwriting in the blue log book. The Rev. Eugene Kelly Jr. spoke to the congregation.
That Sunday, almost 38 years ago, was apparently an ordinary day of worship. It might even have become part of a blurred past if details about things such as the weather and church attendance had not been recorded.
The book containing memories of that day and other Sundays that year is part of a recent addition to the Kansas Black History Collection project at the University of Kansas.
The project, headed by Sheryl Williams, curator of the
Kansas Collection, and Jacob Gordon, associate professor of African and African-American studies, is part of the Kansas Collection at Spencer Research Library.
The Topeka church's trustees donated books of minutes from church board meetings, Sunday school classes and organizations within the church. The earliest documents are from 1912 and the most recent from 1985.
Williams said the documents are being cataloged and should be available for public use sometime in February.
"We're thrilled to death to have them," said Deborah Dandridge, field historian and archivist for the project. "It gives us a nice day-to-day account of what went on in the church."
Dandridge said the wide span of years the documents cover provided a rare opportunity to see how a church developed through the years.
In addition to the books of minutes and logs, the church's donation also includes some photographs and souvenir programs from church anniversary celebrations.
She also said that because churches tended to be the center of the community, the documents reflect what blacks considered important in the past.
Visitors to the collection can see how events such as the Great Depression and world wars affected the church, Dandridge said.
The library contacts ministers around the state to tell them about the black history collection and to ask if they know of documents to include in the collection, Dandridge said.
She said she had been especially pleased by how well
preserved the church documents were.
To prevent damage by attaching library call numbers
to the book bindings, the library uses acid-free paper slips and identification labels that do not harm the books, Nancy Hollingsworth, Kansas Collection library assistant said.
The Kansas Black History Collection project began in 1986, and it is financed by National Historical Publications and Records Commission grants.
In addition to church documents, the collection contains records of schools, clubs, businesses and individuals.
Williams said the collection was an attempt to locate documents that reflect the black experience in Kansas.
---
"I think it is important that we document the achievements and accomplishments of black Americans in the state," she said.
2
Friday, January 22, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Weather Forecast
From the KU Weather Service
LAWRENCE
Sunny but cold
The sun will help to raise the temperature to 29° this afternoon. But another cold January night will see the low drop to 14°.
HIGH: 36°
LOW: 15°
REGIONAL
North Platte
27/8 Sunny
Ornaha
29/10 Partly cloudy
Goodland
28/8 Mostly sunny
Hyea
34/14 Sunny
Salina
36/15 Sunny
Topeka
36/15 Mostly sunny
Kansas City
34/15 Mostly sunny
Columbia
35/21 Mostly sunny
St Louis
38/17 Sunny
Dodge City
39/21 Sunny
Wichita
39/20 Sunny
Chanute
37/10 Sunny
Springfield
39/20 Mostly sunny
Forecast by Bill Abbott
Temperatures are today's high and tonight's low.
Tues
42/23 Sunny
5-DAY
SAT
Sunny
30/20
HIGH
LOW
SUN
Cloudy
35/20
MON
Partly cloudy
28/18
TUE
Mostly sunny
30/15
WED
Mostly sunny
34/20
Senate OKs lottery
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — The Senate overwhelmingly approved a bill yesterday that would give formal approval to Kansas' agreement to participate in a multi-state lottery.
Approval came on a 28-6 vote, after the Senate suspended its rules to push the bill up for final action and after the Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee endorsed it earlier in the day. The measure now goes to the House, where quick action also is expected.
Gov. Mike Hayden said he expected to have the bill on his desk before the end of next week. State
Rep. Robert H. Miller, chairman of the House Federal and State Affairs Committee, said his panel would have hearings on the bill Monday.
During debate, State Sen. Edward Reilly, chairman of the Senate committee, said the Legislature would be able to withdraw Kansas from the multi-state lottery at any time. He added that the governor would be able to do the same under an executive order.
Felix takes final flight Flying feline goes home first class
The first game in the multi-state lottery is scheduled to begin Feb. 3. Kansas lottery officials will conduct practice games next Thursday and Friday at retail outlets.
The Associated Press
LONDON — Felix the frequent-flier feline gave the VIP
— or Very Import Pussycat — treatment yesterday on
her flight home to Los Angeles after hiding out for 29 days in
the baggage hold of a jetliner.
After nibbling on caviar and sniffing at champagne, the wordly cat was put inside a specially secure carrying case and placed in the first-class compartment of a Pan American World Airways jumbo jet.
Flight 121 left Heathrow Airport at 10 a.m., and the 2-year-old calico was heading home, accompanied by an airline employee, Jane Ford, who saved her from possible destruction in Britain.
"This time, she's going to be safely under lock and key and she will stay that way for the next 11 hours or so," Ford said. "I'm not taking any chances on her going missing again."
Her owners, William and Janice Kubecki, were moving from Frankfurt to Edwards Air Force Base, Calif.
Felix became a celebrity after she escaped from her traveling box in the cargo hold of a Pan Am jumbo jet on a journey from West Germany to Los Angeles on Dec. 3.
For 29 days, Felix flew more than 179,000 miles and made at least 64 stops all over the world.
Felix was then placed in quarantine. Ford raised funds to pay the fees, and thereby avoided Felix's destruction.
"I think she must have used up at least one of her nine lives," said Ford, who supervises the calculation of airplane fuel weights for the airline.
On Jan. 1, the bedraggled cat was enticed from the jet's hold at Heathrow by Pan Am staff and given emergency animal hospital treatment. She had been discovered the day before by a baggage handler in London, but she flew across the Atlantic and back again before she could be captured.
Felix was then placed in quarantine. Ford raised funds to pay the fees and thereby avoided Felix's destruction. Meanwhile, Felix's owners were tracked down through baggage claim records.
Pan Am decided to send Felix back to Los Angeles for free, even though the flying feline never formally registered as a frequent flier.
On Campus
The department of personnel services is offering a new-employee orientation at 10 a.m. today in 102 Carruth-O'Leary Hall. Call 864-4946 to register
If the sky is clear, an observatory open house is scheduled at 8 p.m.
today in Clyde W. Tombaugh Observatory, 500 Lindley Hall. Call 864-3166 for more information.
The movie “River's Edge” will be shown at 7:30 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
DEAN APPLICATIONS IN: The search committee for the new dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences stopped accepting applications Wednesday.
Rex Martin, professor of philosophy and chairman of the search committee, said that applications postmarked Wednesday would be accepted and that he expected several to come in the mail.
Local Briefs
Martin said that the committee would have the name of the new dean in April and that by July 1, he or she would be in office.
TWIN FAIR TOMORROW: The Midwest Twint Register will sponsor a twin fair at 9 a.m. tomorrow at Robinson Gymnasium.
KU researchers will collect data as twins go through various tests, such as a fitness clinic, scoliosis screening and blood pressure measurement.
Police Reports
Thirty sets of twins have reservations for tomorrow. Twins 12 years old and over may participate in another twin fair Feb. 13 at Robinson Gymnasium by contacting the laboratory of biological anthropology on Tuesday from noon to 5 p.m. at 864-4172.
A 1985 Porsche, valued at $20,000, was stolen Wednesday morning from a parking lot in the 1900 block of Stewart Ave., Lawrence police reported.
Nineteen watches and 69 bottles of perfume and cologne, valued at more than $3,500, were stolen Saturday or Sunday from a drugstore in the 900 block of Iowa St., Lawrence police reported.
■ A microwave and videocassette recorder, valued together at $435, were taken Wednesday from a residen- tial law enforcement cell at Kell Ave. Lawrence police reported.
A car stereo and a pair of sunglasses, valued at $455, were taken Wednesday from a car in the 1500 block of Eddingham Place, Lawrence police reported. Damage to the car was estimated at $700.
A generator and tools, valued at $3,435, were taken Wednesday from a construction site in the 1600 block of Inverness Drive, Lawrence police reported.
Pet dog is saved by tattoo
The Associated Press
MINNEAPOLIS — A golden Labrador about to be used for research at the Mayo Clinic was spared from certain death when a technician spotted a tattoon on the dog's right thigh and traced her back to her owner 350 miles away.
Brenda Tiegen was doing a general health check on Goldie, a mixed-breed golden Labrador, at the clinic's veterinary care and research facility when she noticed the large serial number.
"I just figured it was somebody, so I checked, the oil," said Tiegen, a veterinary technician at Institute Hills Farm in Rochester. Tiegen then called three groups that register tattoos nationally.
Goldie turned out to be registered with Tattoo-A-Pet in the New York area, which notified Shirley Smith of Des Plaines, Ill., Wednesday night that her dog had been found.
"I really didn't sleep last night. I cried." Smith said yesterday in a telephone interview. "After a certain period of time, you just assume your pet's dog. You just go on."
The Mayo Clinic plans to send 3 year-old Goldie back to Chicago by airplane on Friday.
Smith, who lives with her sister and father, said Goldie disappeared in June after being put outside on a leash on a run wire in the family's fenced back yard.
"She wasn't there when we went outside to get her," Smith said. "I thought she must have gotten loose, slipped her collar, but her collar was not there either."
After searching the neighborhood and calling the local pound, Smith called the pet tattoo registry and reported that Goldie was missing.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, January 22, 1988
3
Computer might ease pain of loan payback
By Donna Stokes
Kansan staff writer
The financial aid office hopes to buy a new computer that could help students check on their student loan status and estimate how much they will owe upon graduation.
Jeff Weinberg, associate director of financial aid, said the office was waiting for the Kansas Service Organization in Topeka to decide whether it would help finance the program.
The total cost of the computer, the module used to access information and a counseling software package
would be less than $2,300, Weinberg said.
If 50 percent of the money is provided by a private firm, the state will match 25 percent. The other 25 percent will come from the financial aid office.
"We're keeping our tingers crossed that the money will be provided for it," said W. Wes Williams, dean of educational services.
Weinberg said that the program, if adopted, would make the University of Kansas the first university to have access to major data banks with student loan information.
KU might be first user
He said that if a student borrowed money from one bank, the loan didn't necessarily stay in that bank. It can be transferred or sold to another bank, and that makes it hard for students to know where their loans are held.
The computer would allow students to trace the location and amount of each loan. The financial aid office could then tell students how much they have borrowed, what they would pay after graduation and what an
additional loan would add to their payments.
"It is so easy to borrow large amounts of money that students don't always realize how far debt in the can get," Weinberg said. "The consequences of borrowing money aren't always spelled out by the bank.
"I believe that a lot of loan defaults happen because of a lack of understanding of the process. If students become more informed borrowers, they might eventually borrow less."
The new computer would also provide a counseling software package designed by the Educational Testing Service in Princeton, N.J.
he said.
- provide information on interest rates, terms, and conditions for major federal student loan programs.
- The new computer program would:
- predict future income based on the student's career field and projected salary growth.
compute a burden index — the percentage of the student's projected income that would be required each
year to repay the loans.
The program would also be updated to include the average cost of living in selected communities, and how the student's projected earnings would cover that cost, Weinberg said.
"We don't want students to decide on a profession based on projected income," he said. "We just want students to believe that will happen when they graduate."
A nationwide sample study by the American Council of Education in Washington, D.C., showed that 43 percent of 1984 college graduates were in debt for school-related costs
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Area housing development is growing
Kansan staff writer
By Rebecca J. Cisek
Some of the countryside that separates Lawrence from the Kansas City metro area will have a new look in the near future.
A housing development called Cedar Creek is springing up 15 miles east of Lawrence along Highway 10. The property, which will eventually house 30,000 people, has been annexed by the city of Olathe.
Charles Sunderland, secretary of the Ash Grove Cement Co. in Overland Park, said construction on the
project began last July. The development had been planned for about 20 years.
years. Sunderland said he expected the first homes to open in March 1989. By that time, the company will have invested about $30 million in the project.
The company began building roads in the development this fall. A dam for the lake at Cedar Creek has been built, and the lake is now filling.
Cedar Creek will feature a private golf course designed by golfers Tom Watson, Tom Weiskop and Jay Mor-
rish. Sunderland said a public golf course probably would be built within a few years.
Cedar Creek will have 5,000 to 7,000 houses in seven neighborhoods, with homes ranging in price from $100,000 to several million dollars.
The total development covers 3,300 heavily wooded acres. About 350 acres of that is reserved for commercial property, including an office park and a shopping center. Sunderland said that eventually, the office park probably would equal the size of Corporate Woods in Overland Park.
"We want to create the ideal living and working environment," he said.
Sunderland predicted that Lawrence and the Kansas City area would grow together eventually as a result of developments such as Cedar Creek.
Sunderland also said that Ash Grove was considering building a hotel and conference center at Cedar Creek that also could be used by the University of Kansas.
Kemp case goes to deliberation
By Ric Brack
Kansan staff writer
Carl Kemp testified yesterday that he had no recollection of the events leading up to the Sept. 3 discovery of his wife's body next to him in bed.
Kemp is on trial in Douglas County District Court for the first-degree murder of his wife, Judy. Authorities found his wife's body in a homemade wooden box in a storage shed outside the Kemps' trailer Sept. 9.
Kemp's attorney, Carl Fleming, and District Attorney Jim Flory finished closing arguments late yesterday afternoon. A jury of seven men and five women deliberated for an hour and then recessed for the day. Deliberation will continue at 9 a.m. today.
In the final day of testimony, Kemp said he had been drinking heavily last Sept. 3 and could remember details only from the early part of that day. The prosecution has asserted that Kemp beat his wife to death that night.
Kemp said he found her still, cold body in bed next to him when he woke up but wasn't sure at what time he woke up or what day it was.
"I was just shocked. I didn't really know what had happened," he said. Kemp said that after he realized she was dead, he contemplated suicide. Later, he went to get the materials to build the box that authorities later found his wife's body in.
Kemp testified that he sold fishing tackle to get the money to buy the lumber and hardware for the box. In addition, he bought a sleeping bag.
When Fleming asked why he bought the sleeping bag, Kemp said, "To put Judy in. I didn't just want to throw her in the box."
Kemp said he slept after spending most of the next day building the box and said he called a sheriff's dispatcher when he woke up because he
realized his wife was still in the shed.
realized his wife was still in the shed. He said he didn't eat or drink from the time Judy Kemp died to the time police found her body. He said he thought the six-day period was only two days.
Under questioning by assistant District Attorney Gerald Wells, Kemp admitted he had lied to detectives who interviewed him after police found Judy Kemp's body because he said he knew it wouldn't do any good to tell police and detectives that he didn't remember anything about her death.
In opening arguments Wednesday, Fleming said that Kemp must have been in a drunken stupor when he struck down and killed Judy Kemp and that Kemp didn't know why or how his wife died.
"Carl Kemp was immediately put in a position where he had to explain in a logical way something that he didn't understand or know," Fleming said about Kemp's conflicting accounts of his actions after the murder.
"First-degree murder is a crime in which a specific intention must be proven," he said in his closing arguments. He called the case against Kemp "fantasland." He said the state had not proved that Kemp had planned to commit murder.
District Attorney Jim Flory called Judy Kemp an emotional and financial prisoner to Kemp. He reminded the jury that social workers had testified that Judy Kemp was an abused wife.
School of Fine Arts considers limiting visual communications majors
By Iulie Adam
Program already has too many, says prof
Kansan staff writer
The School of Fine Arts is considering a policy change that would control the number of visual communications majors.
Enrollment is not controlled now, but if the policy is enacted, it could affect incoming freshmen next fall. Current majors in visual communications, which includes graphic design and illustration, would not be affected.
because of unanticipated enrollment growth, school officials are considering a new policy that would not allow students receiving poor reviews to continue in visual communications. A policy change
could be completed by March.
Peter Thompson, dean of fine arts, said the policy was being considered because of an 18-percent increase in graphic design and illustration majors over the past two years, with another increase expected this summer.
Because the department does not have the faculty or facilities to accommodate the sudden increase, the quality of the program might suffer if growth isn't controlled, he said.
Instead of evaluating students solely on grade point averages, the visual communications sequence has five full-time faculty members who review student portfolios in
four graphic design and illustration courses at the end of each semester. Those instructors advise students who received unfavorable reviews to consider other majors or fields of interest.
This semester, students whose portfolios were judged as poor were sent letters explaining why the student was advised to consider other fields.
Although the letter advises a change, students are not forced to comply. The policy of sending letters is new but giving the advice is not, Thompson said.
Letters also were sent to students who had good reviews on their portfolios and to those who had acceptable portfolios but needed work in certain areas.
Tom Allen, professor of art in the
department of design, said faculty began reviewing student portfolios about three years ago.
He also said too many students were already in the sequence. Some had to be put on waiting lists.
"Serious students have a right to expect a quality education, and they can't get it that way," he said. "If we can't get more faculty and space, we can't have more students. If we only have 20 tables in a room, we can't have 30 people."
Thompson said, "When there's not room for everybody and we're keeping exceptional students out of the classroom, then we have to do something about it."
Jay Clements, El Dorado senior majoring in illustration, thought the new policy
"I don't think a lot of people know what they are getting into, and a teacher can judge by looking at their portfolios whether they can handle what is ahead of them." Clements said.
would be a good idea.
Allen said, "We're not out to get anybody. We're not out to kill anybody off."
Allen said that under the new policy, students wouldn't be considered kicked out. If they took the class over and let them fail, could be able to continue in the major.
He said the review policy should be viewed as a help for troubled students by directing them to areas in which they could better succeed, so that exceptional students could get better educations.
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Friday, January 22, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Hayden is helping education but he must commit to more
Gov. Mike Hayden finally has come through in a big way for the University of Kansas.
the University of Kansas.
His 1989 budget proposals include a state expenditure of $41.3 million for the Margin of Excellence. Instructional faculty salaries would increase 7.8 percent.
KU would receive an extra $1.7 million for enrollment adjustments that would create 24 additional faculty positions. The governor also proposed a fee release of $466,382.
These proposals are a step in the right direction. The Kansas Legislature should pass Hayden's education proposals.
Uncancellor Gene A. Budig is pleased with the proposal as is the Board of Regents. The total Regents package of $536.2 million appears to be quite a gift.
million appears to be quite a gift. But it can't end with that. The University cannot simply bend down and kiss the feet of its benefactor. There is more to be done.
Hayden chose to commit to only one year of Margin of Excellence. He also did not give unclassified employees the additional 2.8 percent salary increase included in the Margin of Excellence proposal. They would get only a 5 percent cost-of-living increase
The large unclassified portion of the University is rightly disguised with being neglected by the governor. Unclassified employees include such people as assistants to deans, research assistants, computer center staff, directors of laboratories, student affairs staff, Watkins Hospital employees and facilities directors — all integral parts of the University community.
Hayden is finally taking education seriously with his 1989 budget, and KU stands to benefit greatly. But his reluctance to commit to Margin of Excellence is a mistake — a mistake that Kansas can't afford to make.
Commission fails to lead
Jody Dickson for the editorial board
Tuesday, the Lawrence City Commission refused, 3-2, to amend the city's human rights amendment to include homosexuals. The amendment presently prohibits housing, job and governmental discrimination based on race, religion, national origin, age, ancestry or handicap.
The decision was bad. The reasons were worse.
commissioners Mike Rundle and Dennis Constance both gave eloquent and moving speeches in favor. But they were outnumbered by Mayor Mike Amyx and Commissioners Sandra Praeger and Bob Schumm.
Sandra P. Freger and 1800 The vote sent a message that the commission condones discrimination and is unwilling to prevent it, to protect its victims, or to penalize those who discriminate.
But the words used by the three opposing commissioners said more than the vote itself.
Amyx said the commission was "dealing with the rights to live free." But he voted no, saying that federal and state governments hadn't addressed the issue.
Schumm said he was "appalled" by reports that gays had had windshields smashed and bricks thrown at them. And he said he had received more calls on the issue than he could answer. But Schumm said he needed "factual data." "I don't feel the need," he said.
Praeger said, "We probably do have some problems in Lawrence. I know that it exists, and that is unfortunate." But she said she preferred "to retain status quo. Let's leave things the way they are."
"I don't feel right as a city official creating a law right now that I'm not sure a majority of the people of Lawrence are ready to follow." Nonetheless, Praeger promised to do what she could as a "person, a citizen of Lawrence . . . and as a leader" to combat discrimination.
Why was she willing to dedicate herself but not the law?
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
Correction
Because of an editorial writer's error, yesterday's broadcast news editorial was incorrect. For the fall, Broadcast News I has been replaced by a new course: Journalism 390, Broadcast Production and Writing. This course will emphasize information gathering and writing and producing radio and TV news stories, commercials, public service announcements and promos.
News staff
Alison Young. Editor
Todd Cohen. Managing editor
Rob Knapp. News editor
Alan Player. Editorial editor
Joseph Rebello. Campus editor
Jennifer Rowland. Planning editor
Anne Lusceb. Sports editor
Stephen Wade. Photo editor
Richard Stewart. Graphics editor
Tom Eblen. General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Kelly Scherer ... Business manager
Clark Massad ... Retail sales manager
Brad Lenhart ... Campus sales manager
Robert Hughes ... Marketing manager
Kurt Messersmith ... Production manager
Greg Knipp ... National manager
Kris Schorno ... Traffic manager
Jannie Brown ... Classified manager
Jeanne Hines ... Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and less than 200 words and must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University of Kansas, please include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kanan reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest columns. They can be mailed or brought to the Kanan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Final Hall.
can be mailed or brought to the offices of Letters, guest columns and columns are the opinion of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University Daily Kansan. Editorials are the opinion of the Kansan editorial board.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stairwater-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60405, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is Lawrence, Kan. 60404. Annual subscriptions by mail are $40 in Douglas County and $50 outside the county. Student subscriptions are $3 and are payable through
in the PostMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
I HATE ELECTION YEARS...
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CINEMATARI ENGINEER 1988
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Senate money was not well spent
Federal commission report says AIDS does not threaten people equally
The University of Kansas Student Senate has been swept away by AIDS bystera, and with it has gone a portion of the activity fees of every student on the campus.
The Senate's distribution of "safer sex" kits and condoms during enrollment last week is an illustration of an AIDS policy that is gravely distorted.
Members of the Senate Task Force on AIDS claim the distribution of these items at this time "lessen(s) the psychological barrier to accepting (them)" because they are available to everyone at once.
I would suggest to the senators that they remove their own psychological barriers in rationally evaluating the AIDS virus and find more constructive ways to use their time and energy, as well as the students' money.
The morning after the senators unanimously voted to spend more than $4,000 on safer sex kits and condoms, the president's AIDS commission issued a report to President Reagan that showed that AIDS is still and probably will remain a disease of homosexuals and intravenous drug users.
While as many as 50 percent of those infected with the disease were identified as members of these two high-risk groups, only 0.021 percent of those infected were identified as heterosexual without specific identified risks. Persons with hemophilia accounted for most of the remaining
cases.
Otis Bowen, Secretary of Health and Human
Jeff Euston Guest Columnist
T
Services and a physician, said, "This is not a massive, wildly spreading epidemic among heterosexuals, as some people fear."
The Senate's distribution of "safer sex" kits and condoms during enrollment last week is an illustration of an AIDS policy that is gravely distorted.
excellent, as some rights groups have the right to Certainly gay rights groups have the right to lobby for help, and certainly everyone with AIDS deserves care and compassion. And of course saving one life pales in comparison to any amount of money.
Yet, AIDS is a behavior-based disease. The methods of prevention are not terribly complicated, and they are hardly underpublicized.
I would understand a need for education and "shock tactics" such as passing out condoms in the inner city, for example, where the people are often the least efficient at acquiring and acting on information.
The immediate goals of the University should be concerned with classroom space, teachers' salaries and the parking situation, not educating relatively well-informed people about AIDS.
As for those on campus who “aren’t motivated” to educate themselves on the virus, I would ask, “Is your willingness not to die not motivation enough?”
Senators who spout statistics such as, "By 1990, as many people will have died of AIDS as died in Vietnam and Korea combined" would be well advised to study the statistics in the latest commission report. Contrary to the belief of at least one senator, listening to a gay rights activist lecture on the subject provides a unique perspective but not necessarily an accurate, objective description of the facts.
Equating the disease with the horrors of Vietnam and Korea and brandishing about slogans such as "AIDS Doesn't Discriminate" builds the myth that AIDS is threatening everyone equally.
equity. The senators claim that it is better to act than to react. Yet, the University already has taken action, including newsletters from Watkins Hospital describing the dangers of AIDS and means of prevention.
I would welcome the Senate allocating $4,000 to research in developing a cure for AIDS, but I did not believe my money should go toward accounting for the actions of other individuals. Jeff Euston is a Kansas copy editor and a Leawood junior majoring in journalism.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, January 22, 1988
5
Hart denies charges
The Associated Press
Gary Hart and former top aides said yesterday they knew nothing of financial improprieties alleged to have occurred in Hart's 1984 and 1988 presidential campaigns, but the candidate's one-time campaign boss also said. "There's no way in God's green earth to ensure it won't happen."
Several former aides, including 1984 campaign manager Oliver Henkel, said they thought circumvention of campaign-financing laws was common but had no direct knowledge of it in any campaign.
Hart, Henkel and 1987 campaign manager William Dixon gave broad denials yesterday when faced with a list of specific allegations by former campaign aides; that his staff was instructed to go to Hollywood video producer Stuart Karl for money, that Karl wired funds to vendors to pay for campaign goods and paid the salary of Hart aide Dennis Walto, and that other supporters provide goods and services without expecting
MICHAEL TOMLINSON
Gary Hart
Hart, campaigning in New Hampshire, said, "no, no, it's not true" in answer to reporters' questions about new allegations as he moved from stop to stop trying to keep the focus on the federal budget and other issues.
payment.
Issues
Pressed by reporters about the allegations reported by the Associated Press and the Miami Herald, Hart promised to investigate the matter.
Henkel said in a telephone interview that it was against the policy of the 1984 campaign to evade FEC rules in any way. He said he knew of no instance in which staff members asked supporters to leave if he could not vouch for every supporter and worker in the campaign.
"I would guess we were about as clean as any presidential campaign ... has ever been," he said.
Broadcasting students in the School of Journalism no longer will be required to take the school's basic reporting class.
By James Buckman
Kansan staff writer
Broadcasters to skip Reporting I
A new policy, which will take effect next fall, will change a requirement that all students in broadcasting, even those concerned with the technical side of the field, have to take Reporting 1.
Max Uttsler, chairman of the radio and television sequence in the school, said yesterday that requiring the class for all students in broadcasting did not meet every student's needs.
Instead of the reporting class, students will have to take a new class, broadcast production and writing. The class will not concentrate solely on reporting but will also feature basic production skills suited to the broadcaster's needs.
The radio-and-television sequence includes broadcast news, broadcast sales, broadcast promotion, corporate television and commercial production
Utsler said the change was made not because the reporting class was unimportant but because the new class would be better for the students.
"When you look at what our students are doing, broadcast news is not the majority of the program for our students," he said. "We have two-thirds to
Dana Leibengood, associate dean of journalism,
said he didn't think the change would hurt students.
“It's the entry-level class for all five of our interest areas,” Utsler said. “It has a piece of Reporting I in it, but it has pieces of a lot of other things in it, too. It was never meant to be a replacement for Reporting I.”
"There was no question that reporting met many of the needs of our students. That was not the issue," he said, "The issue was whether we could take those facts and have the outcome be better."
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"They have, even without Reporting I, 12 hours of required news reporting courses," he said. "I think they'll be well prepared."
three-quarters of our students who are going to do something other than broadcast news."
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It's Lit
School narrows choices for dean
It's Live Radio!
This Saturday at 8 p.m. KANU's IMAGINATION WORKSHOP, our resident band of radio theater practitioners, takes you on another trip into the theatre of the mind! Join our studio or radio audience for a live concert stere broadcast, complete with live music and sound effects, performed right before your ears.
First you'll hear "Here There Be Dragons," Workshop director Darrell Brogdon's adaptation of the William Hope Hodgson story "The Stone Ship." It's a genuine blood-and-thunder thriller about the crew of a British freighter who, while sailing in a remote corner of the South Atlantic, happen upon an incredible ship made entirely of stone!
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Next will be "Lily Daw and the Three Ladies," an adaptation of Fudora Welty's short story about three busybodies in a small Mississippi town who've appointed themselves guardians of "poor Lily," and to provide for her future, attempt to skip her off to the Ellisville Institute for the Feeble Minded. Lily, as you might surmise, has other ideas. The evening will also include the usual collection of comedy sketches, including a session with the "Griel Counsellor."
Seating is general admission but children may sit on the floor in the very front. Tickets are available at the Lawrence Arts Center, the KANU studios, or by calling (913)864-5100 to charge tickets ≤35 for adults, children under 12 we free but must obtain a ticket. Only 150 seats will be available, stay tuned to KANU-FM 91.5 for information about ticket availability.
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The finalists include Ann Weick,
associate professor of social welfare
and acting dean; Shelldon
Gelman, director of the undergraduate
social welfare program at
Pennsylvania State University;
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Edith Freeman, associate professor of social welfare, said the finalists would visit the campus in February and the first week in March. During that period, they will meet with the faculty, the search committee and students. They also will have the opportunity to present their ideas about the dean's role in the department, Freeman said.
The committee will narrow the candidate list to three finalists, and the University administration will make the final decision. Freeman said she hoped the decision would be made by April.
Patricia Ewalt resigned as dean last July to become dean of the School of Social Welfare at the University of Hawaii. A 13-member committee composed of faculty, students, alumni and administrators has been searching for a new dean since September.
By Kathleen Faddis Kansan staff writer
A search committee for a new dean for the School of Social Welfare has narrowed its list of candidates from 14 to five.
William Berg, associate professor of social welfare at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. William Meezon, professor of social welfare at the University of Illinois-Chicago; and Brad Sheafer, director of the undergraduate program in social welfare at Colorado State University.
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CAREER EMPLOYMENT WORKSHOPS SPRING 1988 UNIVERSITY PLACEMENT CENTER
BEGINNING THE JOB SEARCH
"GETTING DOWN TO BASICS"
Monday, January 25 3:30-4:20
Tuesday, February 2 8:30-9:00
Tuesday, February 16 2:30-3:20
Wednesday, February 24 3:40-4:20
Tuesday, March 1 3:40-4:20
INTERVIEWING I "PREPARING FOR THE INTERVIEW"
Tuesday, January 26 3:30-4:20
Wednesday, February 3 8:30-9:20
Wednesday, February 17 2:30-3:20
Thursday, February 25 3:30-4:20
Wednesday, March 2 3:30-4:20
WRITING EFFECTIVE RESUMES AND LETTERS
RESUME REVIEW SESSIONS
Thursday, January 28 3:30-4:20
Friday, February 5 8:30-9:20
Monday, February 22 2:30-3:20
Monday, March 7 3:30-4:20
Tuesday, March 29 3:30-4:20
INTERVIEWING II
"SUCCESSFUL INTERVIEWING"
Wednesday, January 27 3:30-4:20
Thursday, February 4 8:30-9:00
Thursday, February 18 2:30-3:20
Monday, February 29 3:30-4:20
Thursday, March 3 3:30-4:20
3:30-5:00
Friday, January 29
Monday, February 8
Thursday, February 18
Wednesday, March 23
Monday, April 4
MANY VIDEOTAPES ARE AVAILABLE FOR VIEWING AT ANY TIME, INCLUDING:
Resume-writing, Interviewing, and several profiles of employers in business, industry and government.
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Information interviews with recruiters from several major corporations. Of special interest to those students who are still several semesters away from graduation Contact the Placement Center for information
Practice your interview skills before you attempt the real thing. Contact the University Placement Center for information and an appointment. Call 864-3624
6
Fridav. Januarv 22. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Lighting still a high priority
By Jill less
Kansan staff writer
Although future projects in campus lighting improvements are still undefined, lighting remains a high priority in KU planning, the campus landscape architect said yesterday.
The architect, Greg Wade, said lighting was a continuing concern for the University of Kansas.
"Each of the major projects that we undertake has lighting incorporated in the planning," he said. He said the plans for the new science library behind Hoch Auditorium and the new human development center behind Stauffer-Flint Hall both included new lighting projects.
Campus lighting became a matter of concern at
The first phase of lighting improvements was completed last spring with the installation of lights on parts of Jayhawk Boulevard, Naismith Drive and Crescent Drive. The project was financed through the office of facilities planning, Student Senate and the chancellor's office.
the University in 1985 after Ron Helms, chairman of the department of architectural engineering, studied the relationship between the crime rate and lighting on campus. Helms' study indicated that more lighting was needed on campus to improve the safety of pedestrians and motorists.
crime areas, no decreasing crime rate could be shown.
Selate and the enthusiasm of Helms said that he was happy with what had been done so far in campus lighting but that because the new lights were not installed in high
"I don't imagine that one would see a connection between the new lights and the crime rate," Helms said.
After the first phase was identified, Wade said, it was determined that lighting projects would have to be completed in phases because of a lack of funds. The first phase cost $100,655. He said that the second phase had not yet been defined but that it was likely to include scholarship hall areas or the area around Joseph R. Pearson Hall. Parking lots are also likely candidates for phase two of the lighting project, Wade said.
Roskam
Continued from p. 1
One plane design Roskam and two graduate-student teams are developing would fly at two-and-a-half times the speed of sound, Mach $2 \frac{1}{2}$, and another would fly at Mach 4.
The problem with increasing the flight speed is that sonic booms, explosive sounds that can be heard from the ground, result from aircraft that travel the speed of sound, Roskam said.
"The amount of boom which is heard depends on the size and shape of the aircraft," he said. "The trick to come up with a shape of craft that reduces overpressure and thus hurts less on the ears."
Roskam's team has created a design for the Mach 4 plane that would fly so high, at 85,000 feet, and is shaped so that no sonic boom can be heard from the ground.
The only problem, he said, is that ozone levels at that altitude have not
been studied and no aircraft company wants to spend millions of dollars on the design and development of an aircraft that can harm the atmosphere at that level.
"I've shown them to NASA, and they thought the ideas were worth looking into, although it will be about another five years before just the tests on the atmosphere are completed." Roskam said.
Still, people are interested.
Roskam also has worked with KU's Flight Research Lab since he founded it in 1967.
students' research were continuing into the future and beyond.
"Wouldn't it be nice to someday be able to take off from a runway," he asked. "And be able to fly around space and then land like a regular airplane? I think that will happen someday."
Waste stored safely
Rv Christine Martin
Kansan staff writer
Most people don't know that there are 406 different hazardous chemicals on campus.
But Steve Cater does. He's the one in charge of collecting, sorting and disposing them for the University of Kapsas.
Cater collects hazardous material from photography darkrooms, laboratories, and facilities and maintenance operations on campus. The hazardous waste includes photography chemicals, household cleaners and pesticides, he said.
Cater directs the environmental health and safety service at Burt Hall, on West 15th Street across from Jayhawker Towers.
The waste he collects is sorted and stored in a trailer on West Campus. A contractor picks it up four times a year.
Cater said he also kept track of all
hazardous chemicals used on campus. He regularly sends out surveys that ask which chemicals various departments use so the University can comply with state and federal regulations.
John Landgrebre, professor of chemistry, started collecting and disposing of the hazardous waste in 1985. He said he thought it was time aware that the University became aware of the Resource Conservation Recovery Act, which requires that hazardous waste be disposed of properly. In November 1986, the University formed the environmental health and safety service.
Landgrebe said he gradually convinced University administrators to hire someone for the job of collecting and disposing of hazardous waste.
Landgrebe wrote the first campus regulations for collection and disposal of the waste, and the regulations comply with the state and federal regulations.
KU police patrol campus, beyond
By David Sodamann
Kansan staff writer
The long arm of the KU law reaches bevel campus boundaries.
KU police, in addition to their role on campus, are commissioned by the City of Lawrence to take to city streets when needed.
"One thing that happens constantly between the Lawrence police department and KU police is we will respond to emergency calls in each other's effort," said Jim Denney, director of KU police. "We respond to a couple of hundred calls a year in the city because of that, and I'm sure the city responds to pretty close to that same number on campus."
KU police primarily confine their operations to the campus, although they can and do function off-campus, Dennev said.
By law, KU police are charged with the protection of any property owned or operated by the University. In addition, the department is responsible for any property owned, operated or under the control of the Kansas University Endowment Association, the Athletic Department and any organization or group associated with the University, such as off-campus fraternities or sororites.
KU police and city police have drawn a line around campus, setting up an area of responsibility for KU police. But Denney said KU police could go anywhere in the city to address the need to press in cases believed to have originated on campus or within the area of responsibility.
Also, KU police pursuing suspects may follow the trail wherever it leads. Likewise, Lawrence police may come on campus to investigate or pursue suspects.
"There are no turf wars," Denney said, "only concern for solving problems."
The fact that campus and city officers can work interchangeably is a sign of good relations between the two departments, he said.
Sgt. Don Dalquest, spokesman for the Lawrence police department, also said the departments got along well
"There isn't any jealousy — don't step into my territory," he said. "We've got a pretty unique situation here, we've always assisted each other."
Lawrence police have good reasons for maintaining good relations with KU police, Dalquest said. "You have to remember Lawrence wouldn't be this big if it wasn't for KU . . . It's the mainstay."
But the two departments have built a relationship based on more than financial considerations.
No police also serve on the Douglas County major case squad, helping investigations of murders or violent crimes, Denney said. They also help with off-campus fire investigations.
Being part of other teams works to KU's advantage. Dennev said.
"If we have a really bad situation on campus, we can look forward to a major amount of expertise to help us solve it," he said.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, January 22, 1988
Jacque Janssen, arts/features editor
7
Arts & Entertainment
Local artists wear their art on their sleeves
By Kathleen Faddis
Kansan staff writer
Leather, plastic, beer cans, wood, book covers, Venetian blinds, bottle caps, plastic toy soldiers and door keys. An unlikely assortment, but all are potential media used by artists who express their art in jewelry making.
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Art to wear, a movement that grew out of the early 1970s, includes forms of expression as varied as the artists who create it. Local artists are using media as traditional as gold and silver and such non-traditional media as book covers and beer cans. Many artists in the movement have relearned traditional crafts or have utilized designs from the primitive arts.
"Each piece is original because the book jackets are all different," she said. "Using artists' reproductions allows me to express the different colors."
"Adorn yourself in a masterpiece!" said artist Suzanne Perry, who is also a program assistant at the Art Library. Perry said she has access to high-gloss art book jacketts that often were reproductions of the artist's work.
She cuts the brightly colored book covers into triangles and then rolls and glues them, making oval beads about a half inch long. She combines these with glass, metal, wood and stone accent beads to make necklaces and earrings, creating her own unique style of wearable art, which ranges in price from $6 for earrings to $18 to $22 for a necklace.
Perry also creates what she calls rug couture. She recycles old clothing by tearing it into long strips. She interlaces the strips, crochets them with a large hook and makes sweaters, vests and scarves.
makes sweaters, veils and bonnets.
Some of Perry's work is on sale at the book shop at the Spencer Museum of Art. So is the work of another local artist, David Van Hee.
Van Hee is a prolific artist who makes earrings, necklaces, bolo ties, pins and scarfs, hats, wristbands, baseball cards, baseball cards, plastic toys, squashed bottle caps, plastic coiled springs and multiple colors of acrylic paint.
Van Hee creates unusual images in his jewelry by combining common symbols that take on new meaning when juxtaposed.
One technique he uses is applying many layers of paint to make different shapes. He slices the shapes, making a kaleidoscope of color, or he chops off smaller chunks to decorate pins and earrings.
eyes that I have.
Van Hee was hesitant to say what, if any, statement he was making with his works. They mean different things to different people, he said.
For a pair of earrings, he hung a peace symbol from the vertical bar of a crucifix and plastic hot dogs from the horizontal bar. A necklace that he said was a popular seller included plastic toy soldiers cut in half and plastic babies strung together. Another popular piece he makes is pins made of brightly colored faces with little glued-on eyes that roll around.
Rings by Jim Connelly.
"Often, I will do it first, then think about what it might
mean to someone," he said. "A lot of it is just pure design."
He uses popular themes that evoke intense feelings.
"What's emotional topic ... it's a good seller," he said.
"Death is the greatest."
Van Hee has outsets for his work across the country and even in Amsterdam. Locally his works can be found at the Natural Way, 820 Massachusetts St., and the Phoenix Gallery, 812 Massachusetts St. Pieces of his jewelry on sale at the Spencer Museum Book Shop range in price from $5 to $24.
Nancy Ness is another local artist who makes jewelry. "It's pretty hard to pin me down to any specific style."
A nin by Nancy Ness.
Ness creates jewelry with wood, plastic, antique beads and even cut out Venetian blinds.
"I'm not a serious jeweler," said Ness, who has a degree from KU in drawing, painting, and illustrating. "I do it for fun and to keep me stimulated."
Ness said she worked in whatever medium suited her mood. Recently she began weaving. She has sold her work at the Phoenix Gallery but has nothing there now.
Massachusetts. Connelly is also an artist who creates and sells his work at the gallery. His works range in price from $50 to $2,000.
Connelly works with the traditional metals: gold, silver, copper and brass. He likes to see his creations as more than just ornamentation.
photos by Joe Wilkins III/KANSAN
"I'd like to think it could be admired without wearing it," he said. Connelly said he built a piece of jewelry like a sculpture.
"I like the way a line moves through space then is incorporated into a piece of jewelry," he said.
Connelly sells the work of artists from other parts of the country as well as local artists who sell their work on consignment. They use media as diverse as titanium, copper, silver, porcelain, glass, leather and paper. One artist creates her own metals using copper, gold and nickel silver.
Jim Connellly and his wife, Cara, own Silver Works, 715
Olli Valanne, associate professor of design, creates his jewelry with an ancient Japanese technique called mokume. The element is composed of fused layers of copper and silver. Valanne said he made bulges in the metal and then filed them down. The technique creates an appearance of wood grain in the metal. He has a
A pin by David Van Hee.
number of items made with this technique for sale at Silver Works. They range in price from $65 to $70.
Buyers of art jewelry are more interested in expressing themselves than in following trends, Connelly said.
When you see a 60- or 70-year-old woman wearing tunicum $1.50, it means "It means they're not afraid to touch" and bringing new
There is only a small group that appreciates creativity. Connelly said. He blamed the educational system in part for this.
"More people would buy art if they felt comfortable with it and understood it," he said.
Kyle Van Vliet, Lawrence graduate student, buys much art jewelry. She said she started collecting it about five years ago.
Van Vliet said collecting art jewelry was fun and affordable. She said that she gave it for gifts and that people were always asking her for it.
"I didn't realize how much I had," she said. "I must be attracted to the bright colors.
"I think of myself like a bird who likes shiny, bright things in her nest; I like shiny, bright jewelry."
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8
Friday, January 22, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
Trident 2 missile destroyed after in-flight malfunction
The Associated Press
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The Navy's new Trident 2 submarine missile suffered its first failure in nine test launches yesterday when it developed a problem in flight and was destroyed deliberately by a radio signal.
The 44-foot, three-stage missile,
carrying a dummy warhead, blazed
away from a land launch pad at 5:08
a.m. and appeared to observers to be
flying well before it disappeared
Economists predict sluggish growth
from sight. But nearly an hour later, the Navy reported that a malfunction had occurred 2 minutes 43 seconds after liftoff, near the end of powered flight.
WASHINGTON — The United States will get through this presidential election year with sluggish growth but no recession, a group of top economists told a congressional committee yesterday.
When radio data showed the Trident 2 performing erratically, the range safety officer at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station sent a radio signal that detonated explosive charges in the vehicle. Wreckage of the $23.7 million missile plummed harmlessly into the Atlantic Ocean.
The analysts said economic growth would be slower because of the record 508-point drop in stock prices
on Oct. 19, 1987. But they contended that an improving foreign trade deficit should be enough to keep the currency from the 1981-82 recession alive.
The economists presented their views before the Joint Economic Committee of Congress as it began hearings on the economy's prospects.
Airlines warned to match pilots
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Federal Aviation Administration called on airlines yesterday to avoid teaming inexperienced pilots in the cockpit, citing concern about the experience level of the pilots in the crash of a Continental Airlines jet in November.
The agency also announced tighter restrictions on aircraft maintenance and released year-end statistics showing a 26-percent increase in the number of near-collision reports, 1,056 compared with 840 the previous year. filed by pilots during 1987.
About four of every 10 reported incidents, 451 during the year, involved at least one commercial aircraft, an increase of 40 percent from the year earlier, according to FAA figures.
Of about 900 incidents investigated, 18 percent were found to have been "critical," with the aircraft having flown within 100 feet of each other, FAA officials said.
FAA Administrator Allan McArtor discussed the issue of pilot experience, airline maintenance and the near-collision statistics.
Later, during a speech to the National Aviation Club, he said "we are witnessing a crisis in public confidence in flying" but maintained that the airways were "safe and healthy" despite some areas of concern.
McArtor told reporters that the FAA has asked the airlines "to stress the importance of not putting two pilots in the same cockpit if both have relatively little experience in the type of airplane they are flying."
News Roundup
REAGAN'S HELP SUGGESTED:
Former president aide Lyn C. Nofizger suggested that President Reagan could help persuade the Army to give Wedecorp Corp. a defense contract, according to a letter projected yesterday at Nofizger's headquarters in April 1982, letter to presidential counselor Edwin Meees III disclosed that the two met face to face three days earlier to discuss the Wedecorp contract.
GIFTS POUR IN: Stuffed animals, balloons and money poured in yesterday for a 9-year-old girl who was discovered Sunday in an abandoned house by a construction worker. Doctors amputated the frostbite lower legs of Darlin Carlisle, who was in satisfactory condition last night. Her mother was charged with felony neglect for locking the child in a freezing attic.
FEUD HURTS MOVEMENT:
Weakening the nationwide campaign against apartheid, two leading black groups are waging a savage battle for supremacy near Pietermaritzburg, South Africa, that has cost more than 320 lives in a year. The feud in and around the southeastern city is between the United Democratic Front, the largest anti-apartheid coalition, and Inkatha, which has 1.5 million members.
IRAN SIKN'SOW SHIP: Iranian gunboats mistakenly attacked a tanker carrying butane and propane to Iran in the Strait of Hormuz early this morning, shipping executives said. The captain of the Norwegian-owned, Singapore-flagged vessel said one tank was punctured but that a small fire quickly waned and his 28-man crew escaped injury.
SOVIET LAYOFFS AMEAD: About 16 million Soviets will be laid off by the year 2000 under Mikhail S. Gorbachev's reform drive, Pravda said yesterday.
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A political solution to the troubles in the occupied territories is the only answer. Neither an increase in military pressure nor continued rioting will result in peace.
Israeli soldiers are in the West Bank and Gaza in 1988 because the Arab states attacked Israel in 1967 (and 1973). If there were peace, or something even considerably short of peace, there wouldn't be a single unwanted Israeli soldier in the West Bank. Israel is ruling over Arabs because, with the exception of Egypt, the Arabs have consistently refused to engage Israel in a political solution in the Palestinian problem.*
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We mourn the loss of human lives in the occupied territories but believe they must be seen in the context of the continued threat which Israel faces from the Arab world. Our concerns about the actions of the Israeli government stem from an unshaken support for Israel's right to exist.
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薛德统延国先里道伟大会
Memorial Ceremony for President Jiaang Jing-Kuo of the Republic of China
Time: 11 a.m. Saturday, January 23, 1988
Place: Kansas Room, Kansas Union
Organized by: KU Free China Club
(选大自出中国和)
KU Chinese Student Association (北大中國學會)
University Daily Kansan / Friday, January 22, 1988
Sports
9
KU
Game 17
Kansas
Jayhawks
COACH: Larry Brown
Record: 12-4(1-1)
THE FIGHTING IRISH
PROBABLE STARTERS
Notre Dame
Fighting Irish
COACH: Digger Phelps
Record: 9-4
F-24 Chris Piper 6'8" PPG
F-21 Mitten Newton 6'4" 7.3
F-21 Danny Manning 6'10" 23.7
G-12 Olsa Livingston 6'0" 3.6
G-14 Kevin Prichard 6'3" 10.5
F-43 Scott Paddock 69" *PQ*
F-24 Mark Stephenson 69" *12.2*
C-54 Gary Voce 69" *8.6*
G-4 David Rivers 60" *23.5*
C-40 Jamere Jackee 62" *4.5*
COVERAGE: Sat., Jan. 23 at Joyce Center, South Bend, IN., 1:35p.m. Radio: KLZR 105.9 FM, KJHK 91 FM. Game will be televised on WDAF-4, KSNT-27
Holmes hoping to shock Tyson
The Associated Press
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — Mike Tyson, the youngest heavyweight champion in history, and Larry Holmes, who could become the oldest, will fight tonight at the Convention Center.
Holmes, a 38-year-old grandfather who announced his retirement Nov. 6, 1986, would succeed Jersey Joe Walcott as the oldest champion.
Walcott was 37 when he knocked out Ezzard Charles in the seventh round on July 18. 1951.
"They'll say I'm too old, washed up, can't fight anymore." Holmes said of his decision to come out of retirement.
Upon leaving the official weighin Thursday, Holmes said, "I'll win. I'll fool everybody."
Tyson, the 21-year-old champion,
predictions, but I can assure you a lot.
Tyson is an overwhelming favorite to win the scheduled 12-round fight at the 16,000-seat Convention Center. It will be televised by HBO at 9:27 p.m. "I believe I'm the best fighter in world," said Tyson. "I believe he had his era. I believe nobody in the world can beat me."
"He's made for me." Holmes said. "Face fighters are made for me. I can punch back. Boxers give me trouble."
A face fighter is one who leaves himself open while attacking. Tyson, known as an attacker, relies on this strategy as an important part of his defense. He keeps an opponent busy defending himself.
The champion, who weighed in at 215 pounds yesterday, possesses excellent quickness and hand speed.
"Larry doesn't have the physical capabilities at this stage of his career," said Eddie Futch, who trained Holmes for 12 title fights.
Holmes, who weighed 225 pounds, had a great left ab, but in his last fall he was scared by the accuracy and accuracy. The bounce also seemed to be gone from his legs.
Holmes thinks his 21-month layoff has been good for him, but most boxing analysts think that a fighter cannot restore what time and age have eroded.
The former champion has trained in seclusion for several weeks in his hometown of Easton, Pa. He didn't arrive in Atlantic City until Wednesday afternoon.
Holmes, who turned pro in 1973,
won his first 48 fights and was the
world's premier heavyweight for
seven years. He won the World Boxing Council title from Ken Norton June 19, 1978 and successfully defended it 17 times before relinquishing it in December 1983 after a dispute with promoter Don King involving a fight against Greg Page.
Still recognized as champion by the International Boxing Federation, Holmes defended that title three times before losing it to Michael Spinks on a close but unanimous decision on Sept. 22, 1985. He lost the rematch on a split decision in his last fight on April 19, 1986.
Holmes unsuccessfully appealed to have the second loss overturned, and he remains bitter about both defeats.
Tyson, who was 20 when he won the WBC title from Trevor Berbick, was 21 years, one month and two days old when he wedgeed Tony Tucker on points Aug. 1 and became the first undisputed heavyweight champion since Leon Spinks upset Muhammad Ali in 1973.
The youngest heavyweight champion before Tyson was Floyd Patterson, who was 21 years, 10 months and six days old when he knocked out Archie Moore for the vacant championship on Nov. 30, 1956.
Holmes will receive $2.8 million for the fight. Tyson will make between $4 million and $5 million, and he has also signed a six-fight deal with IBO for $26 million. The first. Mackenzie to take place Mackenzie 21 in Tokyo. Tyson will probably face former WBA champion Tony Tubbs.
There will be a second title fight on tonight's card, which is promoted by King in association with Trump Plaza.
There will be three scheduled 10-round heavyweight bouts, matching Michael Dokes of Las Vegas, Nev., a former WBA champion, against Ken Lakusta. Francesco Damiani of Italy, a 1984 Olympic silver medalist, will fight Dorcey Gaymon of Jacksonville, Fla., and Mike "The Bounty" Hunter of Los Angeles will fight Oliver McCall of Chicago.
Carlos De Leon of Puerto Rico will defend the WBC cruiserweight championship against Jose Maria Flores of Uruguay.
In two scheduled 10-round middle-weight bouts, Davey Hill Jr. of Canada will fight Hector Rosario of New York and John "The Beast" Mugabi of Uganda will meet Bryan Grant of Memphis, Tenn.
Jayhawks to face tough Irish
By Elaine Sung
At first glance, the Notre Dame Kansas matchup looks close.
The Irish have guard David Rivers, one of the nation's premier guards. The Jayhawks have pre-season All-American forward Danny Manning.
Notre Dame is 10-4 with losses to Indiana, Lafayette and two to DePaul. Kansas is 12-4 with losses to Illinois, St. John's and Iowa State.
"The home-court has become an advantage, especially with all the fan support," Kansas coach Larry Brown said. "That will swing the game one way or the other."
But the battle will be occurring tomorrow afternoon in South Bend, the home ground of the Fighting Irish.
The home-court advantage is playing an especially big part of a team's performance this season. Home teams in the Big Eight have won six of seven conference games so far, and are leading the league in road play, is 7-0 in home games this season, 4-2 on the road and 1-2 on neutral ground.
Joyce Center, home of the Fighting Irish, is not a new place for the Jayhawks. Kansas played there in 1947 and 1956, but 49-38 against Ohio but losing 66-64 to
"The team that wins on the road in the Big Eight will win the Big Eigh," senior forward Chris Piper said. "It is a great game to walk through the conference."
Kansas, like most of the other Big Eight teams, is taking a short break from conference play. This will be followed by another series at Notre Dame leads the series 8-3.
This year is turning out to be Rivers' best year. He was also a preseason All American, averaging over 23 points and 4 rebounds a game.
Rivers is fully recovered from an injury that occurred in August 1866, when he was thrown through the windshield of a van he was riding in.
Rivers suffered a 15-inch gash in his abdomen and through rigorous rehabilitation, was able to return to Notre Dame's starting lineup in 2014.
Brown knows that Rivers can dominate the game
"I don't think anybody's going to be able to stop him," he said. "We'll just try to keep someone fresh on him all the time."
One of Kansas' plans is to match junior guard Oisai Livingston against
Livingston, who has never played against. Notre Dame, said he was
"The coaches have told me that I just have to keep in front of him and not to go for the spectacular plays," he said. "The team with the least amount of mistakes will come out the winner."
expecting a good game and was ready for Rivers.
There is a motivational factor for Manning as well. Brown recalled that five years ago, when Ed Manning and his family had first moved to Lawrence, Notre Dame's coach Digger Phelps had made some derogatory remarks about the assistant coach
"He said it was a disgrace that a school could hire a truck driver to become a basketball coach," Brown said.
Danny Manning would not comment on that, but last year's 40-point performance against Notre Dame was statement enough.
Kansas beat the Irish 70-60 in Allen Field House while making do with two key players missing. Senior guard Cedric Hunter and freshman forward Keith Harris were both out with sprained ankles.
The Jayhawks had to call upon several of the younger players to overcome the Irish, including guard Jeff Guelder, center Sean Alvarado and forward Mark Randall.
Of those players, only Gueldner remains in the lineup. Hunter has
graduated, Alvarado and Randall have redshirted this season and Harris may or may not play, depending on Kansas coach Larry Brown.
Manning remembers the game well.
"It's going to take a team effort. We'll definitely need to play with effective intensity, and we'll need to take the crowd off the ball."
"We didn't have Cedric, and we were missing Keith," he said. "We're back in the same situation again. We don't have Archie or Marvin."
The Jayhawks are still trying to pull together and adjust to the recent losses of starters Archie Marshall and Marvin Branch.
"It's going to be a tough game, and we're just getting used to our new team." Piper said. "It's like we're starting over again."
The team went through a week of tough practices with suicide spruits and strength exercises, and Brown said they have made progress.
"We'd better be because it doesn't get any easier." he said.
The team's injury report is looking up going into tomorrow's game. Pipper is still sore with a pulled groin muscle and for the first time this week, sat out most of practice yesterday.
Forward Mike Maddox is recovering from blisters on his feet and is doing much better, Brown said.
KANSAS
Kansas tennis player Craig Wildey practiced Wednesday at Alvamar Tennis Club for the Jayhawks' matches this weekend.
Men's tennis team to open spring season
Kansan sports writer
By Tom Stinson
Kansas" men's tennis team opens its spring season this weekend against Ball State and Minnesota at the Alvamar Tennis
Kansas takes on Ball State, Kansas coach Scott Perelman's alma mater, at 6:00 tonight. Kansas then plays Minnesota at 5:00 tomorrow.
Ball State takes on Minnesota at 10:00 Sunday morning.
Perelman played tennis at Ball State from 1973 to 1977 and was an assistant coach for the Cardinals from 1979 to 1981. He was coached by Bill Richards, Ball State's current coach, while in college.
This will be the first time the two coaches have faced each other in a dual match.
"I'm excited to have both teams
here," Perelman said. "Both the matches this weekend should be extremely competitive. Minnesota is the best on paper, but anyone can win this week."
Minnesota is ranked 24th in the country, and Perelman said they are contenders for the Big 10 Conference championship. Leading the Gophers is number-one singles player Jonas Svensson.
since I've been here," Perelman said. "They're tough. They have one of the most established midwest programs."
Ball State has won the Mid-American Conference championship the last four years. The doubles team of Todd Hershey and Eric Nixon is ranked 12th in the nation for the Cardinals.
"We haven't beaten Minnesota
See tennis, p. 10, col. 6
Kansas must cope with loss of Martin
By David Boyce
Associate sports editor
Kansas senior forward Jackie Martin hobbled on crutches into Allen Field House last night with the rest of the women's basketball team from a bittersweet victory in Colorado.
Although the team won its first Big Eight game, 72-71 against Colorado, the Jayhawks lost Martin for the remainder of the season to a ruptured Achilles' tendon.
The team must now regroup for its 11 a.m. game against 13-2 Nebraska tomorrow at the field house.
But despite the impending game against the Big Eight leader, Washington and the rest of the Jayhawks were still thinking about Mar-
"It was a case in which one team won, one team lost and both teams left the locker rooms crying," Washington said of the Colorado game.
"It will take a tremendous effort for us to beat Nebraska." Coach
Marian Washington said. "We will have to play solid defense because Nebraska has very good shooters."
Martin will not talk about the injury until after surgery, Cook said. The surgery has not been scheduled vet.
Martin was injured in the first half when sophomore guard Lisa Braddy drove to the basket and Martin stepped in to receive the pass, said assistant coach Kevin Cook.
The Cornhusker attack features guard Amy Stephens, averaging 15.6 points a game, and forward Maurice Ivv, averaging 19.3 points.
"The next moment, Jackie was on the ground." Cook said. "She said it felt like a dream."
Washington said the effect of Martin's injury has not yet hit the team. Center Lynn Page, who may become
Coach: Marian Washington PPG
F-34 Meshro Western 5'8" 8.1
F-32 Lisa Baker 5'11" 6.1
C-44 Lynn Page 6'4" 5.2
G-12 Lisa Brady 5'7" 9.4
G-23 Sandy Shaw 60" 11.7
See WOMEN, p. 10, col. 6
Men's swim team ranks 18th in latest poll
PROBABLE STARTERS
"It's a real credit to the men's program," Kempf said. "I felt we were good enough to be ranked but
Coach: Angela Cormuskers 13-2
Coach: Angelica Beck PPG
54 Kim Kihm 19.1
F-34 Meunie Bally 19.3
C-34 Stephanie Bobli 5'10"
G-21 Pam Fiene 5'6"
G-35 Amy Stephens 5'7
The men were ranked 18th in the latest top-20 poll compiled by a panel of coaches across the country. The men's dual meet record is only 2.4, but Coach Gaym Kempf said all six ranked squads against nationally ranked squads.
By Tom Stinson
For the first time in its history, the Kansas men's swim team is ranked among the nation's elite.
Kansan sports writer
The men's and women's swim teams travel to Texas this weekend to take on Texas Christian tonight and Southern Methodist tomorrow
with the competition we've faced this year, our record didn't show it."
"Southern Methodist is a real tough team," Kempf said. "Our men beat them in the Alabama Championship meet, but we were more rested
Kempf is one of the coaches on the voting panel.
Southern Methodist's men are ranked 15th and their women 20th in
than they were, so it should be more even this time."
Kempf said Texas Christian was a well-balanced team, but he said he didn't know much about them this season.
In preparation for the Big Eight Championships in March, Kempf said, he planned to enter swimmers in a variety of events. The strategy is to establish a third event for swimmers to compete in at the conference meet. A swimmer may enter three events in the conference championships but only two in dual meets.
Kempf said the squads were beginning to swim fewer yards in practice in order to concentrate on everyone's individual events.
"This is an intense part of the year," the coach said. "We're doing a lot of quality work right now. I like it, from them, which makes it tough."
Aempf said freshman Jeff Stout and sophomore Pat McCool had become unexpected assets and sophomore Marcia Otis and junior Jenny Fisher had made big improvements over last season.
Monk set to return despite knee injury
The Associated Press
HERNDON, Va. — Art Monk practiced with the Washington Redskins yesterday for the first time in more than six weeks as the team began preparations for Super Bowl $ \mathrm {X X}^{1 1} $
monk, the No. 2 receiver in team history, ran pass patterns and agility drills during a two-hour practice session at Redskin Park.
"He looked good out there," Redskins coach Joe Gibbs said. "It's something we will evaluate as we go."
Monk had previously been working out on his own after being placed on the inactive list Dec. 9 with a partial knee collateral ligament in his right knee.
Entering this season, Monk's 270 catches were ranked best in the National Football League over the
Although Monk refused to talk to the media after the workout, his teammates had plenty to say and seemed encouraged that he could be in the lineup for the Jan. 31 game against the Denver Broncos.
last three years. Although he was limited to only 38 acceptions this year because of his injury and the 24-day players' strike, he still commands respect from the opposition.
"It's great to have Art back," wired receiver Gary Clark said. "I'm sure there's still some pain in his knee, but he's not letting it show. He's out there giving it his all, and that's what Art Monk is all about."
"Having him in there takes some of the pressure off me and (wide receiver) Ricky Sanders," Clark said. "You know Art is going to take some defenders with him. He's just a great player, by far the best receiver on this team."
Monk's 504 receptions ranks 20th on the NFL career list. The eight-year veteran has played in three Pro Bowls, and he set an NFL record in 1984 when he caught 106 passes.
"It's great to see him working out there again," cornerback Barry Wilburn said. "There's nobody like him. Even though he wasn't running at full speed, he seems to have a clock inside his head that tells him when to 'turn it on.'
"He'll be ready for the Super Bowl, no doubt about it."
In other news, Gibbs gave placekicker Ali Haji Sheikh a vote of confidence yesterday, saying he had no inclination to use Jess Atkinson, even though Haji Sheikh has missed five of his last eight field goal attempts.
---
10
Friday, January 22, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Game aids cause
By Keith Stroker
Kansan sports writer
OVERLAND PARK — The fans cheered and waved their pompons while both teams warmed up. The basketball game was about to begin.
But who were those guys on the floor? They didn't look like basketball players, at least some of them didn't.
Most of them weren't. They were celebrities from the Kansas City area playing in a benefit all-star basketball game last night at Johnson County Community College. The American Diabetes Association received the proceeds from the game, which was sponsored by the college and radio station KY-102.
The teams were broken up into red and gray. Bill Maes, nose tackle for the Kansas City Chiefs, played for the gray team. He said he hoped to get out of the game healthy and make a lot of money to fight diabetes.
Dave Stewart, KMBC-TV Channel 9 sports anchor and Kansas State graduate, had a different approach.
"We are going to play dirty and try and hurt the muscular guys," said Stewart, who also played for the gray. "I'm playing Albert Lewis in one-on-one and have him down 2-0. I'm going to lead a war with him before the game."
Lewis, a Pro Bowl cornerback for the Chiefs, said that his red team needed to play a slow game and that he was one of the former basketball players.
The main thing was to have fun, said Sam Lacey, gray team member and 11-year center for the NBA Kansas City, now Sacramento, Kings. Lacey said he had enough of the physical game in professional
basketball and wasn't looking for more last night.
"I'm not sure who I'm going to guard," Lacey said. "I'm just very thankful it's not Bill Maas."
Darryl Motley, former outfielder for the Kansas 'City Royals whose two-run homer in game seven of the 1985 World Series sparked the Royals to a baseball championship, was one of the shorter players on the court. He said he would stay outside and shoot jump shots.
Barney McCoy, weekend anchor for KCTV Channel 5 news, said he hoped to just try and make it through the night.
As the game progressed, both teams gave up the idea of playing defense. Offense was definitely the name of the game, said Jon Hart, sports director at KY-102, who did some of the play-by-play over the public address system.
Some of the highlights included slam dunks by Lewis and Clay Johnson, former player for Missouri Tigers and the Los Angeles Lakers, and several three-point baskets by Lacey and Jerry Blanton, former linebacker for the Chiefs.
The crowd erupted when Lewis blocked a three-point attempt by Stewart into the seventh row of the stands.
Terri Barnett, activities committee director at JCCC and a sophomore at the college, said she was happy about the turnout but wished more people would have come. Three hundred people attended the game.
The final score was 112-106 in favor of the red team, though no one seemed to care. The crowd had fun, and it was for a good cause.
3
Jeff Klein/KANSAN
Former Kansas City Royal Darryl Motley goes up for a shot against Kansas City Chief Deron Cherry. Both players participated in the All-Star Basketball game for the American Diabetes Association last night at Johnson County Community College.
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a starter, said she didn't realize the seriousness of the injury until after the game.
"I am upset about the injury," Page said. "I will have to help out any way I can. I still have room for improvement."
For the Jayhawks, freshman John Falbo and sophomores Chris Walker and Craig Wylie will play in the first three positions. Perelman said junior Jim Secrest, senior Larry Pascal and freshman Jeff Gross would compete in the fourth through sixth spots.
"They're a competitive team," Perleman said. "They're very well coached, and this is a big weekend for them. They'll be ready to play."
"We have a challenge ahead of us," Washington said. "But losing Jackie probably won't really hit us for a couple of games.
However, Perelman said Gross had not practiced recently because of an injured foot. Senior Reggie could not play take over if Gross could not play
"The loss of Jackie is a loss to the conference," she said. "It's just so sad to see a competitor like Jackie end her career this way. She has really been an inspirational player, and she will continue to be inspirational on the sidelines."
Besides losing Martin, the Jayhawks last week lost starting center Deborah Richardson. The injuries have forced Washington to use redshirt freshman LaTanva Nelson.
Continued from p. 9
Women
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IMMANUEL LUTHERAN CHURCH and UNIVERSITY STUDENT CENTER
Be part of a community of fellowship and caring
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for KU Students - 5:30 p.m.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, January 22, 1988
11
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Conversational English A course of study for those who have mastered the basics of speaking and understanding English as a second language. This course will focus on contemporary and contemporary idiomatic expressions through conversation English syntax and semantics. Further information call the Lawrence Continuing Education Office (842 6243). Class will be taught by Dr. Stephen Lippincott, fees & plus supplies. 7 p.m. w.m.
LISTENING AND NOTETAKING INTENSIVE WORKSHOP:
Tuesday, January 26, 7 p.m. - 300 Strong Hall
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Large playground. Limited spaces. Sunshine
Spinster Books and Webbery, Lawrence's women's, children's, ladies, lesbiia and feminist bookstore and resource center welcomes KU students back to town. Drop by for a fun book
shop. Please come early. Afternoons Wed. Sun. Thurs. 11: 8; 10: 1/2 Ma.
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Not satisfied with where you're living? Naimsmath is a very good place to move. Consider such features as individual lease liability, excellent "All-U-Can" coverage and you will be recognized as best housing options at KU! For more info, call or come by Naimsmath Hall 1804 Naimsdrive Hill.
One room in nice house on Lawnace Ave.
Call one room no drinker $125.00 plus utilities.
Non-drinker 24/7.
Quet, non-smoking, female wanted to room with 3
quarters in a b. duplex. $131 plus 1/4
room. 81-29-286
Villa26
Apartments -Townhomes
BRAND NEW 1 Bedroom Apartments
- On KU Bus Route
- Energy Efficient
Responsible, non-smoking vegetarian woman to
use 616.67 ml/1'/utility 749-2680
after 109-944, non-smoking vegetarian woman to
use 616.67 ml/1'/utility 749-2680
- Microwave
- Excellent Location
- Open Daily
SHANNON PLAZA CLUB APARTMENTS on K.U. bus route. Washer/driver included, water, trash paid. Dishwair, microwave, cediling fan, basketball court 6 or 12 months lease. bld.71789
2201 W. 26th/Apt. E-102
—phones—
- Washer Dryer Hook-ups
- Move In Today
842-5227 • 842-6454
841-6080
Sublease, Duplex two bedrooms, i. bath. 1804,
Mississippi $300/month; $800/month.
B. of N. Smitham U., 941-2972.
Tre cooperative living. SUNFLOWER HOUSE.
749-6071, ask for Ann, Bend, or Tom.
Sublease Furnished in Meadowbrook,
$270/Mo. Water and cable included. Call
(866) 555-1234.
Sunflower House has private rooms, low rises and a great location. Call evenings
or call 212-579-3800.
Wanted: female roommate to share furnished
A172.720, no utilities. Private room. 841-6194
Trialkife Townhouse for rent. Three bedroom
vacation room. Park 35 Apt. for single, male KU
vacant Room. Park 35 Apt. for single, male KU
Nowhere at KU will you find a residence hall with the advantages of Naismith Hall. Applications for fall spring semester are now being accepted while space remains.
ADVANTAGES
NAISMITHHALL™
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044
913-843-8559
FOR SALE
Wanted preferably two female roommates. Campus convenience. Two rooms available. $190 or $150 per month. No utilities. Call George at 842-5217.
An Absolutely Awesome Array of Antiques, collectibles and neat stuff we have: hardback and 1/2 price paperback books, full line of new antique items, a selection of antique, indian, and costume jewelry (gitter and good stuff), the right vintage clothes for any occasion, antique furniture, large fine art prints on frieza, flesta, and the best selection of antique furniture in the area. Quinnities Fla Market, 1 New Hampshire, Open Sat, & Sun
Aplause 12 - string guitar for sale. Excellent condition! Call after 5.749-3244.
PrintInk X194 X189 X188 X186 X184 X182. Excellent condition.
Fully loaded with options. 841-600 weeks days,
741-500 weeks days, 631-500 weeks days,
Dude Looks like a Lady. Aeromilline line numbers for sale, 1, 12 and 12. Best offer. Call 812-9200 or www.aeromilline.com
Apple II C with color monitor, 5 months old, has Printer Cable, $850, 84-6741.
Cake Machine - Why rent - dispenses cams soda or beer; tape recorder reel - to 'reel, akal 1800ad; playgrj and tape magazines after 5. (913) 727-1080
Drafting tools, beds, lamps, chest of drawers.
Everything But Ice, 616 Vermont.
For Sale 2 Full Tuttons have been well cared for and they will be Queen. Call 841-5772 between 5-9 p.m. Jennifer
For Sale: Student basketball season ticket. Contact Chris: 7-9 p.m. 841-1848
FUTON FRAME Full size sapper 822 ($7) +
Bundle Flute $7 (41) - 841 675)
FUTON FRAME Full size sapper 822 ($7) +
Bundle Flute $7 (41) - 841 675)
Leaving town - Need to sell. Double bed, desk,
double counter. Call: 814.729.4009
KU Basketball tickets for sale, Call 842 1928.
Laguna town. Need to sell. Double bed, dead-
bed.
Moving Sale: Everything goes including baby grand piano, furniture, DCM Time Window Speakers, Technic stereo/tapeded/turnable, paintings, TV's. Saturday, Jan 29, 9:35, 823 Bellie
Nikon FX w/ 35-110 Sigma 200mm lens. Excellent condition $200, 749-4282.
*** MOTHALL GOOD USED FURNITURE
8th floor 5:00 p.m. 5:00 p.m.
32 E. 9th St.
614-786-2544
Rock-n-roll: Thousands of used and rare albums from various artists. Quantiirl F&F Market, 811 New Hampshire.
Spacious mobile home. Top Quality. Large bedrooms and kitchen. 16 by 12 living room. Extra storage sheds and exercise room. Privacy. No extra rent. No rate. Not rentable. Call 749-3523
AUTOSALES
1888 Chevrolet Cavalier Z24 $995.76, Camaro Iz-23 $104.07, Monte Carlo as $125.38, 1988 Ford Mustang as $125.38, Turbo $14.791, 1988 Mercury Coupe XR19.35, 1988 Pontiac Flier Coupe $148.46, Firebird $32.82, Trans AM $12.50. FACTORY warranties guarantee dealer discounts. You choose options
Red Hot Bargains* Drug dealers' cars, boats,
Red Hot Bargains* Drug dealers' cars, boats,
Buyers' tools 680-697-600 s-7295
Dataus B1201 975, MKl M8, *pops* rums. New
B400 395, $700 GHOO on账 404, *blank Hair*
all 4 pumps a 9
Car won't start? Mobile repair service on foreign cars. Call Aaron at 416-4629.
HELP WANTED
Bucky's Drive-In is now taking applications for part time employment. Flexible hours. Half price meals. Apply in person between 10 and 5 at Bucky's Drive-In 9th and 1owa. Thank you!
Consultant positions for Small Business Development Center are available. Positions are paid above minimum wage, hours are flexible, and students must be seniors or graduate students needed in the areas of business, engineering, law, and computer science. If interested, apply at 942 E. Summerfield Hall, Ft. Worth, TX.
BE A REREFEE, Intramural Officials are needed for basketball leagues forming now. Attend the meeting Wednesday, January 27 at 6:30 p.m. in 156 Robinson.
You are skilled with woodworking or solving mech-
nechanical or smaller projects using exteri-
sive experiences needed.
Creative person for sketching 21st Century Life
Original work only: 841-2822. Paid
Leave message
CHILD CARE NEEDED for 1 year old in our
home, transportation, or other
transportation. Call 843-8231.
Cash for sketches of 21st Century auto and trains. Original work only. 841-2382
GOVERNMENT JOBS $1,049.450.230/rw. New
Hiring (Your Address) 878.697.0000 at H/978 for
all positions.
Camp Soaring Hawk, a Christain camp, is interviewing consenting 26th, in the 8th grade, for ad deta for these programs.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $10,449,049.230/Jan.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $678,000.000/Jan. 1978 for current Federal List.
Faculty couple needs aafterschool help with 4 kids:
8-13岁 old. M-F: 3-11; B-M-60. Responsibilities:
transportation, light house keeping, meal
schedules. Sciences. For interview, Call
492-708-3258, $3.25/hr.
Evening line person, part time. $3.50.Hr. Apply in person at Bardiodo, W18. 60 h. Ch
Local marketing firm seeks several new
employees to work on hourly jobs (we're
local). Call Jim 140-7663
Postal Jobs! $20.06 Call! Prepare Now!
Clerks-Carriers! Call for Guaranteed Exam
Workshop. (918) 944-4444 Ext 153.
NEW YORK! live in babysitters needed for young families throughout affluent suburbs of metropolitan New York, beginning in January/February. Airfare paid, plus room. Guaranteed. Cousin Adrian Clausman. (323) 656-0707, 5 Lauren Lane. Darien, CT. 60620.
Qualified individuals earn up to $320/m F./Sop. Qualified students earn up to $450/m F./Sop.
Full time student, physically fit.
Full-time student, physician-certified.
Part time house cleaners wanted. Day and evening hours avail. If you enjoy cleaning and are meticulous, Buckingham Palace is interested in providing full-time house import. Must be available over breaks.
Preschool aid. After school 4:30- Early
experience. Sunshine
house 842 2233 or 749 3233
Research assistant - Graduate or advanced undergraduate student needed for child development, behavior some video tape. Experience with salary package $350-$450/Mo. for 12 weeks $400-$440/Mo. for 12 weeks Send or bring letter of application and resume to Library at 916-785-7000 by January 29. No phone calls please.
Rewarding Summer for sophomore and older college students in Colorado mountains working with the Sierra National Wildlife, many outdoor programs. Write now; in-person, online; and goals. Sanborn Western College. Floridas.
Service Technician Lawrence 1 Computer Store
Software Developer Lucy Daye
Edge and Kayppe Microprinters, etc. Familiarity with micros preferred. Growth potential and leadership to resume or credentials by Jan of the following dates:
Student Business Assistant 1 Deadline 1/27/88
Salary $40.00/Hr Types and departments department documents Participate in setting up documents in the budget accounting process. Mainly maintains and data base files for micro computer Other tasks include training students One year experience in office environment, typ
Post advertising materials on campus. Write:
College Distributors, 33 Febble Trail, Trapper Nag-
wan.
and filing; 2) One course in bookkeeping or accounting and filing; 3) A course in computerized record keeping speed 45 wpm. 4) Ability to follow complex oral and written instructions; 5) Currently current to employment as a student at KIU; 6) Ability to maintain a working knowledge
application at the reception desk at the Computer Center, University of Kansas 04-04-048
11:27AM
The Adams Alumni Center is now hiring a m. and p. time only. You must be dependent on your availability. You must be dependent on your experience. Applications are available at reception. **we are an equal opportunity employer**
Tutored needed in all subjects. Requirements: 3.0
skills. Apply to Supportive Educational
Skills. Apply at Supportive Educational
Volunteer needed: Headquarters Counseling
Counseling, Training Sunday nights. Information
meetings, Wednesday 9th or Sunday 24th, 8-9 p.m.
n.149 Massachusetts.
Come See New City City and Work For Great Families, All Support Groups, Air Care Fund, $150 - $300 a week
NANNIES
Wanted: At Alvamar Country Club. Housekeeping position: 30 flexible hours. Apply in person or by phone.
TENDER LOVING CARE
NANNIES
P.O. Box 191, 215 Godwin Ave
Midland Park, NJ
201-848-0508
Warm caring people - who like children ages 3-5
or older, as volunteers for a minimum of
2 hrs per day, will be needed from
7:30 to 12:30 M-F. Day care volunteers
from 12:30 to 12:50 M-F. For more information
nell 842-629-2840.
MISCELLANEOUS
Secret grade point increasing techniques revealed. Results guaranteed! Free details for Dean's Litt Dreamers Write, Report Card Rambing; D.I.T Dreamers Writ. P.O. Box 351-UK, San Antelope, CA. 94906
PERSONAL
Carmen - Here it is! Happy 25th Birthday - From
your Bank Buddies
GRADEAUIN SENIOR SEEKING COMPANION
JOY WAILSING SCUBA DIVING, ISLAND HOPP-
JOY YOILSING SCUBA DIVING, ISLAND HOPP-
GRAND BRAMA ISLAND YOU MUST BE JUICE-
UNGLE FEVER CALL TROPFOLAR BOR
441-3857
Hey B. Hemon, Happy Birthday! Thanks for being my bud. Hope you have a terrific day. Isn't it nice to know you can have your cake and eat it too? Let's get drunk! 3897.
SEPPIN FOR. I Love You and the guy next to you.
Let's keep going. Love, Amy.
Susan - Help me! This is the cry from Ginger and
Karen, they have been receiving the demands later today. The
baby is sick.
I couldn't miss
Lori
the celebration
Surprise!
Surprise!
Josh
IULIE-
Hey sorysn girl! Where have you been?
We still have to see Roanne!
Do you like John Cougar, I hope so.
Call me. 864-6686-elt
Well, I am back. Thanks you guys for being so supportive. Thanks for all your help Kami, Tami and Scott. You all are such good friends. Love, Lewy. P.S. Hey Kimi heyd got a personal.
BUS.PERSONAL
**85 Value when presented toward new patient case**
**Spinal Exam** Dr. Johnson, Chiropratctor
--send to: N.Y. Times
P.O. Box 1721
Lawrence K5 66044
for Sunday Service
or more info call
Have a secret message inside in jazped up balloon bouquet. Call University Balloons today at 1-800-522-2471.
For the best in world and national news, complete business section, and extensive coverage of sports, movies, books, etc..
ACE
IS COMING
New York Times
National edition
only 25c per copy Mon.-Fri.
by subscription
National Edition
841-5073
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your driver's license without patrol school upon graduation.
Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire
Lawrence Kansas
Friday and Saturday—HOMEGROWN REGGAE With
COMMON GROUND
Every Thursday 50¢ DRAWS NO COVER
Wednesday, January 27- From Oklahoma City
Every Monday—
$1.50 ALL IMPORTS
No Cover
FORTUNE TELLERS R&B
Join the 49er Club
SPRING BREAK
SOUTH POINE ISLAND 128
NORTH PARK/MUSTAN ISLAND 156
DARTON BEACH 19
HAMPTON ISLAND 174
GAVELTON ISLAND 124
FORT WALTON ISLAND 126
ORLANDO/DODEN WORLD 132
Miami BEACH 133
HYLDEN HEAD ISLAND 131
DON'T DELAY
TOLL FREE PRICE BREAK INFORMATION AND ASSIGNMENT
1-800-321-5911
SERVICES OFFERED
Become a Valentine always remembered, with a "BOURHUDOR POIRATT"叫Mirae or Grace at Mike's phone. Call Caller Pioneer for your moving, hauling and delivery needs. One contact or two.
DRIVE EDUCATION offered Midwife
Midwife training required
years, driver's license obtainable, transportation
services required.
Hair CUTS 8$ off with KU-1D for the months of January and February. Ask for experienced hair stylist, Ann Reamy at Standing Ovation, 14 E Ace. 749-0771
Handmade Moccasins, custom sized Elkhide tips, thick soiled, Capri 45/7P, Patrick 82/800. Dress code: no shorts or dresses in movie or game time? Just don't know where to find them! 830-392-1699 INFORMATION 830-392-1699
Kim's Alterations Quick Service Suits, coats,
Wilk 39th; B4-623 (Bellin Food 4 Leaf). Wilk
52th; B4-621 (Bellin Food 4 Leaf).
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ekatchone
processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W services.
.PASSPORT $6.00. Art & Design Building,
Room 206. 864-4767.
KU Photographic Services Eletchachrome pro
Photographer Equipment Art and Design building, rm 306
Passport $6.00 Art and Design building, rm 306
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $/hr, 843-9032
(p.m.).
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services.
Overland Park...913/491/6878
MATH TUTOR 695. experience Individual and group rates. 841-0148
THE FAR SIDE
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716
QUALITY TUTORING Statistics, Economics,
Mathematics. All levels. Call Dennis
842-1055
1-3,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accept
829-745 or Lami-821-181-516.
TYPING
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get you
on the road to a successful completion. Transportation provided
by Sunflower Driving School.
The college of Liberal Arts and Sciences offers tutoring in math, english, business, and other subjects with reasonable charge through Supportive Educational Services, apply at SES B building. 849-3971
1 plus Typing: Letters, resumes, thesis, law typ-
ery; letters of recommendation; Terry 642-785-
843 or 843-7807 and weekends.
24 hr. typing service. Fast, professional word processing with letter quality printer. 843-7641.
Accurate, affordable typing in experienced paper, tissues, mice or IBM correcting Selectric, WordWorks.
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS
843-378 before p. 8 p.m., please.
service available
843-378 before p. 9 p.m., please.
1-aper Woman Word processing. Former editor of *Bernice*, a textbook on punctuation and grammatically correct pages of the 1940s, who taught at Cornell.
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term paper, texts, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists, Letter
quality printing, spelling corrected. 842-7477
For professional typing/word processing, call Myra. 411-4080. Spring special $1.20/page, double space, pica.
Quality typing. Includes excellent spelling, grammar, punctuation, editing. Fast, reliable service. Pick-up delivery available. 843-0247.
FAST, ACCURATE, DEPENDABLE. Letter quality printer, special student rate, spell check.
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES 843-5062
WANTED
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes HAVE M.S. Degree. 841-6254.
Typing at a reasonable rate. Call Holly at 845-0111.
Female nonsmoking roommate - 2 Br. Apt. closed to campus, $137.59/Mo. plus elect. No deposit 842-6649
Fern roommate wanted for nice 2 bedroom
ferm on balcony 160/Mo plus 1/2 utilities. Call
phone: (855) 327-1414
January rent paid. Non-smoking male roommate
January rent paid. Non-smoking room house. For more information 749-7240
811-563-4050
Female roommate needed to share bugee room in
6-10'x7-1/2' units. 7-1/2' x 7-1/2' usites. Short walk to campus. 748-5120
Hiring!
Hiring! Government Jobs-your area $15,000
8281 Call (602) 838-8855 ext 4055.
Male roommate will need to share Alvaram Condo $25/Mo plus utilities. Washer, dryer, fireplace, tennis, swim, private bath/bedroom. Call 842-4106. References and deposit required.
female non-smoking roommate at Pinecrest. Oven room. 165 plus utilities, 842-256-2952
RESPONSIBLE MALE ROOMMATE needed for 2 br apartment at Grystane, adjacent to Trailridge on bus route. Non-smoker. $180/mo.
Utilities. references helpful. Eric 748-205-835
ROOMMATE WANTED FOR SUNRISE
147 facilities. January rent账. Chrs 749-600
Roammate wanted Unique 2 br apartment. 1 block off campus. $205 plus utilities. Price includes: 2 bathrooms, Wi-Fi, 6 months of insurance.
Roommate: 4 Br. 3 bath, a story clouse close to store with plus utilities and deposit ask for Todd Kasko
Room needed to share large beautiful home
$275/Mo. Callrie at 841-4672 or 841-5413
Wanted = Female comatee, non-smoker to
close campus. Close to campus, water cableed, grad student
close campus.
Wanted non-student basketball tickets · 842-6783
Wanted: Part-time kitchen utility. Flexible hours.
Call Frank at Lawrence Country Club,
842-2866.
Wanted to share spacious, clean, warm room. Graduate student or prefer Prefer grad student or working person. Walk 2 blocks to KU. Central heat and air conditioning, washer and dryer. $75/m plus 1/2 of reasonable rent.
By GARY LARSON
©1986 Universal Press Syndicate
MENU
MENU
1-22
"Well, this may not be wise on a first date, but I just gotta try your garlic whart rats."
12
Friday, January 22, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Student faults policy
By Kathleen Faddis
Kansan staff writer
President Reagan's foreign policy is discouraging Central American refugees from seeking political asylum in the United States, a KU graduate student said last night.
Marc Becker, a teaching assistant in Latin American history, spent last year working with Central American refugees on the U.S.-Mexican border. He spoke at the MEX conference of policies toward refugees at the Latin American Solidarity's annual rice and beans dinner.
Becker was a paralegal last year
with the Overground Railroad, a group that assists Central American refugees applying for refugee status in Canada. He said the Canadian refugee program was not dependent on the policies of the government.
The problem the refugees have with the United States is that they are fleeing countries that the United States is supporting, he said.
The U.S. government spends $600 or $700 million a year to help the government of El Salvador and doesn't want to admit there's something wrong in that government that would create refugees."
Sue Schellie/KANSAN
Becker said he worked almost exclusively with refugees from Guatemala and El Salvador.
KU graduate student Marc Becker speaks at the Latin American Solidarity's annual rice and beans dinner about his work with Central American refugees along the Mexican border.
he said.
Rhonda Neugebauer, president of Latin American Solidarity, said the rice and beans dinner, an annual event since 1978, is meant to show solidarity with the Central Americans, who often have no more than rice and beans to live on.
The group's function is to educate people about U.S.-Latin American medical care and provide medical aid for citizens of Nicaragua and El Salvador.
The group opposes U.S. intervention in Latin American countries, Neugebauer said.
Becker said changes in U.S. immigration policies caused fear among the refugees that there would be mass deportations.
"A lot of the refugees from Central America were staying in Mexico rather than coming into the United States," he said.
Becker described conditions along the lower Rio Grande, which he said was the most common crossing point for refugees coming from Central America. He compared the area to a police state.
Becker taken the physical and mental abuse of several Guatemalan refugees by U.S. immigration officials. He said many refugees were greeted by the U.S. border patrol upon entering the country and were immediately placed under arrest.
Most of the refugees end up in the Port Isabel Detention Center in Texas unless they can find someone who can pay their bond, he said.
$100,000 winner satisfied with state's first jackpot, despite large bite of taxes
By Jeff Suggs
Kansan staff writer
For Francis Whisler, winning the jackpot in the Kansas Lottery was more than just a dream.
"It all went so fast," he said,
before I had time to think, I had
worse.
Whisler, of Russell, won $10,000 Saturday night in the lottery's Up and Away contest. He'll never see $24,000 of it.
Barbara Frick, spokesman for the Kansas Lottery, said federal taxes took out 20 percent and state taxes took out the percent of the jackpot winnings.
Frick said that lottery prizes of $599 or more were reported to federal and state tax authorities and that
'T.
I the lottery was not advertised as tax-exempt or tax-free. My goodness, they will take $24,000, so that still leaves a good amount of money.'
Francis Whisler lottery winner
winners who received prizes of more than $5,001 had their taxes automatically taken out.
Whisler said he wasn't upset about the deduction.
lottery was not advertised as tax-exempt or tax-free," he said.
"Oh. I think it's all right. The
"My goodness, they will take $24,000, so that still leaves a good amount of money."
Walter Adam of Topeka won $10,000 on a lottery ticket on New Year's Day. He said the taxes were too high.
It will be several days before Whisler receives his lottery check. When he does, he and his wife plan to use most of it for retirement.
Whisler, who buys only a few lottery tickets a week, said people shouldn't spend all their money to try to win big.
"If they can afford it," he said, "play all they want. But don't play it too steep.
Official stresses health care
Watkins nurse says many foreign students overlook services
Bv Stacv Foster
Kansan staff writer
Foreign students at the University of Kansas often are unaware of the health services available to them and that ignorance could be dangerous in an emergency, a KU health official said yesterday.
The official, Lequetta Diggs, registered nurse at Watkins Hospital, asked foreign students at a workshop on health services at KU to call the hospital when they have questions, preferably before falling sick.
The workshop was organized by the office of foreign student services.
At the beginning of each semester, foreign students are invited to visit the hospital so they can become better acquainted with the services. They receive information
on health insurance, get their blood pressure checked and get a tuberculosis skin test.
Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins, said that foreign students who visited the hospital benefited because they learned what was available to them.
"In many countries, there is far more state-supported health care," Yockey said. "Foreign students don't even think about it until they need medical help."
A visit to Watkins is not required of foreign students. But that should change for next year's school term, when all incoming students will have a mandatory immunization and tuberculosis skin check. Yockey said that would be made official by the start of next semester.
School of Nursing stresses recruitment to boost declining enrollment
By Davana Yochim
Kansan staff reporter
Declining enrollment in the School of Nursing has forced University of Kansas Medical Center officials to place more emphasis on recruitment.
The image of the hard-working, underpaid nurse has plagued the nursing profession for years. That was reflected in enrollment figures, which reached a three-year low in the fall.
Enrollment at the nursing school dropped to 231 students this fall. In 1865, 294 students
before," Clifford said.
Rita Clifford, assistant dean of the school of nursing, said that for the past four years, the school had emphasized recruiting to nurses and that it has missed the bad image of the nursing profession.
"We're trying to reach the non-traditional student, such as the one who wants a career change or one who has not been in school
"We want to update the image of nursing," she said. "We want people in the community to see that nursing is a field that has highly intelligent and highly skilled individuals that are able to think on their feet."
To battle declining enrollment figures the school has used recruitment strategies such as advertising and monthly open houses. The school also has participated in high school career days.
Clifford also attributed the decline of interest in the nursing profession to a change of values.
"This generation of women, where this is primarily a woman's profession . . . has grown up with the idea that they are not engaged by sex in career choices." Clifford said.
Clifford said she thought youths placed a higher value on earning money and a lower value on helping people.
"There is a perception that nurses are poorly paid because of the shortages, the rapidly changing standards, and the highly charged nature."
Clifford said the starting salary for nurses in the Kansas City area was $2,000.
Judith Hefley, director of community relations at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, said the decline in enrollment at the school directly affected the hospital.
Hefley said the hospital had programs to encourage nurses to work there.
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DOMINO'S
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DOMINO'S
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Monday January 25,1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 81 (USPS 650-640)
Dole's error?
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A newly published autobiography of Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole and his wife, Elizabeth Dole, contains an error about the University of Kansas. The Kansas senator attended KU in the early 1940s before he joined the Army.
A caption for a photograph of Dole in a track meet says, "In the fall of 1941, I entered Kansas State University at Lawrence. With a little talent and a lot of perseverance, I break the tape at a quarter mile."
Dole actually attended the University of Kansas at Lawrence. He left KU to enlist in the Army in December of 1942.
Walt Riker, Dole's press secretary, said the senator was told of the mistake immediately after the
first printed copies of the book arrived in his office.
Riker couldn't recall Dole's reaction, however.
The book, "The Doles: Unlimited Partners," was written with Richard Norton Smith and published by Simon and Schuster.
The Kansas Republican, who is seeking the 1988 GOP presidential nomination, said in the book that he considered abandoning politics for another career after he left out of the 1980 presidential race.
He decided to remain in politics and seek re-election to the Senate in 1980 because "I did want to be a plaver."
"For a few weeks I toyed with the idea of leaving politics altogether," Dole wrote in the joint autobiography with his wife.
Contra plane shot down
The Associated Press
MANAGUA, Nicaragua — Sandinista soldiers shot down a cargo plane after it had air-dropped supplies to contra rebels in southern Nicaragua, and four crew members were killed, a survivor of the crash and authorities said yesterday.
The Defense Ministry, in a communique, identified the four crew members as three Nicaraguans and a Colombian.
See related story
p. 7.
The communique said a Nicaraguan survived the crash and was captured. It did not specify how many people were on board the vintage DC-6 aircraft.
The survivor, Alejandro Sanchez Herrera, 25, told reporters that two men had parachuted out of the plane when the supplies were dropped.
He also said the Colombian, whom the other crew members only knew by the pseudonym of "Richard," was piloting the plane.
"The communique claimed that "Richard" was working for the CIA. Both the government and the contras side had been on board the propeller-driven plane.
Nicaraigan President Daniel Ortega said the incident was proof that the supply mission "was actively mounted by the United States in their territory," and a violation by Honduras of the Central American peace plan.
"President Reagan should reflect over this, since his policy is being shot down just like this plane was shot down," Ortega said.
Earlier yesterday, Defense Minister Humberto Ortega, quoted by the government radio, said 10 of the 11
people on board were killed. Contra spokeswoman Marta Sacaza, interviewed in Miami, Fla., said 11 were killed.
Sanchez Herrera was interviewed by reporters yesterday while in military custody at the town of San Carlos. He said the plane took off from a Honduran air base at Swan Island.
Sanchez Herrera said he thought the men who parachutaled out of the plane were experts in explosives who were trained in the United States. He said the air-dropped cargo consisted of rice, beans, boots, clothes and ammunition.
Swan Island, in the Caribbean Sea, belongs to Honduras and for decades has been used by American military forces to monitor the area.
troops at 10 p.m. Saturday with a Soviet-made C-2-M Rocket, and crashed on the jungle-covered Arrancazos Mountain, near the village of El Arena. The village is 18 miles east of the Costa Rican border and 144 miles southeast of Managua.
Lt. Col. Roberto Calderon, Chief of the Fifth Military Zone where the plane crashed, said rescue squads had to hack their way through the jungle with machetes to get to the site of the crash.
Reporters and photographers who visited the scene said they saw two badly burned bodies in the cockpit of the wreckage, a third in the fuselage and a fourth lying on the ground outside the plane.
They were told by Calderon and other authorities that these were all the bodies found at the site.
MOM GAVE YOU THE RIGHT TO LIVE
PLEASE LET THEM LIVE!
LIFE TABERNACLE IS GOING TO HELP?
GOD CARES!
Life
Lawrence Kansans
for
About 230 demonstrators walk down Massachusetts Street to protest the 15th anniversary of Roe vs. Wade, the Supreme Court decision that legalized abortions.
Local citizens march to protest abortion
Kansan staff writer
By Donna Stokes
About 230 area citizens marched Saturday to protest the 15th anniversary of Roe vs. Wade, the decision that legalized abortion.
The group left City Hall at noon and marched down Massachusetts Street
Jim Ryun, president of Lawrence Kansans for Life, said the march was to raise public awareness of the issue. Ryun said the protesters had marked the anniversary of the Supreme Court decision with a
march for the past several years.
"I think we have had an impact and will continue to have an impact," he said.
Protesters chanted "not abortion — adoption" and sang "God bless America" as they passed more than 100 onlookers during the march.
"We believe there are better alternatives to abortion." Carl Burkhead, professor of civil engineering, said. "Marriage, fidelity and knowing Jesus are important in stopping abortion."
Angela Williams, 11. walked along
sidewalks and handed anti-abortion pamphlets to shoppers and store clerks.
"I don't like abortion," she said. "I think all babies should live."
Lawrence police escorted the protesters down the southbound lane of Massachusetts Street. Some protesters carried symbols that quoted biblical
verse and read "Unborn Babies are
Brad Hunt, a member of Lawrence Kansans for Life, said, "It is time for the public to speak the truth and stand against the tyranny of abortion." Mr. Mussolini did it, Stalin did it, and now the U.S. government is doing it."
Patrolman Steve Coon said the march didn't cause any problems for the police.
"It only ties up two (patrol) cars, one for in front of the group and one for behind. They usually move along pretty good; they do it every year," he said.
The march ended with a prayer and the singing of hymns near the gazebo in South Park. At 1 p.m., many protesters went to the
Lawrence Public Library and
that showed an abortion surgery.
On Friday, members of Maranatha Christian Ministries and the Great Commission Students, a campus Christian organization, marched from the Chi Omega countain to the Kansai, then back to Wescoe for a protest anniversary of the Supreme Court ruling. About 30 people participated.
Kansan reporters Julie Adam and Dave Sodamann contributed information to this story.
President to review past years
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — One last time, President Reagan is going before Congress with a State of the Union address, giving an upbeat assessment of his seven years at the White House and setting a limited agenda for his final months in power.
There will be no sweeping proposals or bold promises when Reagan delivers the nationally broadcast speech before a joint session of the House and Senate at 9 p.m. EST today, officials said. That would be unrealistic in a presidential election year.
After trying to slash education spending last year, Reagan will ask for an increase this year, to nearly $21 billion, with more money for magnet schools and remedial education.
Instead, Reagan will restate familiar themes on foreign and domestic policy, look back over the full span of his presidency, and challenge Congress to reform its erratic budget process and try harder to cut federal spending, the officials said.
He also will propose initiatives in the fight against illegal drugs, another area that was targeted for spending cutbacks last year.
The address will not contain a lot of unrealistic goals that can't be accomplished, one official said.
"It will show that he's still willing to put a few challenges out there, that he is not ready to just sit back and watch the days and months go idly by," said the official, speaking on condition of anonymity.
The speech urges Congress to act in a bipartisan spirit and help him make his final year productive, the official said.
Seminar teaches fearless flying
By Kathleen Faddis
Kansan staff writer
Larry and George Ann Seymour of Olathe have grown children and are beginning to think about retiring. They want to be able to pick up and go somewhere when they want.
Larry is a licensed pilot and loves to fly. But George Ann is afraid.
That upsets Larry because it has interfed with plans for week and trips.
"They don't have a bridge to Hawaii," he said.
The Seymours were part of a group of ten people who attended a all-day seminar Saturday at the University of Kansas Medical Center on aerophobia, the fear of flying. It was conducted by Walt H. Gunn, assistant clinical professor of psychiatry and a former TWA pilot. The cost was $90.
"She'll go if she has to, but it's white knuckles all the way." Larry said. Once, after a flight, George Ann got off the plane and kissed the ground.
George Ann Seymour will fly, but it's not a pleasant experience for her.
The Seymours are expecting their first grandchild in June, and George Ann wants to be able to travel to Maine to see her grandchild. This finally made her decide to do something about her fear. Larry couldn't be happier.
"It was very embarrassing," Larry said.
About 25 million are fearful of flying, Gunn said. He said most aerosphobics had multiple phobias, not necessarily all related to flying, as anything from snakes to elephants
ten of anything I shake to elevators.
Gunn did his best to convince the group
that air travel was perfectly safe, in spite of what seems to be a rash of airline accidents in recent years.
"The accidents that have happened lately have to have some attribution to deregulation," Gunn said. But he said he think the situation was as bad as it seemed.
"I'm here to champion and defend air transportation," Gunn said. "You are in good hands; you can be confident of the pilots."
Even if the engine conks out, a 747 can glide more than 100 miles without power, he said. But he minimized the possibility of that happening.
"They dearly love to play investigative reporter," he said. Their conjectures about causes, he said, were a bunch of garbage.
I flew few for 22 years and had maybe no engine failures where I had to shut the engine.
Gunn blamed the media for sensationalizing every airline crash.
Megan Brim of Overland Park said she hadn't always been afraid of flying. She went to college in Minnesota and flew back and forth to Kansas City frequently.
But this summer, for some reason she could not explain, she became afraid to fly. She flew to Minnesota and couldn't even get up the nerve to return to the airport for her flight back. She took a bus home, and, after a very long ride, decided that wasn't the answer to her problem.
Megan's sister Katie came with her to the seminar. She said she wanted Megan to be able to fly so the two could take trips together.
"She's in control of so much of everything else, this is out of character," Katie said.
Fifty percent of phobics are concerned with matters of control, Gunn said. They often try to avoid the experience.
Megan Brim agreed. "I feel like I ought to give the pilot some pointers, but I don't know."
Although most people who are afraid to fly are afraid of crashing, Gunn said that no one who had taken his seminar had ever been in a plane crash.
Getting through a flight without crashing doesn't ease the fear, either. Each flight gets worse and it becomes not worth the trip. Gunn said.
Eddie Feinstein of Overland Park said, "If you know you're going to die in a plane crash, after one successful flight, you know it's the next one that will kill you." He attended the seminar with his wife, Gloria, who is afraid of flying.
But Gunn said refusing to fly was not the answer.
As long as you avoid, you'll never overestimate you. You have to confront the fear to get at your best.
Gunn described aerobophiles as high performing, high achieving people.
"Iass Asimov can write about interstellar space travel in the safety of his studio, but I don't fly to San Francisco to receive an award for science fiction writing," he said.
Gunn said that when he was a pilot, he had had a number of entertainers and artists at his disposal.
Wayne Gretzky, hockey player for the Edmonton Oilers, could oply overcome his
Monday Morning
OPEN
Forrest MacDonald/KANSAN
Inside the simulation room at KCI Airport, Megan Brim, Overland Park
dread of flying by being allowed to sit in the cockpit, Gunn said. He said he thought that John Madden, CBS sportscaster, quit coaching football because he didn't like to fly.
resident, tries to overcome her fear of flying.
The day-long seminar ended with a trip to Kansas City International Airport to the TWA training academy.
---
2
Monday, January 25, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
AWRENCE
Mostly sunny
HIGH: 24°
LOW: 4°
Today expect mostly clear skies and the high to be in the mid-20s. Tonight the mercury will dip to a very frigid 4 degrees
KEY
Rain T-Storms Snow Flurries Ice
REGIONAL
North Platte 25/3 Clear Omaha 20/2 Clear
Goodland 29/12 Mostly clear Heve 26/7 Mostly clear Salina 25/4 Mostly clear Topeka 24/3 Mostly clear Kansas City 22/0 Mostly clear Columbia 20/0 Partly cloudy St Louis 22/2 Mostly cloudy
Dodge City 28/12 Mostly clear Wichita 29/8 Mostly sunny Chanute 20/0 Mostly sunny Springfield 27/6 Partly cloudy
Forecast by Mike LaPointe and Brent Shaw. Temperatures are today a high and tonight's overnight low.
5-DAY
TUE
Partly cloudy 30/17
WED
Cloudy 38/28
THU
Chance of showers 42/29
FRI
Clearing 32/18
SAT
Mostly clear 34/20
Step aside, Frosty
The Associated Press
SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, Calif. — Using earthmovers, dump trucks, conveyer belts and 532 tons of snow, organizers of the 1988 Great Sierra Winter Carnival have built what they believe is the world's tallest snowman.
The 50-foot, $10\%$-inch frost giant, styled after the giant marshmallow man from the movie "Ghostbusters," took about two weeks to construct. It was finished just in time for Saturday's dedication ceremonies to
kick off the week-long festival.
Carnival organizers said they planned to submit proof of its height to the Guinness World Records and it apparently exceeds the current record of $4½ feet.
The five-story-tall snowman towers over the Skiers Sierra Ranch, site of the carnival 12 miles west of South Lake Taheo. It was made in four sections instead of the usual three, and features a cone-shaped hat, orange cardboard nose, and a black cardboard mouth and eyes.
Students seek to save 'Bugs'
Magic monkey
The adventures of a magical monkey king and his court will be presented by the University of Kansas Theatre for Young People on Saturday.
BOULDER, Colo. — A plea from elementary school students has prompted a restaurant owner to offer up to $1,000 to preserve a mural of Bugs Bunny.
The Associated Press
The mural displays a dancing Bugs
The play, "Monkey, Monkey," by Charles Jones, is a series of stories adapted from a 16th century Chinese novel, "Monkey" by Wu Ch' Eng-en. The production of the children's drama will be at 2:30 p.m. on Jan. 30 at the Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall.
For 10 years, a colorful mural of the cartoon character adorned the side of an old house near the corner of Broadway and College streets.
Darrin Person, Kansas City, Kan,
sophomore, who plays the Monkey King,
said that he enjoyed the part because it was difficult to portray an
Bunny, carrying a guitar case and
flashing a smile and peace sign.
The home, along with three adjacent buildings, was demolished to make room for a condominium complex, but not before developer Amory Host preserved the section of wall on which the mural was painted.
Host temporarily moved the halfton brick mural to his home.
Play about Asian myth is scheduled
Klein said the performance would be about an hour long and would be of special interest to children over six.
Tickets are $2.50 for all ages, and may be purchased at the Murphy Hall box office. All seats are reserved. For reservations, call 864-3982.
The play was originally written for the Nebraska Theatre Caravan in 1981 to show oriental children who were relocated in Nebraska after the Vietnam War their literary and folk ancestry.
Jeanne Klein, assistant professor of theatre and media arts, will direct the 12-member cast. The monkey king's legend has been a vital part of Asian and Chinese culture for centuries, she said.
"It's been a thrilling part because playing a monkey is very physically challenging. The Monkey King is very mischievous and childlike, but what is so ironic is that he's given such a vast power," Person said.
animal.
TV couch potatoes unite at convention
The Associated Press
LINCOLNWOOD, Ill. — Hundreds of television addicts, including a Chicago Bears lineman, gathered to share trade secrets and perfect their lounging skills Saturday at the first National Couch Potato Convention.
Those who flocked to a hotel in this Chicago suburb said they're among millions of Americans who spend hours each day on the sofa watching television.
works behind the scenes at a Chicago television station when she's not in front of her TV set. "I'm not ashamed of being a couch potato. I'm here to learn how to improve my couch potato ways," she said, lounging on a plush divan.
Many sofa spuds said they found it difficult to pry themselves away from their TV sets for a weekend of training. Jacobson said, "Even if the weekend turned out to be a bore, I knew I could always go back to my (hotel) room and watch TV."
"I watch television from six in the evening to six the next morning," said Hope Jacobson, 38, who
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A car stereo and speakers, valued at $232, were taken Saturday or Sunday from a car parked in the 1000 block of Harper Road. Lawrence are reported.
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■ Assorted tools, valued at $246, were taken Saturday from a truck parked in the 700 block of Arkansas Street. Lawrence police reported.
Two antique brass horse statues
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, January 25, 1988
Campus/Area
3
P
Britt York, Salina junior, ponders a question during the College Quiz Bowl. The competition took place Saturday at the Kansas Union.
Trivia rules
KU quiz bowl champs get chance to win regional tourney title
By Stacy Foster
Kansan staff writer
Don't let their name fool you. The Apathetics do care about something. On Saturday they won KU's double
On Saturday they won KU's double elimination college quiz bowl tournament
communication college at Boyd University. They will advance to the regional quiz bowl tournament Feb. 26-27 at Oklahoma Baptist University in Shawnee, Okla.
Brent Ellerts, Hutchinson junior and team captain, said he was glad his team won the game.
"I formed the team when I was a freshman, but we had never won. We got close last year when we took second." Ellerts said.
The other team members are Brian Leslie, Hutchinson junior, Laura Lorson, Olathe junior and Frank Partnoy, Overland Park junior.
Lorson said she was looking forward to the regional tournament.
"I've never even been to Oklahoma," she said.
Scott Daniel, Lenexa graduate student,
said he had played a lot of Trivial Pursuit
and thought the college quiz bowl would be
interesting. He did it for fun and never
thought his team, the Ex-Mamasons, would
win in the championship match
Saturday.
This is the 12th year for KU's quiz bowl tournament. The Association of College Unions-International sponsors the tournament nationally, and Student Union Activities and Lambda Sigma, sophomore honor society, sponsored the campus tournament.
"We did nothing to prepare. I was really suprised we went as far as we did. We only had three players. Two of us are science majors, and we didn't have anyone that
M,
We did nothing to prepare. I was really suprised we went as far as we did. We only had three players. Two of us are science majors, and we didn't have anyone that was in history or humanities.'
- Scott Daniel
- Scott Daniel
Lenexa graduate student
was in history or humanities," Daniel said
The other two team members for the Ex-maniacs were Don Payne, Haysville senior, and Pracheta Mukherjee, Kanpur, India, graduate student.
Nineteen teams competed in two 7-minute halves. Questions covered such topics as sports, literature, history, science, religion and philosophy.
There were a few questions on movies. For example, one question asked the city settings for the movies Dragnet, Flashdance and the Untouchables. Answer: Los Angeles, Pittsburg and Chicago.
Gene Wee, SUA advisor, said that the competition was usually relaxed and fun, but that there were times when a participant protested a decision. The Lambda Sigma protest committee was set to hear complaints, but no decisions were appealed.
SUA will sponsor the team's trip to Oklahoma. Regional winners advance in the spring to the national competition in Orlando, Fla. Walt Disney World sponsors teams at the national tournament.
Legislative reports presented
Kansan staff writer
By Brenda Finnell
Because legislative decisions greatly affect campus personnel and students, the University of Kansas is offering weekly updates for people who want to keep informed about what is happening in the Statehouse.
"Issues develop overnight," said Jon Josserand, assistant for government relations at KU. "This is a good communication link."
At the Saturday updates, which began two weeks ago. University officials who work with legislative issues review the week's activities and preview the next week's schedule.
The meetings will cover both Regents and non-Regents topics. A question and answer period will follow each meeting.
Josserand said the meetings would continue for the remainder of the legislative session.
At Saturday's briefing, Josserand
talk about 25 people that meetings
between legislators and students lobbying for the Margin of Excellence were the week's highlight.
Josserand predicted that this would be a slow week in the Legislature. Tax reform and AIDS issues will receive the most attention, he said.
He said that Stanley Kopik, executive director of the Board of Regents, would present a Regents budget overview Wednesday to the House Appropriations Committee.
Josserman said the beginning of each legislative session traditionally was slower than the latter part of the session. He also said legislators' preliminary comments about higher education had been positive.
"We'll have to wait and find out," he said.
Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, said she strongly supported the meetings.
important they be current on all relevant issues," he said.
Chancellor Gene A. Budig said the legislative update meetings were organized because faculty and staff in Statehouse are interested in Statehouse activities.
"The chancellor has a strong commitment to giving people information on a timely basis," she said. "Everyone will be affected by the outcome of the legislative session."
Jane Hutchinson, director of the KU chapter of the Associated Students of Kansas, said she was optimistic about the legislative session and pleased by the interest students had in legislative issues.
"They want to be helpful, but it is
"I think there is a lot we can do." she said.
The legislative updates will help faculty, staff and students work together to improve the financial condition of the University, Hutchinson said.
The next legislative update will be at 9 a.m. Saturday in the Kansas Union Pine Room.
Change in University policy would restrict logo use by student and non-profit groups
The University of Kansas is considering policy changes that could restrict the use of its logo, seal, name or other identifying marks by student groups and non-profit organizations.
Currently, campus or non-profit organizations can use KU emblems without paying a royalty fee to the University.
Mike Reid, KU licensing director,
said that an option the University
By a Kansan reporter
Organizations would have to submit a sample or design of a product to the University's licensing agent, and then enterprises Inc., for approval, he said.
was considering would require student organizations to be license in
Last year the University made $40,000 in licensing royalties, Reid said. That money went into scholarship funds.
A decision on the policy probably won't be made until July 1, Reid said. Chancellor Gene A. Budg would make the final decision about licensing changes.
"The policy could mean more money for scholarships." he said.
"We're looking into licensing at a lot of other schools right now," Reid said.
The University has not taken formal action on any plan yet.
1234567890
Jane Krueger, center, Shawnee, has her wrist measured by Danielte Knownton, Lawrence. Krueger and her twin sister, Judy Marleen, right, Mission, were at KU's first Twin Fair on Saturday.
Twins share histories at fair
By Christine Martin
Kansan staff writer
Thirty sets of twins from Kansas, Iowa and Nebraska participated in KU's first Twin Fair on Saturday at Robinson Gymnastium.
The Midwest Twin Register, which sponsored the Twin Fair, was started this year in order to compile medical histories and other data from twins, said Michael Crawford, professor of anthropology and director of the register.
Researchers use the data collected from twins to study which medical conditions, such as migraine headaches and scoliosis, are caused by genetics or environment. Researchers also may be investigating identical or similar genetic factors.
up a self-selected regional sample of twins in Kansas, Iowa and Nebraska and eventually to obtain a list of all the twins born in Kansas in the last 50 years, Crawford said.
So far, the register has a list of 450 sets of twins. Crawford said he hoped to get a list of 6,000 to 10,000 sets of twins.
The twin register's goals are to set
The Midwest Twin Register is holding another Twin Fair on Feb. 13, Crawford said. Interested twins may contact the department of anthropology to make an appointment. There is no fee.
Researchers from the departments of anthropology, psychology, human development and family life, and music education and music therapy took part in collecting various data from the twins.
On Saturday, the twins were asked to list their general medical history, give finger and palm prints, give a recording of their voices and have their pictures taken. They also were given blood sample tests, had their blood pressures taken, had measurements taken of their faces, heads, arms, legs, hands, shoulders and backs, took a musical aptitude test and went through a fitness clinic.
Crawford said that there was no problem in getting twins to partici-
"Twins are unique people," he said. "They want to know everything they can about themselves."
Crawford said that twins were born one out of every 100 births.
THE
BLACK STUDENT UNION
will hold a very important
GENERAL ASSEMBLY MEETING
JANUARY, 25,1988 at 6:30 p.m.
JAYHAWK ROOM KANSAS UNION
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4
Monday, January 25, 1988 / Ut.liversity Daliv Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Students take an extra step for Margin of Excellence
Hundreds of KU students have signed petitions and written letters in support of the program. But the students who bumped shoulders with legislators at the Capitol made the biggest impression of all.
Tuesday, about 150 KU students did the University a favor. They made a trip to Topeka to participate in a statewide lobbying day for the Board of Regents Margin of Excellence program.
They did more than take up space. "They really tried to do a job to convince the legislators," said Jake Krakow, student body president and member of the board of directors for the Associated Students of Kansas, which sponsored the effort. "We've gotten noticed. We've been able to identify students as a constituency that is active, vocal and identifiable."
Margin of Excellence is an important program. It must go into effect if KU is to avoid falling face down into the mediocrity it now leans toward. Many students have shown their support with petitions and letters, and they are to be commended.
Legislators can no longer ignore students as part of the voting public. And the turnout was especially impressive in light of the apathy with which students usually greet political or educational issues.
But the students who took their concerns to the Capitol deserve special thanks from their peers. They took the time and put forth the effort to work for a goal that must be realized, for the sake of our educations and KU's future.
They went the extra 30 miles.
KU needs evacuation plan
KU officials do not think that a fire evacuation plan tailored to accommodate students with disabilities is necessary.
Such a plan is about as necessary as a fire alarm system itself. To exclude disabled students from the benefits of assured and planned evacuation assistance is unbelievably ignorant and potentially disastrous.
Implementing an evacuation plan similar to that at Emporia State University would provide a great service to all students living in KU residence halls.
Emporia State's plan is widely regarded and used as a model across the country. It is an effective way to assure that the needs of disabled students are accommodated.
Disabled students list on a form the nature of their disability and potential risks involved in evacuating them. Other students are then trained by the disabled student on the proper way to help during an emergency.
Emporia fire and police departments have records of where disabled students live and where their classes are. In case of a fire, officials know exactly where special assistance is necessary.
Similar forms filled out by disabled students living in KU residence halls and filed with Lawrence fire and police departments would be a safeguard against potential disaster
departments would be a safeguard against potential disaster. The extra time consumed by filing paperwork and training personnel is well worth the effort considering the potential effects of ignoring the needs of disabled students.
Jody Dickson for the editorial board
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
Housing officials call them "temporary triples." It's the polite way of telling three freshmen that they must live together in a dorm room designed for only two of them.
Other Voices
Nine hundred of the 6,000 students who live on campus spent at least a part of the fall semester in temporary triples. Many of them lived out of one half of a closet, two drawers of a four-drawer dresser and one side of a desk.
Housing officials later "de-tripled" most of the rooms as some dorm residents dropped out of school or moved off campus. But that didn't solve much: Another 1,000 students are still on a waiting list for campus housing.
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Why our kids have so much trouble with Geography:
QUIZ: Where is the Pacific Ocean?
PSST! WHAT'S THE BIG WORD AFTER "the"?
Bush sidesteps Iran-contra issue
Vice president uses executive privilege to protect his political ambitions
His office now has announced that the Honorable George Bush has "answered all questions" put to him by independent counsel about the Iran-contra affair. It would be more assured if Bush would answer to all the public's questions about his role in "The Affair That Will Not Die."
Instead, the American public has been treated to a series of evasions and condescensions by this vice president who would be president. The people are supposed to be sovereign in this constitutional system, but Bush insists on brushing off embarrassing questions from anyone without subpoena powers. His excuse is that for him to give a full account of his role in this tangle would violate the confidentiality of the executive branch. That is a high principle, but Bush is putting it to a low purpose: the protection of his own political ambitions.
It is not as if the vice president were being asked to comment on a current policy that might be jeopardized by revealing what counsel he gave the president in the past; what he is being asked is to substantiate all that talk about how close and trusted and sound an adviser he has been to the chief executive. What better test of his claim than to discover just what advice he was giving Ronald Reagan while the most extravagant mistake of this presidency mounted.
PETER SCHLÜTER
Both George Shultz and Caspar Weinberger — secretaries of state and defense as this mistake mushroomed into a crisis — have said what they thought of shipping arms to Iran in exchange for hostages. Of course, they had little to hide; they were against it. Bush has indicated that he was, too, talking guardedly about having expressed "reservations" or hinting that he would have expressed reservations if he had known that exemplars like Shultz and Weinberger opposed this foolish idea. But his name has popped up in at least one memo as having supported this colossal mistake. And why would Bush, or any other adult, need to know how other officials stand on sending arms to Iran in order to recognize such a policy as folly?
Paul Greenberg
Syndicated Columnist
These persistent suspicions could be cleared up if the vice president would be candid about what he told the president when they discussed this subject. Then again, these suspicions might be confirmed. Is that why the vice president is ducking behind executive privilege?
The thought will persist so long as he doesn't come clean — as his rivals for the Republican presidential nomination well know. And his bering them for raising this issue isn't going to prove any more effective than Br'er Rabbit's jabbing at the tar baby did.
When he was vice president, Hubert Humphrey could scarcely discuss his role in the development of the Johnson administration's policy on Vietnam while running for president in 1968. Only toward the end of that campaign did he show some independence — and almost won it. But there was a war going on at the time. Bush has no such reason for keeping confidence about a scandal that now is past; he can only use executive privilege as an excuse, and not a very persuasive one.
Bush has been the perfect vice president if the job of the vice president is to sit quietly and wait, and in the main it is. The country's first occupant of the office called it the most insignificant ever devised by the mind of man. And the classic description of the job is still that of Mr. Dooley, Finley Peter Dunne's Irish barkeeper. "It's shrange about th' vice-pridisy. Th' pridisyine th' highest office in th' gift iv' gift th'. People. Th' vice-pridisyine th' next highest an' th' lowest. It isn't a crime exactly. You can't be sent to jail fr' it, but it's a kind iv a disgrace. It's like writin' anonymous letters. It 'l strange too, because it's
a good job. A man could put in four years comfortably in 'th' place if he was a sound sleeper."
Contrary to Mr. Dooley, the job of vice president is no snap and, contrary to John Adams, it is a highly significant one. There ought to be someone standing by in the government who has not offended anybody and therefore could unite the country in an emergency. Bush has been a superb vice president in that regard, and he was never better than when Reagan was recovering from having been shot. Bush did nothing then and did it particularly well. 2
Saying nothing controversial is a good deal harder than it sounds. It would probably be impossible for the likes of an Alexander Haig, who is by nature unqualified for vice president. He didn't have all that easy a time keeping his equanimity as secretary of state. Bush has long experience at only appearing to lead, and while that makes him a fine No. 2 man, it does raise questions about his candidacy for the presidency.
Bush and Bob Dole may have called a brief truce on this issue, but it is bound to recur so long as the vice president stays in the campaign. And the more he objects to questions about his role in this affair, the more defensive he seems. Have you noticed that it's when he tries to talk tough that George Bush sounds most like Mister Rogers? Don't get me wrong: Mister Rogers does a wholly admirable job, but his job is not that of president of the United States.
In short, Bush's rule about not compromising executive privilege won't do. If Reagan really does think highly of his vice president, and there is no reason to doubt his repeated assurances on that score, then he will relieve his stand in of any obligation not to reveal the substance of their past conversations about arms shipments to Iran. Or would Reagan insist they be kept secret precisely because he doesn't want to hurt Bush? That suspicion is the natural result of Bush's refusing to talk once the issue gets beyond his resume and into his actual performance.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Group's values unclear
I guess I don't understand what the Alliance of Citizens for Traditional Values is supposed to represent. I frighten me to read that such an organization can stop an important proposal like the one regarding the prohibition of discrimination against homosexuals. What is their definition of traditional values? I wonder if it would include opposition to families with adoption, or divorced women? I fall into both the first and second traditional? Who decides what is and isn't traditional? Ann Ryun? Nancy Liskey? I certainly hope not.
The next order of business for the Alliance of Citizens for Traditional Values ought to be to study the contributions homosexuals have made to our society. I just can't see Lawrence forbidding Gore Vidal residence. I'm not sure a
single member of the Alliance of Citizens for Traditional Values ever watches a Rock Hudson movie rever. There are countless gay men and women who have contributed to our society throughout history. The narrow minds that voted down the proposal would probably say that AIDS is God's terrible swift sword to damn the homosexuals of the earth.
I am a heterosexual woman with a lot of homosexual friends. I love them very much. I would like to protect them from pious groups like the Alliance of Citizens for Traditional Values. I don't want them discriminated against. They are constructive, intelligent, wonderful people who deserve to work and live wherever they choose.
Cathy Renfro Lawrence graduate student
Stop supporting Israel
holiest shrines of Islam. This outright belligerence and disrespect for places of worship entrusted to the state of Israel has placed the Jews among the worst violators of human rights, civil rights and now, spiritual rights.
This letter is an open plea to Jewish-Americans and to all Americans who still believe in human rights. Does power give the Israelis the right to destroy everything the Jews have fought for, their right to co-exist with other human beings? Are these the rights that American democracy stands for and advocates to its allies?
Please call or write your congressman. Your support and tax dollars ($4 billion) go to Israel. With your hard-earned money, there will be more violence and killing of women and children and old men in what was once called "the Holy Land."
With shocking horror and dismay, we watched Israeli soldiers beating defenseless women with clubs inside the sanctuary of the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem, one of the
Sumaya Al-Raja Yemen senior
Omaima Abdelaziz Bahrain senior
BLOOM COUNTY
I DUNNO... I THINK
GORBACHEV
IS A WOLF
IN SHEEP'S
UNDER-
WEAR.
1-25
IRREGARDLESS,
I'M WORRIED.
"CLOTHING."
by Berke Breathed
YOU ALWAYS
MOCK MY POLITICAL
INSIGHTS AND IT
MAKES ME
"IRREGARDLESS"
ISN'T A
WORD.
MAP AS A
WET
HATTER!
MAD AS A HEN
WETTER.
GOODBYE AND
GOOD DAY.
"HEN."
THAFT.
University Daily Kansan / Monday, January 25, 1988
5
KU AND LAWRENCE EVENTS
CALENDAR
MONDAY
2:30 p.m. — Children's theatre.
Monkey, Monkey A play at Crafton-
Preyer Theatre in Murphy hall. School
children only. Also 1 p.m. daily through
Friday.
25
6 p.m. — Hallmark Symposium James Mcullan, New York illustrator, will speak at the Spencer Museum of Art auditorium.
7 p.m. — Study skills workshop
*Reading for Comprehension and
TUESDAY
Speed." Sequential program. Call 864-4064 for registration information and telephone number.
8p.m. — "An Evening of Chamber Music" with Denise Myers and friends in Swarthout Recital Hall at Murphy Hall.
26
7 p.m. — Water safety instruction class Nine weekly sessions at Lawrence High School, Call John Forbes at 842-6252 for more information.
10 a.m. – Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Workshop - the Gover-
mance Department
4:30 p.m. — "Christian Faith as Simplicity of Lifestyle" Jack Bremer, leader. Seminar at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
7 p.m. - Listening and Notetaking Workshop for listening to lectures and presentations
5 p.m. - Signup deadline for SUA ski trip to Winter Park. Sign up at the SUA office in the Kansas Union. Call 864-3477 for information.
7 p.m. — "Choices: You've Got a
Year Ahead of You" a Women's Resource Center workshop at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union.
7 p.m. — Lawrence Region Men and Women's Widowed Group Friendship and Valentines at the Lawrence Public Library.
8 p.m. — Concert Series with Paul Tiger Dance Company at Hoch Auditorium. All Seats Reserved. Tickets on sale at Murphy Hall box office, 864-3982. Public $14, $12; KU and K-12 students $7, $6; senior citizens and other students $13, $11.
WEDNESDAY
6 a.m. — Sunrise Fitness Program Swimming, weight room, aerobics at the Robinson Center gym. Running and jogging at Anshutz Sports Pavilion. Call 312-455-7900 for information. Free for KU students, staff and family-plain plan. except aerobics.
10 a.m. — "Search Screening and Selection" an affirmative action workshop in the Governor's Room at the Kansas Union.
10 a.m. — Retirees Club coffee in
the Lounger at Adams Alumni
Center
11:40 a.m. — University Forum Charles Stansler, director of Latin American studies, will speak on "Guatemala Accord in Crisis" at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread to make lunch reservation
1 p.m. — Microcomputer workshop "Introduction to MS-DOS." Call 864-0494 for class location and registration
information.
2 p.m. — Concert series matinee for
the Paseo Teatro Dance
in the Theater of Music.
4:30 p.m. — "Nuclear Weapons and National Security" with Dr. Jackson Baur at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
7 p.m. - "Listening and Notetak-
ing study skills workshop at 300
Strong Hall
6:30 p.m. — Campus Christians meeting at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union.
7 p.m. — Women's Basketball KU versus Oklahoma State University at Allen Field House, Adult $3, high school or young $1, KU students free with
8 p.m. — Poetry Jam at the Sunflower House, 1406 Tennessee. Bring instruments, poems, and short stories.
THURSDAY
evolution of the social bees (Apidae) $ ^{*} $ at 1005 Hawth Hall.
12:30 p.m. -- "AIDS and HIV Infection: Impact on Public Health Care and Research a lecture with Charles Haworth graduate student, at 6031 Haworth Hall
2 p.m. — "Managing Corporate Culture" an executive lecture series with Kay Ellen Consolver, Mobli Corp. New York, in the Pioneer Room at the
4 p.m. — "Olas Eriksson: a 17th Century Visitor to Japan" by Seunbog Cho of the University of Stockholm in the Waihou Room at the Kansas Union.
4 p.m. — Michener Lectures on Social Biology "Kin selection and the
7 p.m. -- Campus Crusade for Christ meeting in the Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union.
7 p.m. "The American Past with
Calder Pickett on KANU-91.5 FM.
7 p.m. — Sisters Commuter Forum Panel Discussion "Maternity and Parental Leave" at the Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont.
FRIDAY
7:30 p.m. — Architecture lecture
"Recent Works of IKOY" by Ronald Keenberg, Winnipeg, Manitoba in 3139 Wescool Hall
9 a.m. — "Introduction to Word Perfect" an microcomputer workshop.
Call 864-0494 for class location and registration.
29
3:30 p.m. — "Outrageous Fortune" an SAU film in Wooldorf Auditorium at the Kansas Union. Also 7 and 9:30 p.m. Jan. 29; 3:30, 7 and 9:30 p.m. Jan. 30; 2 p.m. Jan. 31. Afternoon showings $1, evening $2.
7 p.m. "Opera is My Hobby" with James Seaver on KANU-91.5 FM
International Room at the Kansas Union.
p.m. - German Club Meeting at
Millennium.
3:30 p.m. — Philosophy lecture with Andrus Pork, Soviet Union in the
7:30 p.m. "Dim Sum" will be
held in the National Church
mini-museum, 124 South Fourth St.
8 p.m. - Observatory Open House
at 500 Lordley Hall, Call
864-3164 for more information
SATURDAY
8 a.m. — Men's volleyball tournament at Robinson Center. $6 entry fee.
8 p.m. — River City Review a talent competition to benefit the Seem-ToBe team.
30
Players at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts Street. Tickets at Liberty Hall, $10.
SUNDAY
Noon — Baseball camps for ninth and 11th grades. Call 684-7097 for more info.
2 p.m. — Children's art class with
Laura Allen and Dianne Shilliter. Ages 7-
12 at Spencer Museum of Art. Call 864-
4710 for more information.
2 p.m. — "The Art of Teaching"
gallery talk with Stephen Goldman, curator of prints, Henry Fullenwider, German; Ted Johnson, French and Italian, at the White Gallary. Spencer Museum of Art.
3:30 p.m. — University Symphony Orchestra with student soloists at the Crafton-Preyer Theatre, Murphy Hall, Tickets-for 452 Murphy Hall and at the door. Public $4, students and senior citizens $2.
3 p.m. — The KU Concerts on KANU-911 FM.
2:30 p.m. - Art museum tour at the Spencer of Art. Call 864-4710 for information.
31
Ideas for KANSAN MAGAZINE?
✓ Story ideas ✓ First person ✓ Fiction ✓ Reviews
Call 864-4810 Kjersti Moen, editor
Pulliam's Music House
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PENEY
Verdict read
Jury finds Kemp guilty of second-degree murder
Carl Kemp was found guilty in Douglas County District Court on Friday of second-degree murder in the death of his wife, Judy, whose body was found in a homemade wooden box behind his mobile home last September.
Kansan staff writer
By Ric Brack
A jury of seven men and five women returned the verdict about noon after almost 4 $ \frac{1}{2} $ hours of deliberation. Douglas County District Attorney Jim Flory had sought a first-degree murder conviction.
The second-degree conviction carries a minimum sentence of from five to 15 years and a maximum sentence of 20 years to life.
"I'm satisfied it was an appropriate and a just verdict in this case," Flory said when the verdict was read. He said he would ask Douglas County District Court Judge Ralph M. King to return the maximum sentence.
Sentencing is scheduled for Feb. 18
Flory said he thought there was sufficient evidence to show that Kemp had planned to kill his wife, but said premeditation in the case was difficult to prove beyond a reasonable doubt.
During the week-long trial, testimony was heard from two of Kemp's ex-wives and two of Judy Kemp's children. Witnesses said they had
seen Kemp beat his wife and had heard of death threats to her. Prosecution testimony tried to establish that Kemp had a history of violent marriages and that he beat his wife to death.
Kemp testified in his own behalf that he did not remember many details from Sept. 3, the day law enforcement authorities think Judy Kemp was killed. He admitted that he should have known that he never knew why he did it, and that he usually did not remember doing it.
When testimony ended late Thursday afternoon, King told the jury they could decide if Kemp was not guilty or guilty of first or second-degree murder, voluntary manslaughter or involuntary manslaughter. King said the only difference between the first and second degree murders were whether or not Kemp had killed his wife deliberately and with premeditation.
Dennis Loewen, who served as jury foreman, said the jury never had considered a verdict below the second-degree murder charge they
Kemp's attorney, Carl Fleming, said he would have to talk to Kemp before deciding whether to appeal the verdict.
YARNBARN CLASSES
1-3 p.m.
III. Starts Feb. 3 (Wed.),
$18.00 fee; 8 week class I. Starts Jan. 25 (Mon.).
II. Starts Jan. 31 (Sun.), 1-3 p.m.
III. Starts: Feb. 3 (Wed.)
BEGINNING KNITTING
V. Starts Feb. 11 (Thurs.).
7-9 p.m.
7-9 p.m.
II. Starts Jan. 31 (Sun.).
VI. Starts March 28 (Mon.).
7-9 p.m.
10-12 a.m.
V. Starts Feb. 11 (Thurs.)
7-9 p.m.
IV. Starts Feb. 8 (Mon.).
10, 12 a.m.
VII. Starts March 30 (Wed.)
7-9 p.m.
VI. Starts March 28 (Mon.),
VIII. Starts April 10 (Sun.).
1-3 p.m.
IX. Starts April 14 (Thurs.). 7-9 p.m.
ZIMMERMAN
CIRCULAR YOKE
$12.00 fee; 6 week class
I. Starts Jan. 25 (Tues.).
7-9 p.m.
II. Starts April 5 (Tues.).
8-9 p.m.
Cab talks resume
LACE SCARF
PEOPLE PROGRAM
$5.00, 1 session
Feb. 20 (Sat.).
10-12 a.m.
$8.00 fee; 3 sessions (alternate Sat.)
Starts Jan. 30 (Sat.).
10:13
BEGINNING KNITTING
125 (90 cm) & 8 mm alon
ARAN FISHERMAN KNITS
AARK HISHER
$8.00 tue, 3 weeks
Starts Feb. 21 (Sun.).
1-3 p.m.
ADVANCED
BEGINNING CROCHET
$16.00 fee; 8 week class
Starts Feb. 9 (Tues.).
7.9 p.m.
UNTITED LACE COLLARS
$5.00 fee; 1 session
March 13 (Sun.,
SKI SWEATER
$12.00 per week
Starts March 15 (Tues.)
7:90 am
$12.00 fee; 6 weeks
Starts March 26 (Sat.).
10-12 a.m.
FINISHING PROJECTS
Three options to be offered
COTTON T-TOP
DESIGN WITH COLOR
$18.00 fee; 8 week class
I. Starts Jan. 27 (Wed.).
7-9 p.m.
DROP SHOULDER
$5.00 fee; 1 session
March 13 (Sun.),
1-4 p.m.
$10.00 fee; 3 sessions (alternate Sun.)
Starts March 27 (Sun.).
1-4 p.m.
FINISHING TOUCHES
LAWING TOUCHES
$ 5.00 fee, 1 session
April 17 (Sun.).
1-4 p.m.
7-9 p.m.
II. Starts March 30 (Wed.).
7-9 p.m.
CROCHET DESIGN
FILET CROCHET
0.00 fee, 1 session
March 20 (Sun.).
1-5 p.m.
$10.00 fee; 4 weeks
Starts March 17 (Thurs.).
7-9 p.m.
Student Senate leaders met Frida with representatives from loca transportation companies to discuss alternatives to the Secure Cab service.
By a Kansan reporter
BEGINNING WEAVING
Secure Cab, a service sponsored by Student Senate, was canceled in December because the Union Cab Company raised its rates for each ride from $2.50 to $4.
Jason Krakow, student body president, and Matthew Kerr, Senate treasurer, met with Charles Bryan, coordinator of KU on Wheels; Robert Forbes, president of Corporate Coach of Lawrence Inc.; and
$35.00 fee; 1 weekend
I. Feb. 6-7 (Sat./Sun.).
18-50 F
II. March 5-6 (Sat./Sun.),
III. April 23-24 (Sat./Sun.).
10-5:30 p.m.
$20.00 fee; 1 weekea
March 26-27 (Sat./Sun.).
10-5.30 p.m.
EXPLORING TWILLS
TAPESTRY WEAVING
$45.00 fee; 1 weekend
Jan. 30-31 (Sat./Sun.).
10-4 p.m.
Record Convention
$40.00 fee; 2 weeks
Feb. 20 (Sat.) & Feb. 28 (Sun.).
10-5 p.m.
$10.00 fee; 4 weeks
I. Starts Feb. 10 (Wed.)
7-9 p.m.
II. Starts March 23 (Wed.).
Holiday Inn "Holidome" Lawrence, Kansas
RUG BRAIDING
SUNDAY, JANUARY 31st
BEGINNING SPINNING
establishing a shuttle system.
S. § 10 (42' s.) SESSION
I. Iverson (Sat.)
10-4 p.m.
II. April 2 (Sat.)
BOBINB LACE
$18.00 fee; 7 weeks
Starts Jan. 25 (Mon.).
9:7 p.m.
Chris Ogle, president of the Lawrence Bus Company.
Kerr said he would recommend three options to the Transportation Board. Those recommendations included:
Giant Selection of Rock - Oldies - Country - Jazz - Soundtracks - More! CDs - Albums - 45s - Videos - Out of Print - Collectables!
Record Convention
A new service would have to satisfy two needs, Krakow said.
- extending the nightly bus service
o downtown and to local tavern.
- charging students $1 each time
hey use Secure Cab.
9:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Easy to Find - 170 & West Lawrence Exit
*Establishing a shared system*
Krakw said the board would discuss the options in a meeting this week.
PRE-REGISTRATION REQUIRED
Plan to Attend Lawrence's Best Ever Record Sale!
BEGINNING BASKETRY
"We need to expand on late night transportation because, at this point, we only have two buses running during the week nights," he said. "We also need to cost-effectively get a person home safely."
II. Starts April 9 (Sat.).
9:30-12-30 p.m.; 2 weeks
$15.00 fee
1. Starts Feb. 4 (Thurs.).
6:30-8:30 p.m.; 3 weeks
2. Starts April 9 (Sat).
6:30-8:30 p.m.; 3 weeks
Door Prizes!
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EASTER EGG BASKET
$8.00 fee. 1 session
March 13 (Sun.).
1-5 p.m.
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6
Monday, January 25, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Med students leave program
By Elaine Woodford
Kansan staff writer
Kevin Norris was looking forward to helping small communities in Kansas receive better health care once he got out of medical school.
But now he is not so sure.
Norris may opt to repay the scholarship money Kansas has given him to entice him to work in the state, despite legislative efforts to make his medical obligation more palatable.
There were 50 scholarships available to students last year.
Norris, a first-year medical student from Hutchinson, is one of 43 students at the University of Kansas and accepted a Kansas Medical Scholarship.
The scholarship, offered by the state, provides tuition money and a degree.
In return, the student agrees to serve
underserved area of the state, for four years.
A bill recently approved by the Kansas House Appropriations Committee would allow students to repay their time obligations by working part time in state hospitals, prisons or other state institutions instead of in underserved areas. Universities would not be included.
"This bill would broaden the methods in which students could meet their obligations," said State Representative Bunten, chairman of the committee.
Bunten said that former medical students could work $2\frac{1}{2}$ a week in a state institution, such as the State Prison in Lansing or the State Mental Hospital in Osawatomie, for four years to complete their obligation.
"It is difficult to say if this will help to attract students to the program," he said. "We may attract none. It's difficult to attract doctors to state institutions."
Many students who take advantage of the Kansas Medical Scholarship pay the money back to the state rather than serve the time obligation, Bunton said.
A lot of the students pay off the scholarship. The state scholarship repayment method paid all of the scholarship money to be offered in 1989," he said.
The money must be paid back in one lump sum plus the interest that would have accrued over four years of medical school. Students have 30 days after graduation to pay off the scholarships if they decide to leave
the program.
Norris said that with recent restrictions placed on the scholarship by the state, he would probably be one of the students who paid the money back.
"I have a real problem with the KMS program. They added a clause that restricts the areas of medicine a student may specialize in," he said
The bill now requires that students specialize in primary care medicine, which includes the area of general practice, pediatrics or areas of internal medicine.
Norris said that at one point he was looking forward to serving in a small community in Kansas. But now that he is learning what his options are, he doesn't think the program is a wise investment for medical students.
Frozen head has its day in court Cryonics keeps bodies frozen under a much debated practice
The Associated Press
RIVERSIDE, Calif. — When a cryonics company froza Dora Kent's head last month, it was with the hope that the 83-year-old woman could someday be revived and live in a new body without the disease that plagued her first life.
But while the members of the Alcor Life Extension Foundation cast themselves as visionaries, others consider cyronics the work of mad scientists.
Cryonics is the freezing of the dead in hopes that technology will someday advance to the point that
the bodies can be revived — a practice scoffed at by most medical authorities.
On Jan. 7, Alcor President Michael Darwin and five members were handcuffed and taken in for questioning, and the Riverside County coroner demanded to examine Kent's severed head.
The physician who signed Kent's death certificate, indicating she died from pneumonia, is under review by the University of California, Los Angeles School of Medicine. The physician, a postgraduate research pathologist at the medical school, is an Alcor
member
The man who removed the woman's head — a research associate at the medical school — has been put on a paid leave of absence.
Alcor has refused to release Kent's head, and earlier this month received a temporary court order preventing the coroner from disturbing the frozen remains. A Feb. 1 hearing is set.
Coroner Ray Carrillo has found that few if any regulations exist to police cryonics firms.
field," said John Gill, executive officer of the state Cemetery Board, which licenses cemeteries and crematories.
Gill would like to see cryonies firms outlawed, but he added,
“Nothing is going to happen from a legislative and regulatory point of view until you have more proven abuses.”
"It's a big, new, unregulated
There have been abuses. In 1980, authorities, acting on the concerns of relatives, opened a tomb in Chatsworth, where four people were said to be frozen. Instead, they found rotting remains.
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April 1/26
Learn and practice skills to:
* Listen for the main points
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* Use notes for exam reviews
LISTENING AND NOTETAKING INTENSIVE WORKSHOP
Presented by the Student Assistance Center
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Applications now available for SUA Officer & Board Positions
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864-3477
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FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF KANSAS CITY
is seeking MANAGEMENT DEVELOPMENT Analysts and Interns and FINANCIAL EXAMINERS
Qualified candidates for the management development program should have a business-related or liberal arts major and be interested in a generalist position in a project-oriented environment. Good oral and written communications skills, strong analytical and leadership ability, creativity and initiative are essential.
Qualified candidates for positions as full-time financial examiners and summer interns should have Finance or Accounting majors, enjoy working in a project-oriented environment, and be willing to travel 30-60%. Good oral and written communication skills, strong analytical and leadership ability, creativity and initiative are essential.
We will be available for campus interviews
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1988
For more information, please contact your placement office or
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Kansas City, Missouri 64198
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, January 25, 1988
7
Nation/World
Wright willing to consider humanitarian contra aid
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — House Speaker Jim Wright said yesterday that he would be willing to consider new aid to the Nicaraguan contra rebels if there were adequate safeguards to see that it were used only for humanitarian purposes.
While he carefully stopped short of backing the idea of including weapons assistance in an escrow fund as a way of pressuring the Nicaraguan government to negotiate, the Democratic leader from Texas said such a proposal would merit consideration.
The key, he said, would be whether such a package would bar the Reagan administration from having the sole authority to release the funds if it determined the Sandinista government was not acting in good faith in peace talks.
"I'll talk about that if the president asks," he says. "I think it's something worthy of consideration."
Appearing on ABC-TV's "This Week With David Brinkley," Wright was asked whether he would support a contra aid package with weapons money held in escrow if that was President Reagan proposed.
Assistant Secretary of State Elliott Abrams, appearing earlier on the same show, declined to say whether the administration proposal would contain an escrow feature for lethal aid.
"We're still working on the package," Abrams said. "It will be a package that is very carefully tailored to support the negotiations."
BROTTT'S FATHER DIES:
Paul J. Babbitt Sr., the father of Democratic presidential candidate Bruce Babbitt, died Sunday in Flagstaff, Ariz. He was 89. Aides to Bruce Babbitt in New Hampshire said he would cancel his campaign appearances in that state Monday and his appearance at a debate in Boston on Monday night.
BABBITT'S FATHER DIES:
News Roundup
MINE SWEEPING: Britain, France and Italy have agreed to work together under a single command to sweep mines in the wartown Persian Gulf, Reagan administration sources said yesterday. The action comes as U.S. officials reportedly are looking for ways to cut the $1 million-a-day U.S. military effort in the gulf, where commercial shipping has been endangered by the 7-year-old Iran-Iraq war.
GENDER GAP: Ten million more women than men are expected to vote in 1988, according to a study released yesterday by a coalition of women's groups. The survey noted that 1980 marked the first time there was a significant difference in voting trends based on sex, but said the "gender gap" has grown with each round of elections.
DISSIDENT EMIGRATES: Alexander Lerner, a prominent Jewish dissident, arrived yesterday in Vienna, Austria, from Moscow and was reunited with his daughter after a 16-year battle to emigrate. Lerner, 74, was accompanied by his son, Admiral, his daughter-in-law and a 2-year-old grandmother, Julia, who were also allowed to emigrate. Lerner's wife died in 1981.
**TRAIN DERAILS:** An express train derailed early yesterday in the mountains of southern China. Ninety people were killed and 66 others seriously injured, the official Xinhua News Agency reported. It was China's sixth big transportation accident in a month. A total of 314 people have been killed.
SIEGE ENDS! A Shite Muslim militia has ended its siege of Palestinian refugee camps in Lebanon after 90 days, but the Palestinians are still encircled, this time by the Syrian army. The Syrians contended they are enforcing peace and denied that they wished to impose their own blockade on the strategically located camps.
SOUTH AFRICAN FUNERAL:
Anti-apartheid activists, diplomats and black leaders paid triumph yesterday to Percy Qoboza, one of South Africa's pre-eminent black journalists, at a funeral service restricted by police. Qoboza was editor of City Press, the country's largest-selling newspaper for blacks. Throughout his 25-year journalism career, he was a persistent critic of the white government's racial policies. He died Jan. 17, his 50th birthday, after suffering a heart attack.
DROUGHT EXPECTED: The new year is starting to look like a repeat of drought-plugged 1987 for much of the Pacific Northwest, experts say, and the consequences could be water rationing and losses to farms and fisheries.
Ski with SUA...
Doggon
Fun!
Winter Park, Spring Break '88
Travel, Lodging, and Rental $304
$75 will reserve your space Stop by SUA Office, 4th floor Union Sign up deadline — Tuesday, January 26
Application due by February 25,1988
Sponsored by District Student Exchange Fellowship District #567-ROTARY INTERNATIONAL
*Must be a resident of Northwest or North central Kansas.
Team Up For Intramural Basketball
To study abroad for 1988-89
For information and application blanks Contact: Dr. Bob Severance, Exec. Secretary Rt. 2, Beloit, Ks.67420
Graduate Study Scholarship $5000
Entry Fees: Trophy League $20.00 Recreation A League $15.00 Co-Recreation $15.00 Recreation B $10.00
Instant Scheduling in 308 Robinson
Tuesday, January 26 8:30-4:00 p.m.
Wednesday, January 27 8:30-4:00 p.m.
Sponsored by Recreation Services 864-3546
TONIGHT
Mandatory Manager's Meeting:
6:30 p.m.
North Gym
T
*play begins Feb. 1
AXΩ AΔΠ ΣK
KU Panhellenic
Association congratulates.. chapters with the top 3 scholastic averages
1) Kappa Alpha Theta
2) Pi Beta Phi
3) Alpha Delta Pi
chapter average includes pledge grades $ \textcircled{1} $
Top pledge class averages
1) Alpha Delta Pi
2) Kappa Alpha Theta
3) Pi Beta Phi
A $ \phi $ X $ \Omega $ $ \Gamma \phi $ B
CARRY OUT
and receive
$1. off
Order your favorite
Chinese dish on
House of Hupei's
carry out menu.
CALL
843-8070
This special
not in conjunction
with any other
House of Hupei
specials.
Offer good till
March 15,
1988.
2907 W. 6th St.
next to Econo Lodge
House of
HuPEI
House of Hupei
Funded, in part, by the Kansas Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts through their affiliation with the Mid-America Arts Alliance, a regional arts organization; additional support provided by the KU Student Activity Fee, Swarthout Society, and the KU Endowment Association; a University Arts Festival event.
8.00 p.m.
Tuesday, January 26, 1988
Hoch Auditorium
Half Price for KU Students
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reserved For reservations: 913 864-3982
Public $14 & $12; KU & K-12 Students $7 & $6; Senior
Citizens & Other Students: $13 & $11
Presented by The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series
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DANCE
Put your degree to work where it can do a world of good.
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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.
Sign up now for Peace Corps Interviews!
February 3rd and 4th
Placement Center, 110 Burge
Call 913-864-3624 for more information
The toughest job you'll ever love
PEACE CORPS youll ever love
8
Monday. January 25. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Officer killed with own gun
The Associated Press
DALLAS—A police officer making a routine traffic stop get into a scuffle with a homeless man, who took the officer's gun and shot him to death as he pleaded for his life Saturday, authorities and witnesses said.
Officer John Chase, 25, was shot in the chest and head shortly after 8:30 a.m. in front of a crowd of about 30 men. Officers from Chase's killer to shoot, said witnesses.
The suspect in the shooting, Carl Dudley Williams, 34, was shot by off-duty police officers who responded to the call. Williams died a few hours later at a Dallas hospital, police said.
Williams, described as a street person with a history of mental illness, began arguing with Chase, who was preparing to give a traffic ticket to the driver of a vehicle he had pulled over, said police spokesman Vicki Hawkins.
Williams, who did not know the driver of the car, began fighting with the officer and took his .44-caliber Magnum gun, said Hawkins.
Chase pleaded for his life before he was shot, Police Chilb Billy Prince said at a news conference. Prince said witnesses indicated some people in the crowd watching the incident urged the suspect to shoot the officer.
"The officer was saying. 'Don't shoot me. I will help you whatever way I can.' But the guy shot him in the head," said one witness, Melitha Johnson.
Witnesses said Williams then strolled down the street, dangling the gun from his hand.
Chase, a 2½-year veteran who had received three commendations from the police department, was pronounced dead at the scene. He was wearing a bullet-proof vest, but was shot in the face, witnesses said.
Williams had a criminal record with an arrest in August for assaulting a police officer.
Students & Faculty Only Leading Edge Model “D”TM
Greg Anrig Jr., the author of the MONEY article, said the magazine used the Reagans' 1986 tax return, which the president made public, and figured taxes for 1987 on the basis of the same income and same deductions.
Congress, according to the current issue of MONEY magazine.
Reagan plan cuts own income taxes
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WASHINGTON — President Reagan will pay about 15 percent less in 1987 federal income taxes than he paid in 1986 under tax legislation that he pushed through
The Associated Press
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University Daily Kansan / Monday. January 25, 1988
9
Bankruptcy increases Rise was less than state officials expected
The Associated Press
HAYS — A total of 7,287 bankruptcy cases were filed in Kansas in 1987, an increase over 1986, but fewer than the state's federal bankruptcy clerk had anticipated.
In 1986, 7.217 bankruptcy filings were made in the state's federal bankruptcy courts in Kansas City, Wichita and Topeka. In 1985, there were 5.503 cases.
"We were looking at a 20 percent increase," Brenner said. "Then it slowed substantially toward the latter part of the year in all three locations."
The 1987 increase fell short of what Russell Brenner, clerk of the federal bankruptcy courts in Kansas, had expected.
Brenner said uncertainty in the agriculture, oil and aerospace industries prevented him from making any prediction for the number of bankruptty filings in 1988.
Brenner was concerned that the closing of General Motors' Leeds plant in Kansas City, Mo., which put 1,600 people out of work, could have an effect.
"That could have an impact on Kansas City and Topeka," he said. "Usually, when you have something like that happen, it has a domino effect. I would anticipate having an increase in filings."
As in previous years, the Wichita court handled the largest number of bankruptcy cases in 1987.
The Wichita office received a total of 3,543 cases, Brenner said. That compares to the 1,839 cases that were filed in Topeka and the 1,905 cases filed in Kansas City.
Joe Wilkins III/KANSAN
Reference & Information
Direct Circulation
Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for academic affairs, stands next to the new Online Catalog computer system. The system was introduced at a ribbon-cutting ceremony Friday at Watson Library.
Library file system unveiled
By Jill Jess
Kansan staff writer
Amid ceremony and speeches.
Watson Library's online catalog
system opened officially Friday
afternoon,
"For official purposes, this is day one," said Clinton Howard, assistant dean for technical services.
Although the terminals for the catalog system have been used since November, the activities of the ceremonial beginning of the system.
About 20 percent, or 400,000, of the library's books are listed on the system. Eventually, Howard Koehler should be recorded on the computers.
The periodicals index also would be added to the catalog system as
well as circulation status, Howard said.
Students can call up books by author, subject, title or call number. A "help" function explains how the computers work.
Hardware for the computer system cost about $105,000 and programming cost about $60,000.
"If we had any scruples, we would not ask for any more money for awhile." Howard said. "But, we don't."
After speeches by Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, and Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for academic affairs, Mary Roach, assistant head of the cataloging department, cut the blue and red ribbon on one of the terminals. Then, John Miller, library analyst,
called up the ceremonial first record.
"It's good when you christen something new like this to stress the continuity with the old, so the first record I'd like to call up is for the book whose gard was the last card filled," Miller said.
Appropriately, the book was "By the Sweat of Their Brow", by Angela V. John.
Howard said he was proud of the catalog system and the work that had gone into preparing it.
"I'm happy to be able to present this information in a form that we've wanted to all along and in a way we're really proud of," he said.
ACE
The Association of Collegiate Entrepreneurs
The ACE chapter is alive and thriving this semester at the University of Kansas. The organization is one of over 500 internationally affiliated college chapters that consist of students who either currently own their own business or have interest in doing so in the future.
ACE would like to invite students from every school to attend our first general meeting this Thursday, January 28 at 7 p.m. in the Pioneer Room Level 3, Burge Union. Kevin Wickliff from legal services will make a presentation on the legal aspects of entrepreneurship.
ACE provides a unique opportunity for all members to meet entrepreneurs from both the local and national levels through a series of "Guest Lectures" sponsored solely by ACE. Through this process, the organization provides a communication network between student members and the business world.
For more information and meeting location call 843-3277
Don't just take history- MAKE HISTORY!
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Now with KU 30 Day Price Guaranty Ask for Details
With this ad, receive a free copy of Twin spreadsheet, a Lotus 1-2-3 $ \textcircled{r} $ look-a-like.
COMPUTER OUTLET
KU's #1 supplier of the Leading Edge Personal Computer just made the system even more attractive...
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Something's Developing!
KU
KU
Why go off campus to have your film processed when you have all the photographic capabilities right
in your own Kansas Union Bookstores. For a normal roll of 36 exposures, you could drop it off on your way to class before noon, then
pick it up around three the next day. At the KU Bookstores, we are here for your convenience... so drop in and see what develops!
12 prints - $1.49
15 prints - $ 1.99
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Copy prints - 33 cents each
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10
Mondav. January 25. 1988 / University Daliv Kansan
Polls show three-way Iowa race
The Associated Press
Two polls released during the weekend showed Sen. Gary Hart's support slipping in both New Hampshire and Iowa, and a tight three-way race developing in Iowa.
In a Des Moines Register poll published verysteady, Rep. Richard Gephardt, Sen. Paul Simon and Gov. Michael Dukakis have moved into a virtual dead heat atop the Democratic presidential field, two weeks before Iowa's crucial precinct caucuses.
In New Hampshire, a Los Angles Times poll showed Dukakis and Vice President George Bush are leading in their respective party's campaigns.
The Iowa poll showed Gephardt with the backing of 19 percent of those surveyed, followed by Dukakis with 18 percent and Simon with 17 percent. The poll has a 4.9 percent margin of error, meaning any of those three candidates could actually be in the lead.
Hart, who had led in polls published just after his dramatic reentry into the race last month, fell to 13 percent in the Iowa poll. Surveys earlier in the week conducted by the Los Angeles Times and NBC News also showed Hart's support slipping in Iowa.
Jesse Jackson got the support of 11 percent of those surveyed in the latest poll, former Arizona Gov. Bruce Babbitt received 10 percent, and 12 percent said they were undecided. Tennessee Sen. Albert Gore Jr., who has pulled his campaign out of Iowa to concentrate on his native South, got less than 1 percent.
ENOUGH
U.S.
TO
Protester
Sadique Abu-obbid, Jerusalem junior, holds the Palestine flag in front of Strong Hall during a protest march promoted by the Islamic Center of Lawrence. About 50 persons participated in the march Friday afternoon to protest recent violence in the Israeli-occupied territories of the Gaza Strip and the West Bank.
Cosby performance boosts Jackson campaign
The Associated Press
IOWA CITY, Iowa — Comedian Bill Cosby came to the political proving ground of Iowa for a two-hour benefit for Jesse Jackson yesterday.
Cosby played to an appreciative crowd of 3,000. The turnout for the fund-raiser was below the 15,000
"These funds go to presidential candidate Jesse Jackson, who was described in one of the New York papers this morning when they were putting down odds for candidates' chances to win, 10-to-1 for Jackson. They gave the reason why. They called him a celebrity." Cosby said
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capacity of the University of Iowa arena. Osby said it was due to the political nature of his visit. "Ordinar-ly historically, this would be full." he said.
Campaign officials said Cosby raised about $30,000. Tickets were $17.50 for adults and $12.50 for students.
CALL
TRAVEL
BOY MASONS
2721 West Sixth St. Suite C
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
(913) 841-9808
Wescoe Duplicating Services 1520 Wescoe
Hours: 7:00-5:00 (open during lunch)
Wescoe duplicating has machines with the following features:
Xerox 9500:
dark bold print
- photo contrast (excellent on photographs)
- unichip rosetts (61% 402%)
- copies 1 sided original 2 sided copy
- paste-up setting (reduces paste-up lines)
Xerox 1090:
- capacity to staple up to 50 pages
- variable reduction (65% - 155%)
- copies 1 ledged original 2 sided copy
- copies 1 sided original;2 sided cop.
- copies 2 sided original;2 sided copy.
Both machines print only $8\frac{1}{2}$ x 11 and $8\frac{1}{2}$ x 14 paper or cardstock
University of Kansas Printing Services
PLACEMENT CENTER
When it comes time to begin a job search. K.U. students get help from K.U.'s Career Planning and Placement Office in THE BURGE UNION.
THE BURGE UNION WHAT A GREAT IDEA!
- A VCR and an AM-FM cassette recorder valued at $700 were taken between 11 p.m. Saturday and 3 a.m. yesterday from a residence police reported.
RENTERS:
Could this happen to you?
- A 19-inch television valued at $500 was taken between 10:30 p.m. Saturday and 3:15 a.m. yesterday from a residence police reported.
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841-2981
Your personal items can be protected for as little as:
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FARMERS INSURANCE GROUP
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SCoRMEBE MEMBERS:
The first general meeting of 1988 will be on Monday, Jan.25, in room 1046 Learned Hall 7:00 p.m.
MAN'S WORKS FOR SALVATION
keeping the 10 Commandments Baptism
Gifts of Charity Prayers
Doing One's Best Regular Church Attendance
Leading A "Good" Life Tithing
Holy Communion Confirmation Penances Believing in God
WARNING! NO WORKS OF OUR OWN RIGHTEOUSNESS
WILL EVER GIVE US SALVATION
SALVATION ONLY THROUGH TRUSTING IN THE FINISHED WORK OF
JESUS CHRIST ON THE CROSS FOR THE FORGIVENESS OF SIN
Titus 3.5a "Not of WORKS OF RIGHTEOISINESS which we have done,
but according to his mercy he救 us." ...
Here's how
ADMIT You Are A Sinner
Romans 3/23 "For all have sinned and come short of the glory of God."
ADMIT You Are A Sinner
Romans 3:23 "For all have sinned and have been guilty of the glory of God."
REALIZE Punishment For Sin Is Eternal Damnation
Romans 6:23a "For the wages of sin is death."
ACCEPT Christ's Work On The Cross As A Substitute For Your Sin
I Cointhians 6.21a "He for hath made him to sat for us..."
BELIEVE On The Finished Work Of The Cross
John 1:12 "For as many as received him, to them gave he power to become
the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name."
CALL Upon the Lord To Come Into Your Heart And Save You Romans 10.13 For autoschroessen call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved.
REPEP FROM Your Sins And Turn Your Life Over To Christ
ISBN 978-1-50724-293-6
**REPEAT** From Your Sins And Turn Your Lite Over to Christ
II Peter 3:9 "The Lord is not slack concerning his promise, not telling that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance.
"So profit ye in the earth before whole world, and lose his sun soul!"12
Heresy 2:9 "WHO SHALL WE EVEN BE IF WE NEED TO GO ABALE SALAVATION?"
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Please present this coupon before ordering.
Limit one coupon per customer.
Not to be used with other coupons or offers.
Void where prohibited by law.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, January 25, 1988
11
Sports
Irish spoil Jayhawks' trip
By Elaine Sung
Kansan sports writer
Kansas coach Larry Brown said he thought forward Danny Manning did not see the ball enough on Saturday afternoon.
And Notre Dame's guard David Rivers saw too much of it.
"We talked about denying the ball to Rivers and getting the ball to Danny, but then our guards shoot a 28 or 18-footer after only one pass," Brown said.
Rivers was indeed denied the ball in the field, shooting only seven for 16. But when it went down to the last minute, it was Rivers' 14-for-15 free throw shooting that gave Notre Dame its 80.76 victory over Kansas.
The Jayhawks had a chance to tie the game with 15 seconds left in the game when Manning went to the line. But he missed the front end of a one-and-one and the rebound was kicked out-of-bounds by forward Chris Pipi
Rivers returned the favor by binking both his free throws with 12 seconds left, giving the Irish a four-point advantage. 78-74.
Guard Lincoln Minor's jump shot with 6 seconds left pulled the Jayhawks back within two, and Brown was on a timeout to regroup the top men.
Kansas' only hope was to foul a Notre Dame player, preferably a poor free-throw shooter, regain possession and tie the game with a two-
point basket or win with a three-point shot.
But Rivers was fouled again, this time by guard Kevin Pritchard, and capped the victory with two more flawless free throws.
"We felt going in, we could beat Kansas," Rivers said. "Even when they took an early lead we didn't back down."
The Jayhawks are now 12-5 and reenter their Big Eight schedule with an away game on Wednesday against Nebraska.
Kansas went into Saturday's game as a slight underdog, but the Jayhawks surprised the more than 11,000 Irish fans at the Joyce Athletic and Convocation Center by piling in six unanswered points to open the game.
Notre Dame's first points came with a three-pointer from Rivers, hereday to the fans with a shower of shots that stopped the game temporarily.
The Irish had some problems early on, trailing the Jayhawks the entire first half. They were unable to connect on field goals and were shooting just over 30 percent in the first 10 minutes.
Notre Dame improved on that by halftime, shooting 46 percent, but also committed three times as many turnovers as Kansas in the first half.
The statistics turned against the Jayhawks in the second half, however. Kansas was outbounded 26-22, yet the tell-tale sign of defeat was in
the fouls column, where the Jayhawks committed 24 to Notre Dame's 14.
Forward Milt Newton turned in another excellent performance, sinking three out of four three-point shots, finishing with a total of 15 points and seven rebounds.
Manning, who led the Jayhawks with 22 points and nine rebounds, was double-teamed much of the time, leaving forward Keith Harris open to take a few shots.
Station PresidenthaNKANSAN
Harris, finishing with seven points,
scored several key baskets to extend
their lead.
But it took the Irish only 7 minutes to climb up, soewhat 19 points and hold in place.
That lead was extended to 11 early in the second half with Manning's drive inside to make the score 55-44.
Sophomore guard Jamere Jackson's three-point play signaled Notre Dame's comeback, cutting the lead to 58-53. Piper sank his jump shot but Manning missed and ended of a score from Irish tools control to score six consecutively.
KA
Center Gary Voe tied it all at 61, and gave Notre Dame its first lead of the game when he completed his three-point play with more than 8 minutes left.
Kevin Pritchard, Kansas guard, fouls David Rivers, Notre Dame guard, in the closing seconds of the game. Rivers sank the two ensuing free throws that assured the victory.
Neither team could establish a definite lead. Kansas tied the game again at 65 with an alley-oop play by Manning, and Newton's jump shot gave the Jayhawks a two-point advantage.
The Irish got their biggest lead in the game with 2:16 left in the second half when Rivers completed both of their one-and-one, putting the score at 72-69.
Pritchard chuck his three-pointer to tie the game back up, and Voce's baseline jump shot gave the Irish what turned out to be their final lead.
The Associated Press supplied some information for this story.
Kansas 76
Notre Dame 80
Kansas
| | M | FG | FT | R | A | I | F |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Manning | 40 | 9-13 | 4-6 | 9 | 4 | 1 | 22 |
| Piper | 30 | 2-8 | 0-0 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 4 |
| Newton | 30 | 2-8 | 0-1 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 4 |
| Livingston | 26 | 2-3 | 0-0 | 1 | 6 | 4 | 4 |
| Pritchard | 26 | 2-3 | 0-0 | 1 | 6 | 4 | 4 |
| Minor | 20 | 2-6 | 2-2 | 1 | 4 | 2 | 6 |
| Barry | 6 | 0-0 | 1-2 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 3 |
| Measucci | 4 | 4 | 1-2 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 3 |
| Harris | 15 | 3-4 | 1-2 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 7 |
| Totals | | 31-57 | 9-14 | 22 | 19 | 24 | 76 |
point goals 5-9 (Newton 3)- Blocked Shots:
04 (Manning 3) Turnovers 10 (Mins 3)
15 (Bishop 3) Turnovers 15 (Mins 3)
| | M | FG | FT | A | R | F | T |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Stevenson | 36 | 7-9 | 1-2 | 1 | 4 | 13 | 5 |
| Kenyon | 39 | 9-0 | 3-8 | 2 | 1 | 13 | 15 |
| Padock | 8 | 0-0 | 3-4 | 1 | 1 | 13 | 15 |
| Rivers | 38 | 7-16 | 1-4 | 5 | 7 | 39 | 21 |
| Jackson | 31 | 3-8 | 2-3 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 8 |
| Jackson | 31 | 4-8 | 2-3 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 8 |
| Singleton | 2 | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Connor | 11 | 1-1 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Robinson | 11 | 1-1 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| | 27:48 | 25:32 | 16:12 | 12 | 14 | 10 |
Percentages: FG: 551, FT: 781. Three-point goals: 1-(Rivers 4) Turnovers: 13 (Stevenson 6) Steals: 6 (Robinson 3) Technician Moon
Half: Kansas 41-36. Officials: Leimbach, Reynolds, Eichhorst.
KANS
2
RISD
50
12
Staton Breidenthal KANSAN
Notre Dame forward Keith Robinson is surrounded by Kansas players Danning Manning, foward; Milt Newton, forward; and Otis Livingston, guard. The Irish defeated the Jayhawks, 80-76.
Jayhawk men's tennis team has successful season opener
By Tom Stinson
Kansan sports writer
The Kansas men's tennis team opened its spring season this weekend with two impressive victories at Alavar Maracq Club.
Kansas, playing in team competition for the first time this season, defeated Ball State 5-4 on Friday and led Minnesota 6-3 on Saturday.
"This is the first time we've beaten Minnesota since I've been here," said head coach Scott Perelman. "This is also one of the few times we've ever beaten a ranked team.
"To play these two matches back-to-back is a really good showing. This gives us good momentum for next weekend."
The Jayhawks' doubles play highlighted the victory over Minnesota with Kansas sweeping all three doubles matches. The squads split the six singles matches
Walker and Craig Wildey, John Falbo and Larry Pascal, and Jim Secrest and Jeff Gross each won for the Javhawks.
In singles play, Walker defeated Casey Merickle in two sets and Wildey defeated Anthony Cruz 4-6, 7-6. However, it was Secrest's victory over Mathias Olsson 4-6, 6-4 in the second round, which was the key to the team's victory.
"He was just great." Perelman said. "That match swung the whole meet our way."
The doubles teams of Chris
Secrest came back to win the final set of the match in a tiebreaker after trailing 5-2.
In other singles play, Falbo lost to Jonas Svensson, Pascal lost to Jason Hall and Gross was defeated by Kevin Werwie.
Against Ball State, Kansas relied on a victory in the number- three doubles match to seal the victory. Secrest and Gross defeated Todd Kafka and Brian DeVirgilio 6-4, 6-7, 6-3 in the night's final match.
Also winning against Ball State was Falbo, Secrest, Pascal and Gross. Only Falbo's match against Tod Hershey went three sets.
"We played better tonight as a team." Perelman said Saturday. "We were very fortunate to win Friday. They gave us all we could handle. We came out scared and tentative against Ball State, but against Minnesota we played with more confidence, which showed in the results."
Perleman said playing with three newcomers was one of the reasons the Jayhawks came out tentative. Freshmen Falbo and Gross were playing in their first college matches, and Secrest had been little used in his first two years.
"We learned a lot," Wildey said.
"We could've played better against Ball State, but we still dug it out. And against Minnesota, we jumped on them right away and got the momentum going for us."
KU women fall 80-64 to Cornhuskers
By Keith Stroker
Kansan sports writer
Things don't seem to be getting any easier for the Kansas women's basketball team.
This phrase summed up how coach Marian Washington felt shortly after the Jayhawks' game Saturday with the Nebraska Cornhuskers at Allen Field House. Washington and Kansas forward Lisa Baker received technical fouls when they questioned several calls by the officials.
Outscored 20-7 at the free-throw line, Kansas, now 11-6 overall and 1-3 in the Big Eight Conference, lost for 28 points at home, falling to Nebraska 84-64.
The Jayhawks face the Oklahoma State Cowgirls at 7 p.m. Wednesday at the field house. The Cowgirls are tied for second place in the conference with the Missouri Tigers at 3-1, and then the Dallas Cowboys, howtough the road ahead will be.
Washington was referring to the loss of two key players to injury. Jackie Martin, plagued by injuries all season, ruptured her achilles tendon Wednesday at Colorado and is out for the season. The senior forward finished her Kansas career as the fifth best rebounder in school history with 713 and third best in steals with 158. She also ranks high in many other categories.
Deborah Richardson is still out of the Jayhawks lineup after injuring her knee in practice a week and a half ago. The junior center had arthroscopic surgery a week ago and should return to play soon. She leads the Big Eight with 34 blocked shots.
"Last year, through the first nine games of the Big Eight, we were 4-5." Washington said. "I don't want to be in that position again. We'll just work to work with the personnel we have and try and turn this thing around."
Nebraska, 14-2 overall and 4-0 in the conference, won for only the second time in 11 games at Kansas. Their previous win came Jan. 17, 1976, when they defeated the Jayhawks 50-45.
In an 82-72 victory over Kansas State last Wednesday night, Ivy scored 25 points and became the leading scorer in Nebraska women's basketball history with 1,880 points, passing Debra Powell's 1,843 career time.
The Cornhuskers were led by reserves Sabrinia Brooks, with 20 points, and Ann Halsey with 16. Guard Amy Stephens also added 16 points for Nebraska. Senior forward Maurice Ivy was held to just 13 points, 14 below her conference average.
"This game was a momentum builder for us," Ivy said. "This was the beginning of a three-game road that required us to get us off to a good start."
"We executed well today and played as a team," Beck said. "But the race isn't over yet. There is not a poor team in the conference."
4. 10, Strengthen 3. 0/6; Bend 2. 0/4; Load 2. 0/4
Bend 2. 0/4; Bend 2. 0/4; Bend 2. 0/4; Bend 2. 0/4;
Strengthen 3. 0/6; Bend 2. 0/4; Load 2. 0/4; Load 2. 0/
4;
The Jayhawks were led by Sandy Shaw, Lynn Page, and Lisa Dougherty, with 10 points apiece.
Nebraska 80, Kansas 64
Stephene 12-6-13 Horns 04-4-4, Bolt 4-1-2, Buffalo 0-6-0,
George 5-6-4, Kahine 14-6-1, Tieke 7-3-2, Brooks 8-6-7, Hubert 8-2-2, Fline 9-0.0, Smith 0-0.0, Wilson 0-0,
Totals 31-20 21-70
31
35
Dale Fulkerson/KANSAN
Michelle Arnold, Kansas guard, is pressured by Maurice Ivy, Nebraska guard, during second period action.
Wilander beats Cash in Australian Open
In a 4½-hour match delayed twice by rain, Wilander 23, rallied from two sets to one in his fifth Grand Slam title.
MELBOURNE, Australia — Mats Wilander of Sweden captured his third Australian Open title Sunday with a 6-3, 6-7, 3-6, 6-1, 8-6 victory over Pete Kang, who was trying to become the first native to win the championship since 1976.
The match was watched by a sellout crowd 15,000 at the new $800 king box.
The Associated Press
The players were on court for 4 hours and 28 minutes. Rain stoppages accounted for another 52 minutes.
Wilander, who won the Australian
open in 1893 and 1894 collected
$200,000.
Wilander ended a run of defeats in his last three Grand Slam finals.
Cash was beaten in the final for the second successive year. Last year, he lost to Sweden's Stefan Edberg in five sets.
Swedish players have won the last five men's singles titles at the Australian Open. Edberg won the two titles and Gilles Simon toptowers the two years prior to that.
Wilander, the third seed, collected the 27th Grand Prix singles title of his career. He was playing in his ninth Grand Slam final.
In the Swede broke Cash's serve in
"It was a great match," Wilander said. "Pat showed great sportsman-
Wilander, who was cheered by hundreds of Swedish fans, many with their faces painted in the colors of the band. A group set, set, but Cash came back to lead 3.
His persistence, poise and placement proved more than a match for her.
the 13th game of the decisive set, then held serve at love to clinch the victory.
Cash, the fourth seed and ranked seventh in the world, was seeking the sixth singles title of his career and his second Grand Slam title. He won Wimbledon last year and was seeking to become the first Australian to win the title here since Mark Edmondson in 1976.
The serve-and-volleyer, playing in front of his hometown crowd, defeated the world's top player, Ivan Lendl of Czechoslovakia in the semifinals, while Wilander downed Edberg.
Steffi Graf won the women's title on Saturday, capturing her second Grand Slam crown with a 6-1, 7-6 (7-4) victory over Chris Evert.
It was the first step on the road to capturing tennis' four major tournaments.
Wilander won the men's title with steady, conservative play.
He got 76 percent of his first serves in, compared to 60 percent for Cash, who had 48 unforced errors to 21 for Wilander.
Wilander double-faulted only twice, but Cash had nine double-faults. Cash forced the five sets by charging the net, winning 85 points there to 38 for Wilander.
Gusty winds and the two rain delays made conditions difficult for birds.
Wilander led by a set and 4-1 at the first enforced break and had two points for 5-1 after the resumption, but the momentum swung Cash's way.
12
Monday, January 25, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
SportsMonday
Big Eight hoop newcomers handle pressure
Rv Tom Stinson
Kansan sports writer
So much importance is placed on an incoming basketball recruiting class. Bolstered by new recruits, a team can become ready to compete with anyone after signing some high school or junior college standouts.
So much pressure on so many untested players.
But the latest men's basketball newcomer class in the Big Eight seems to be handling the pressure, as well as some of the best competition the league has to offer.
Heading the list of future All-Big Eight candidates is Oklahoma junior
guard Mookie Blaylock.
Blaylock is one junior college transfer who is making an impact in the league this season. Others include Oklahoma State's John McCoy and Missouri's Byron McCoy, who transferred from Arkansas.
"With Mookie we knew we had a better player than most." Oklahoma assistant coach Mike Mims said. "He has done something remarkable and tremendous contribution this year."
Blaylock, a transfer from Midland Junior College in Texas, currently leads the nation in steals with 4.7 game, and he averages 17.8 points
per game for the Sooners.
Oklahoma recruited junior college players heavily last year, a trend that is growing with each major college basketball recruiting season. Many people refer to such recruiting as the quick-fix for rebuilding teams.
Of six 1987 Sooner recruits, only one was a high school senior.
"With junior colleges you've got players who had 60 games in two years," Oklahoma assistant coach Mike Mims said. "That puts them in the high school players who played maybe 40 games in two years."
Dave Farrar, basketball coach at
Hutchinson Community College, said the bottom line to recruiting a junior college player was the athletes' academic success and consistent play during his first two years of college.
Kansas State coach Lon Kruger, the 1972 Big Eight Newcomer of the Year, said he anticipated a junior college player to contribute earlier than other recruits. However, Kruger added that every player had a transitional period from his previous program.
Kansas State's McCoy averages 11.1 points and 6.1 rebounds per game, but Kruger said that McCoy
was just beginning to feel comfort able with the new program
"McCoy wasn't playing much earlier in the season," Kruger said. "But junior college players are more prepared to contribute today than in the past because of the quality of junior college coaching. So, after a transi- tion from an junior recruiting a contribution from a junior college recruit earlier."
However, the traditional high school recruit is still holding his own in the league. Oklahoma State's Richard Dumas, Missouri's Doug Smith and Nebraska's Beau Reid are consistently playing well in arenas
around the Midwest
Dumas is leading the Cowboys in both scoring and rebounding with 15.5 points and 7.1 rebounds per game. Smith is averaging 10.1 points and 6.2 rebounds per game for the Tigers.
Reid is leading a crop of eight Nebraska newcomers with 8.9 points and 4.4 rebounds per game.
Nebraska coach Danny Nee said,
"The change is really hard on freshmen. In their first year, they are adjusting academically, socially and athletically. And we understand that. So we try to keep as much pressure
MUNICIPAL TENNIS
See NEWCOMERS, p. 13, col. 1
Ultimate Frisbee is catching on
By Brenda Flory
Special to the Kansan
Zontal player Matt Logan defends a pass. The Lawrence-based Zontals defeated the Kansas City Strip 19-10 Saturday in Ultimate Frisbee competition.
OVERLAND PARK — It's a mix between basketball, soccer and Frisbee. Although it's physically demanding, it's one of the most laid-back, friendliest sports around.
The sport, becoming increasingly popular on many college campuses, is Ultimate, or team Frisbee.
Last weekend the University of Kansas' Ultimate team was among the 14 men's teams who came from all over the United States to keep up the Ultimate spirit as the teams participated at the Indoor Ultimate Frisbee Championship in Overland Park.
"The players are here for the love of the game," said John Brooks, a world freestyle Frisbee champion. Brooks helped coordinate the tournament.
"Many love the sport so much that they don't let anything get in the way of it," he said.
Most of the players were from the Midwest, but one team, who spent more than $1500 on airfare, traveled at their own expense from New York. Another team drove from Winona, Minn.
Brooks said Ultimate has increased in popularity in the '80s, especially on college campuses, and that in the '90s he thought the sport might eventually draw crowds. In recently, there are more than 2,900 college including non-college teams, including women's teams.
David Lam, Tulsa, Oka, senior,
said the name was a combination
of the word "horror" and the word
"zontal," which is the term
describing a player diving for the
Frisbee.
Ultimate, first developed in the United States in 1969, didn't get underway at KU until 1981. Grudy Boles, a former KU student, is considered the grandfather of KU's team, the HorrorZontals.
"Horror is actually short for horrible," Iam said. "You see, we were so bad in the beginning that we spent a lot of our time diving for the Frisbee. So we decided to combine the two words."
Now they often call themselves the Zontals.
The past four years, the KU team has made it to the college national, and twice they won the regional championship.
Athletic soccer, rules change when an Ultimate is brought inside. It involves seven players on an outdoor team and five on an indoor team. Time limits are placed on indoor competition where teams play a 45-minute game. There is no time limit on outdoor games. Instead, the players of both teams decide the number of points they
will play to. The first team to reach that number wins.
"I like outdoor competition better because I don't have to worry about the clock," said Stuart "Stuba" Price, Fairway senior.
A game of Ultimate starts out with the defense throwing the Frisbee to the offense, which is similar to the kick-off in football. The team succeeds by the offensive players pass the Frisbee in an effort to get it to a goal.
Like basketball, each player has a "man" to keep track of throughout the game. Once a player
receives the Frisbee, he can only take three steps and then has eight seconds to get rid of it in indoor competition and 10 seconds in outdoor competition.
The defensive player starts counting out loud once the offensive player has taken the three steps. If the offensive player exceeds the time limit, the disc comes to a halt and the defensive player takes more than three steps it is considered a violation of danger.
Unlike other sports, though, a fan will never hear whistles when
a violation has taken place.
"It's a sport specifically geared toward the players." Price said. "You rely on the honor system." He said the rulebook even explains that the spirit of the game must not be hindered by any conflicts. Thus, the rules bend to where a friendly relationship is maintained in competition.
The Horror Zontals, who won two of their six matches this weekend, did not qualify for finals, but said they weren't disappointed.
KU hoping to gain late signing edge
By Mike Considine
Special to the Kansan
On Feb. 8, something resembling the Oklahoma land rush will take place across the country. It won't be as dramatic, but it should be equally competitive.
A wave of college men's basketball recruiters will blanket the land to lay claim to the best unsigned high school and junior college players.
Expect Kansas to be in the thick of
during the first six months of 2019.
Noy.
"When you don't sign kids early, it puts on added pressure to sign good kids in the spring," said Kansas assistant Coach Alvin Gentry.
It won't be easy to make up for lost time.
Bob Gibbons, who publishes All-Star Sports Publications, a recruiting newsletter, said 89 of his pre-season top 100 high school players had signed in November. Gibbons said five of the remaining 11 were unlikely to meet academic eligibility requirements.
Still, Gibbons said there were a number of good players available because many high school and junior college players develop late or prove better than expected.
"I feel very positive about what I'm seeing as I travel around the country," he said. "There are a lot of people there who weren't recognized early."
The Jayhawks' shopping list includes a power forward, a scoring small forward and a point guard, a defensive player and a fourth player might also be signed.
Gentry said Kansas was recruiting from 10 to 12 high school players and 18 to 24 college players.
One key player the Jayhawks are recruiting is 6-foot-3 guard Sean Tunstall, who has helped St. Louis Vashon High School to the No. 5 ranking in USA Today's nationwide poll. Tunstall can play either guard or linebacker and has excellent shooter with three-point range. Gibbons said.
"If they get a kid like Tunstall, who is having an outstanding year, that could really make their recruiting," he said. "He's really shown people he's much better than anticipated."
Gibbons said Tunstall could be better than Kansas City high school guard Anthony Peeler, who chose Missouri over Kansas in November. He was recruiting services ranked Peeler as the top high school offguard.
Gibbons said Dexter Boney of Wilmington (Del.) Brandwine High School was deciding between Kansas, Villanova and Seton Hall. Boney excels in the transition game and on defense
At power forward,Chishaw Lovelace of Ft. Wayne (Ind.) Northrup High
'I feel very positive about what I'm seeing as I travel around the country. There are a lot of good players out there who weren't recognized early.'
Bob Gibbons
publisher, All-Star Sports Publications
"He has all the skills you could ask for in an excellent athlete," Gibbons said. "He needs to play consistently hard. His game is more finesse than power right now."
School has narrowed his choices to Kansas and Purdue, Gibbons said. Lovelace is thin at 6-9 and 195 pounds but has good mobility and shot-blocking ability.
The Jayhawks are in the running for Maurice Brittain of second-ranked Hutchinson Community College. Hutchinson coach Dave Darrar said Brittain, a 6-8 power forward, was also considered DePaul, Minnesota, Indiana, Kentucky and Georgia.
Britain averages 11.6 points, 7.7 rebounds and 3 assists per game.
"Passing and rebounding are definitely his best skills." Farrar said. He's extremely mobile. He would be in Larry's approach to defense.
Herman Henry, a teammate of Lincoln Minor at Midland Junior College, is a late bloomer at small forward. Henry, 6-6, 180 pounds, averaged 9.7 points and 5.1 assists as a reserve on Midland's national championship team, but has emerged as a sophomore.
"He's an unknown who needs
Ball saul. But he is a
Apple, Marshmallow and then
A new NCAA rule that limits the number of games recruiters' can watch has made recruiting a more speculative business. Coaches can only evaluate prospective recruits during two "contact periods." The first was Dec. 11-31 and the last is Feb. 8-29.
"We still haven't had an opportunity to see all the people play who we're really interested in recruiting." Gentry said. "We've had to do a lot more over the telephone. We're in the dark a little bit more. I don't feel like we've covered everything."
Ball said the rule, which was intended to cut costs, will have several undesired side effects — like the "land rush" atmosphere.
"You are going to see a lot more recruiting mistakes than ever before," he said. "Schools are going to be signing players on reputation. That eventually creates a lot more transfers and a lot more hard feelings."
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13
University Daily Kansan / Mondav. Januav 25.1988
Swim teams suffer setbacks at SMU
By Tom Stinson
Kansan sports writer
Last weekend will stick in the minds of the Kansas men's swimmers for a long time.
After reaching an all-time high
Thursday, when the team was
ranked 18th in the country, the Jaya-
hawks fell back to earth on Saturday.
Kansas was soundly defeated by 13rd
ranked Southern Methodist 96-17.
The Jayhawk men defeated Texas Christian 65-50 Friday in Fort Worth. Kansas' women defeated Texas 68-41. The two ranked Southern Methodist, 89-50.
"Southern Methodist swam their best dual in two years," said coach Gary Kempf. "They swim a good team and we have better prepared than we were."
Kansas defeated the Mustangs 69-44 in December.
The Jayhawk men failed to win an event against SMU, as only junior Glenn Trammler and sophomore were able to finish second for Kansas.
Junior Barbara Ann Smith led the Kansas women with victories in the 500-yard freestyle and 400-yard individual medley. Sophomore Heather Hardy won the 100-yard breaststroke and the Kansas won the 400-yard
freestyle relay.
Junior Eiron Easton won the 200-yard individual medley and the 100-yard breaststroke for the Jayhawks, and junior Jenny Fisher added a victory in the 200-yard backstroke. Diver Lori Spurney continued to perform well, winning both the 1-meter and 3-meter events.
Freshman Jennifer Carani recorded her first collegiate victory in the 1000-yard freestyle in the TCU meet. Smith completed a sweep of the distance freestyle events as she won the 500- and 200-ward freestyles.
The Jayhawk men won 10 events against TCU, including all of the freestyle races and both the medley and freestyle relays.
Trammel won both the 50 and 100-yard freestyles, and Billings and seniors Dave Nesmith and Chuck Jones completed the domination of the freestyle events by winning the 500- and the 1000-yard competitions.
Sophomore Kevin Toller also finished first for the Jayhawks in the 200-yard breaststroke, and divers Dennis Pucket and Andy Flower won the 1-meter and 3-meter competitions.
The Jayhawks next face Iowa State on Saturday in Ames.
Newcomers
away from them as possible while we're brining them along."
Nee also said that the Big Eight had always relied on junior college players because the Midwest is the "hotbed" of two-year basketball. Kansas junior colleges are nationally known for the powerful Jayhawk Conference, which produces numerous major college prospects every
year.
Iowa State coach Johnny Orr said, "With two years in the junior colleges, a player has matured and gained more experience. His confidence level has gotten higher. So, I think you'll start to see major colleges going to junior colleges more and more in the future."
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Mon.-Sat. 10-5/Sun. 1-5 864-4540
ATTENTION GRADUATING SENIORS
ON-CAMPUS INTERVIEWS sign ups for sales, management, and other types of positions open to students in ANY MAJOR, as well as positions for COMPUTER SCIENCE and CHEMISTRY majors, are now in progress at the University Placement Center. Companies will be arriving starting February 1. Don't miss out.
Sign up now at the
University Placement Center Level One, Burge Union.
Hillel
Events
Wednesday, January 27
Lunch — 11:30-1:00
Sunset Room
Level 2, Kansas Union
United Jewish Appeal
Solicitation Training
7:30 p.m.
Hillhouse
Thursday, January 28 Kansas Legislative Breakfast - 7:00 a.m.
UMC'S COPIES
4¢
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of tutors. Student Assistance Center, 121 W. 6th St., Chicago.
CIDS, RECORDS, POSTERS and MORE! The MIDA MERICA RECORD CONVENTION show will be held all over 50 dealers from many states. Great prizes! Miss out! 10-5 at the HOLIDONE
COMMUTERS: Self Serve Car Pool Exchange.
Main Loboy, Kansas Union
Lakeland, Kansas Union
daily Lakeland, Kansas Union
between 3 and 4 p.m. drinks only $3 at Buckeye's Drive-In
with a drink for $10.
ENTERTAINMENT
Drummer for working on band. 843-705-
GET INTO THE GROOVE Metropolis Mobile
Sound Superior sound and lighting. Professional
club and radio DJ's. Hot spins. Maximum Party
J $ M FAVORS AND FLASHBOK FOTO. The perfect combo. Quality party favors and fast party pics. Call 843-8770 or 841-4349 to book your next party.
MUSIC******* MUSIC******* MUSIC
Red House Audio - Mobile Party music, 8 track
presentation, P.A. and lights, Maximum Audio Wizadry.
Call Brad 794-1275.
FORRENT
Apartment: No security deposit, January free! 2 bedroom, large living room, new paint, new carpet. $30/Mo. You keep deposit at deposit at by step 768 W. 25th, 4 a.p. per day. Bid 814-7298 or by step 768 W. 25th, 4 a.p. per day.
Beautiful 2-bdrm apartment with bath and cozy fireplace. Very spacious and a fun place to live. On KU bus route. $400.00 per minimal utilities. 9th and Michigan. Call 814-789-8370 or 814-789-8470.
SHANNON PLAZA CLUB APARTMENTS on
K.U. bus route. Washer/driver included, water,
trash paid. Dishwasher, microwave, ceiling fan,
hot tub, tennis and basketball courts 6 or 12
try cooperative living. SUNFLOWER HOUSE,
749-0871, for Ann, Don, or Tom.
Completely Furnished Studios, 1-2-3 & 4 bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call (956) 2025, or 749-2415. Mastercraft Management.
Duplex, one bedroom, within walking distance of KU. Low temperatures. $285/Mo. 843-6798.
Immediate opening in house close to campus.
Female preferred. Fully furnished with laundry
equipment. Please send resume.
I NEED A ROOMMATE BAD! Own bedroom.
Ubilities: Pmds $200. Will negotiate
Sublease. Duplex two bedroom: 1 bath, 1804
Missouri; great location for KIU at $369/m,
$480/m. Fully furnished.
Female nonsmoker need - Nice 2 bedroom townhouse near campus on bus route. YOUR FIRST ADVANCE ON BUS SERVICE. Female roommate, preferably quiet and non-smoker. Female graduate student in Spanish Credit Ap. 2021 W27th on bus route. $155/m plus utilities. Swimming pool and laundry facilities are on the property.
MASTERCRAFT offers beautifully furnished apartments, various sizes, all great locations! Designed with the K.U. student in mind. Call 814-1212, 814-5255 or 749-4268.
Needed non-smoking male roommate to share 3 bedroom apartment in Windmill States $130.00
Female roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom,
with female roommate. Furnished room for rent, most utilities paid, with off street parking, two blocks from university, quiet, studious atmosphere, and no pettle please.
New 1 and 2 bedroom apartments, 443-527-227.
New 1 and 2 bedroom townhomes, 443-527-227.
Not satisfied with where you're living? Naimshim Hall has one female space available for immediate move in. Consider such features as an office, laundry room, Eat" meals, paid utilities, weekly maid service, and more. You can also choose best housing options at KU! For more info, call or come by Naimshim Hall 1800 North Drive, Dumbo, Brooklyn, NY 11230.
Female roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom
Non-couple, 43'2 inches, 749.0 sqft.
Sunflower House has private rooms, low-rate and a great location. Call events.
One room in nice house on Lawrence Ave. Non
smoker one non-smoker $125.00 plus utilities. Call
(843) 796-2678.
Upper, non-simultaneous female wanted to room with 5 upper-class women in 4 br. doubles: $313 plus 1/4
Roommate wanted: Great Apt just second away from Kuala Lumpur! 2 bedroom, $20/Mo.
Triangle Townhouse for rent. Three bedrooms.
On KU bus route. Immediately. Call 833-7333.
ADVANTAGES
Nowhere at KU will you find a residence hall with the advantages of Naismith Hall. Applications for fall/spring semester are now being accepted while space remains.
NAISMITHHALL™
1809 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 68044
913-943-8509
- Microwave
Villa 26 Apartments-Townhomes BRAND NEW 1 Bedroom Apartments
- Energy Efficient
- On KU Bus Route
- Excellent Location
- Open Daily
- Move In Today
- Washer Drver Hook-ups
2201 W. 26th/Apt. E-102
—phones—
842-5227 • 842-6454
841-6080
EDDINGHAM
1988 Chevrolet Cavalier Z24 $695.75, Camaro Iz-23 $10.47, Pontau Carlo as $13.25, 1986 Ford MK II $45.99, Ford Edge Turbo $14.79, 1988 Mercury Cougar XK19.53, 1988 Pontiac Fiero Couper $48.66, Firebird $82.82, AM XM $12.501. FACTORY warranties apply. You choose option colors you want $84-849.
Datalun B121 975, 86K Ml, 49p, runs best.
battery, alt+, 700 FOH, cash on all 40 Blake
iPhone.
PLACE
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
AT AN AIFORDAN
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
BERTONE XI/9-198, 198-336. Excellent condition.
BERTONE XI/9-198, 198-336. 941-600 weekdays,
817-424 weekdays
817-424 weekdays
contract
* Swimming pool
Free Showtime
- Swimming pool
MGB Convertible 78. great shape, no rust,
F/M Cassette, low mileage, $200 or best
buy.
- Exercise Weightroom
Satellite T.V.
Exercise Weigh Laundry room
Fire place
841-5444
- Energy efficient
Red Hot Bargains! Drug dealers' cars, boats,
Redd (603) 987-0007 s. 979 f.
Buyers' Guides
603) 987-0007 s. 979 f.
Wanted: female roommate to share furnished
apartment. Apt. 7270-25, no utilities. Private room. B41-694-
Wanted preferably two female roommates. Gam-
ball roommate. Roommate to pay $150 per
月 no utilities. Call George at G
Vacant room. Park Apt. 4pt, for single, male KU
January 13 (414-823-8977) 6:48 694-315-31
(414-823-8977) 6:48 694-315-31
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Professionally managed by Kwik Walle Management Inc.
- On-Site Management
FOR SALE
An Absolutely Mature Array of Antiques, collectibles and neat stuff we have: hardback and softcover books, picture books, playbooks, Penthouses, etc., loads of antique, Indian, and costume jewelry (glitter and good stuff), the right vintage clothes for any occasion, antique toys, fine art glass, doll leavens, and much more.
HELP WANTED
Lost: Burgandy and black paisley scarf between Strong and Bailey, Saturday. Jan. 18th between 8:30 and 9:00. Great sentimental value. 842-2955.
good staff; the right vintage clothes for any occasion; a wide selection of miniature, miniatures, fiesta, and the best selection of antique furniture in the area. Quinnfire Flats Market, 11 New Hampshire, Open Sat, & Sun.
1979 Gibson Les Paul, 1987 Salomon ski 61 ski
best. Offer best. 749-1755, ask for Bill
Applause 12 - string guitar for sale. Excellent condition! Call after 5.749-3244.
Academic Computing Services. Word Processing Typist. Deadline 2/1/18. Salary: $35 per hour for a term, or $40 per hour for all text using a word processor (software training provided); proofreading; data entry and verification; and other duties as assigned. Req. B.S., M.A., Ph.D., M.S., M.P., M.B., M.p., M.p., per week per hour, M.F., 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; current enrollment at KU; accurate typing skills at a speed of 45wpm; microcomputer experience. Fill out application at the reception desk at the Center, University of Kansas. EO/EA Manager.
--chair, chair counter. Cheap). Call Hugh T49 782-4590 Monday 10:00 a.m. p.m. Thursday 10:00 a.m. p.m. Monday 10:00 a.m. p.m. Thursday 10:00 a.m. p.m. Monday 10:00 a.m. p.m. Thursday 10:00 a.m. p.m. Monday 10:00 a.m. p.m. Thursday 10:00 a.m. p.m. Monday 10:00 a.m. p.m. Thursday 10:00 a.m. p.m.
Apple II C with color monitor, 5 months old, has Printer Cable, 8684, 964-0741.
For Sale: Student basketball season ticket. Contact Chris
7-9 p.m. 841-1848.
Drifting tools, beki lamps, chest of drawers.
Everything But Ice, dilder Vermont.
NANNIES
FUTON FRAMA Full size sofa - sleeper $220 (?).
Purple FFRMA Full size sofa - sleeper $220 (?).
LOST-FOUND
Come See New York City and Work For Great Families, All Families Screened, Local Support Groups, AIR Fare Paid, $150-$300 a week
Are you skilled with woodworking or solving mechanical problems on smaller projects?
Yes, I can help.
BABYSISTER TEREEDED. Need a reliable person to babysettle for 50/kW. B42 848-2088
AUTO SALES
Bundle Fund $70 (?) 841-4675.
KU Basketball ticket for sale, call 842-1928.
Nikon FW m-28-119 Sigma 200mm lens. Excellent condition $200,749 - 428.23$
Car won's start? Mobile repair service on foreign cars. Call Aaron at 814-4629.
Rock-n-tell-Thousands of used and rare albums
a. 10 m. to p. 5 gm. on Saturday and Sunday
b. 7 gm. to p. 8 h. on Tuesday
P.O. Box 191, 215 Godwin Ave.
Midland Park, NJ
201 848 0508
TENDER LOVING CARE NANNIES
Cash for sketches of 21st Century auto and
trains. Original work only. 841-2382
CHILD - CARE NEEDED for 1 year old in our
transportation. Call 844-821-8211
transportation. Call 844-821-8211
Camp Soaring Hawk, a Christian camp, is inter-
missioned. The camp is at 29th, in the Inchon, on
seven Friday for a deltate event.
Consultant positions for Small Business Development Center are available. Payments are paid on time, with as much or as little as you like. Seniors and graduate students need in the areas of business, engineering, law, and science. If interested, apply at 942 E. Summerfield Hall.
Creative person for sketching 21st Century life
(cars etc). Original work only 814228. Paid $200
Director of Child Care Program P & T afterschools.
Must have a pre-school teaching experience.
Acceptance based on background and
skills; $60/mo. Send resume and 2 letters
of recommendation by Jan. 29th. CCC Child
care must be in New York City.
EDITORIAL & RESEARCH ASSISTANT KU Geralentogy Center. Half-time Feb.-Aug. 1898. Online articles on topics in articles on a national newsletter for professionals who assist families caring for elderly. $450/Mo.
more continuation, and edit articles for a national newsletter for professionals who assist families caring for elderly. $450.Mo. Mail resume to: The Gerontology Center, enrolment in minimum of one hour KU credit. Preferred: word-processing skills, ability to abstract and critique studies from behavioral sciences. Apply deadline: F.3.1988. Application deadline: F.3.1988. Submit letter of interest, resume and writing samples to the Gerontology Center, 316 Strong Hall, RS 66445. A E.E.O.A. Army Engineer
Evening line person, part time. $3.50 .hr. App in person at Bardio Bandio, 180 W. 6th H.
GOVERNMENT JOBS $16,040-$20,290 jr. New
Hiring Your Area. (875) 687-0000 for R7958
or call 875-345-0000.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16,400 or yr./now. *VAR*
GOVERNMENT JOB: $87,800 or yr. *R-9758 for*
The Federal Labor.
GRADUATE RESEARCH ASSISTANT. Housing Research Program. Center for Applied Behavior Analysis. responds to needs of research programs and researches of research conduct statistical data analysis; assist in development and implementation of research national data collection activities; prepare written and graphic research reports. QUALIFICALE social science or environmental design research, ability to work flexible hours; prior experience in use of personal computers; acceptable writing skills; ability to design and/or programs and services for people with disabilities; prior experience in social science.
TERMS OF APPONTMENT: 50% time position
for application. Salary commensurate with
satisfactory performance. Salary commensurate
with experience. TO APPLY: Send letter of ap-
plication to SAFFRON BRIER, DIRECTOR,
AA287 BRIER Torture, LAWRENCE, KS.
NEW YORK! live in babysitters needed for young families throughout affluent suburbs of metropolitan New York, beginning in January/February Airfare paid, plus room. Register online at www.metroair.com Claire Sussman, (203) 565-4707, 5 Laurel Lane, Darien, CT, 06230.
Local marketing firm seeks several new employees to work on own jobs (week week) Call 719-768-2500.
Qualified individuals earn up to $340/m Fr./Soph years and $700/m Jr/Sr years. Requirements: Full time student, physically fit, willing to join the AROTC-SMP program.
**Postal Jobs:** $20,064 Start! Prepare Now! Clarks-Carbo Job! Call for Guaranteed Exam
Research assistant Graduate or advanced undergraduate student needed for child development behavior video tape enclosures Behavior video tape enclosures with video tape equipment $40-$440/Mo. for 12-20 hours/Wk. Send or bring letter of application and resume to Dr. Oriben, HDLL. 117 Haworth by January 31, 2015.
Rewarding Summer for sophomore and older college students, you can work with students in backpacking, backbore hiking and wildlife, many outdoor programs. Write new; include program interests and goals. Sanborn
Adams Alumni Center is now hiring a.m. and m. dishabaswift failures full-time at the Alumni Center to have experience. Applications are available at receptionists desk between 8 and 10 a.m. No phone calls are allowed.
MISCELLANEOUS
Recently grade point increasing techniques revealed. Secrets guaranteed! Free details for Dean's "Dear Dean" Writesheets. Report Card Hamboning. Littleroots. P.O. Box 313-UK, San Anselmo Ca. 940968
Bass player wants for recently relocated west-coast band. Reliability, congeniality and a commitment to Rock and Rock a must. Equipment a plus, but we have bass rig. 749-7382 after p. 1.m.
Hey sony girl! girl that have you been we still have to see Roseanne? Do you like Joan Cougar, I hope so. Call me. 864-6686-jce.
Cheri, I LOVE YOU. L.B.S.
IULIE-
A REFERENCE: Intramural Officials are at the meeting Wednesday, January 27 at 6:00 p.m.
GRAVIDAN ATTENTION SEEKING COMPANION
FOR EXCITING TRIP TO THE BAHAMAS!
ENJOY SAILING SCUBA DIVING, ISLAND HOPPING
AND MORE IN FREEPORCH ON THE
GRANBHAAM ISLAND YOU MUST BE 21
ONGLE FUNGE FALL CALL TROPICAL BOB
WB3892
HARPER
Burcky's Drive-In is new application for the Burcky's Coffee and Tea Company to price meals. Apply in person between to and at Burcky's.
SEC - No matter where I am, you're always with
Me. Missing you LKE
BUS. PERSONAL
LAWYER
Warm caring people - who like children ages 3-5 and over.
Warm care volunteers - minimum of 2 bfr per day, one day per week, between 7:30 and 3:30 M-F. Day care volunteers for 16 hours a day. For more information call 842-255-1211.
1101 Mass Suite 201
749-0123
SPRING BREAK
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND **128**
NORTH PADRE/MUSTANC ISLAND **156**
DAYTONA BEACH **99**
DAYTONA BEACH **99**
GALVESTON ISLAND **120**
FORT WALTER ISLAND **126**
ORLANDO/DOONEY WORLD **132**
MIAMI BEACH **133**
MILITON HEAD ISLAND **131**
**DON'T DELAY**
TOOL FREE SERVICE INFORMATION AND ADMINISTRATIONS
1-800-321-5911
INTERESTED IN LEARNING
ABOUT A PHARMACEUTICAL
SALES CAREER?
Visit with a recruiter from Merck, Sharp and Dohme on Monday Feb. 1.
Open to Freshmen, Sophomores, and Juniors with science majors.
Sign up now at the University Placement Center
Level One, Burge Union
DONALD G. STROLE
- **OWV1**, new OWV 1s and other alcohol related offences
• **Personal injury**, Medical Malpractice
• Products Liability
• Other legal matters related to students
16 East 13th St. 842-1133
**$50 Value when presented toward new patient ser-
vice.**
**Spinal Exam** Dr. Johnson, Chiropractor,
**$120 Value when presented toward new pati-
ence.**
Getting into care for spring? Start taking care of them. For Men and Women, Call Michele 794-1693 for men and Women. Call Michele 794-1693
Hide a secret message inside an jazped-up balloon bouquet. Call University Balloons today
Pregnant and need help? Call Birright at
843-8421. Confidential help/free pregnancy
Want to win a cruise? Have a complementary facial with friends. Call Michele 749-1659.
SERVICES OFFERED
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest
DRIVER ASSOCIATE offered thru Midwest
driver, driver's license available, transportation
Hair CUTS $2 off with KU1D for the month of January and February. Ask for experienced hair stylist, Ann Reaney at Standing Ovation, 14 E Ace. Fax 704-0771
Handmade Macintosh, custom sized Ekblade, etc.
Help! **CUSTOMIZED** Help!
*HPFRAID* red by tape? Needing a movie or game time? Just don't know where to find UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER at UW.
THE FAR SIDE
Become a Valentine always remembered, with a HOLIDAY PORTRAIT* by Mira Grace or Gretchen McKenzie. Pick your favorite Kim's Alterations-Quick Service Suits, coats, jeans.zippers all types of alterations. 2201 W
PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES ELEKtroniks
PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES ELEKtroniks
VIP SPORTS PORT 50.0 Art & Design Building,
www.elektroniks.com
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $8/hr, 843-9022
(n.m.)
MATH TUTOR YURS. experience. Individual and group rates. 841-9148
Rose Special
Order in advance and save on romance ROSES
- Cash & Carry . . . . . 1250 doz
LAWRENCE
FLORAL &
GIFTS
939 Massachusetts
Offer good'til Jan. 27
sit for a professor on a sabbatical, beginning June 1985; then attend a private contraception and abortion services in
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Allion Services
Overland Park...913-491-6807
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-236.
QUALITY TUTORING. Statistics, Economics,
Mathematics. All levels. (Call Dennis
842 1055
The college of Liberal Arts and Sciences offers tutoring in math, english, business, and social studies, with reasonable charge through Supportive Educational Services, apply at SES Building 864-3971.
TYPING
1-der Woman Word processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, gramatically correct pages of letter-quality. 843-2635, days or evenings
1 plus Typing: Letters, resumes, thesis, law typ-
ing; Letter Terry Coulter 842-7540 or
843-2671 evening and weekdays.
1-AI Reliable Typing Service. Term papers,
Reports, Letters, etc. professionally typed, 18k.
US Mail
24hr typing service. Fast, professional word processing with better quality service. 843-7611
cessing with letter quality printers. 843-7643
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in term papers, theses, meis, IBM correct Selectric, spelling corrected. 843-9544
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing.
Term papers, theses, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailings lists. Letter quality
printing, spelled correct. 842-7247.
DESERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS
MOMMY'S TYPING, one day service available
842-3378 for 9 p.m. please.
FYSPING PLUS assistance with composition,
presentation of work in print, dissertations, papers, letters, applications.
SCHOLARSHIP.
Quality typing. Including excellent spelling, grammar punctuation, editing. Fast reliable service.
FAST, ACCURATE, DEPENDABLE. Letter query must specify spell check service numbers MEMBERS 89351 22610 1010
Typing at a reasonable rate Call Holly at 845-0111.
Female nonsmoking room: 2 Br Ap, close to campus, $17.99/Mo. pls. rent. No deposit required.
WANTED
Female female needed to share bugee 2 room (19)
(6) students. Must be a junior or high school
(14) utilities. Short walk to campus. 749-3120
Female roommate wanted for nice 2 bedroom apt. on bus route. 160/Mo. plus 1/2 utilities Call
Hiring!
Hiring! Government Jobs-your area. $15,000
688. Call (602) 838-4957 ext 4055
Male masseuse wanted to share Ava Condo Center suite, private bath, bedroom Californian swim, private bath
842-4106. References and deposit required.
Needed female non-smoking roommate at
950-823-7388 or 950-823-2988.
RESPOUSHIBLE MALE ROOMMATE needed for
2 br apartment at Graystone, adjacent to
Trailrigh on bus route. Non-smoker. $180 mo.
utilities. Utilizes facilities. Helpful. Eric
749-2085.
Roommate: 4 Br. 3 bath, 3 story duplex close to
the office and plus utilities and deposit
209k ask for房源
Wanted K-State student B-Ball tickets. Call Jeff
842.387.3001
Wanted non-student basketball tickets 842-6783.
Wanted: Part-time kitchen utility help. Flexible hours. Call Frank at Lawrence Country Club, 842-2866.
By GARY LARSON
©1968 Universal Press Syndicate
When car chasers dream
14 Monday, January 25, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
UNLV upsets Temple on late shot
The Associated Press
Nevada-Las Vegas 59
Temple 58
Nevada-Las Vegas is known for its explosive offense. But it was defense that triggered the Runin' Rebels' come-from-behind victory Sunday over previously unbeaten Temple.
UCLA 74
No. 8 UNLV held the third-ranked Owis scoreless over the last four minutes as it made up a 58-51 deficit to win 59-18. *Reserve Anthony Todd hit a 10-foot jurper, with two seconds left to tap the comeback.*
Arizona 86
UCIA, which trailed 56-41 early in the second half, rallied to take a 66-44 win. The Wildcats outscored the Bruins in the next 4½ minutes to regain control
Sean Elliott scored 27 points and the tep-trapped Wildcats withstood a late CLA rally to post their 18th win in 19 tames.
Arizona improved to 8-0 in the Pac-10, while UCLA fell to 3-4 in the conference and 7-10 overall.
North Carolina 77
N.C. State 73
J. R. Reid scored 17 points for No.2 North Carolina overcame foul trout
ble to beat No. 20 N.C. State in Raleigh.
The Wolfpack tied the score 62-62 on Vinny Del Negro's 3-pointer with the Tar Heels surged ahead 72-80 and Madden and led the rest of the way.
The Tar Heels improved to 14-2 overall and 3-1 in the Atlantic Coast Conference. Charles Shackleford scored 26 points for N.C. State, which dropped to 10-4 overall and 2-2 in the conference.
Kentucky 76 LSU 61
Rex Chapman and Winston Bennett led a 10-3 surge early in the second half, sparking the visiting Wildcats over Louisiana State. Ed Davender led No. 4 Kentucky with 21 points while Ricky Blanton had 16 for LSU.
Kentucky, 13-2, is second in the Southeastern Conference with a 5-2 mark. LSU is 9-6 and 4-2 in the SEC.
Purdue 91 Louisville 85
Troy Lewis scored 15 of his 23 points in the second half, including five free throws in the final 1:16, as visiting Purdue survived a furious second-half rally by the Cardinals.
No. 5 Purdue, 17-1, extended the nation's longest winning streak to 16 games.
Oklahoma 86
Pittsburgh 83
Harvey Grant scored 28 points and Mookie Blaylock made two free throws with four seconds remaining on 10. 11 Sooners held off No. 6 itchibibib.
Pittsburgh, 13-2, rallied from a 17-point deficit in the second half to pull within 84-83 with nine seconds left. But Blaylock, who finished with 19 points, hit two free throws that clinched the victory for Oklahoma, 16-2.
The Wolverines, who led 35-30 at halftime, broke the game open in the second half behind the scoring of Rumeal Robinson. The sophomore guard scored 11 points at the start of the game and the Wolverines surged to a 46-32 lead.
Michigan 72
Indiana 60
Glen Rice scored 21 points as No. 7 Michigan halted Indiana's 29-game home winning streak.
Michigan improved to 16-2 overall and 5-1 in the Big Ten. Indiana, the defending national champion, fell to 9-6 and 1-4.
Duke 103
Wake Forest 70
Danny Ferry scored 29 points as the No. 9 Blue Devils beat Wake Forest in the ACC.
Duke, which led by 11 points at halftime, extended the lead to 57-39 behind Ferry's hot shooting early in the second half.
Duke improved to 12-2 overall and 3-1 in the ACC.
Missouri 119
Iowa St. 93
Derrick Chievous came off the bench and scored 30 points as the Tigers upset No. 10 Iowa State in the Big Eight.
The Tigers, 11-4 overall and 1-2 in the conference, led by as many as 30 points in the first half. Chievous, who had been in a slump, didn't enter the game until midway through the first half.
The victory snapped a three-game losing streak for Georgetown, which improved to 12-4 overall and 2-3 in the big East. Syracuse fell to 13-5 and 3-3.
Georgetown 69
Syracuse 68
Inside track season starts for Jayhawks
By Keith Stroker
Kansan sports writer
The Kansas men's and women's track teams opened the indoor season Saturday at Anschutz Sports Pavilion. But women's coach Cliff Rovello took his team's elite to the Eastern Michigan Invitational to expose them to tough competition.
The Kansas Invitational at the sports pavilion featured teams from Iowa State, Emporia State, and Saunders College. son County College College.
"The competition in my heat wasn't real good." Watchek said. "Because of this, my time wasn't as good as it could have been if I was more of a challenge. I think Dearen Bell had a good meet for us."
Kansas' Craig Watcke, South Bend, Ind., junior, finished first in the 3000-meter run with a time of 8:41.4. He said his time wasn't great, but the race was weak.
Bell, Inwood, N.Y., freshman,
won the 200-meter dash with a time of
22.0 seconds.
The Jayhawk men had five other first place finishes.
Senior John Creighton won the 400-meter dash in 49.1 seconds; and Sharriief Hazim, also a senior, won the long jump with a leap of 24-7 1/4. Juniary Bryan Martin won the 55-meter dash in 6.2 seconds; and two sophomores, Steve Hefferman, who won the 100-meter run in 2:29.2, and Stacy Smiedala, who won the 600-yard run in 1:12.5, rounded out the Kansas squad
The women's team did not have a first place finisher at the Kansas Invitational, although assistant coach Jill Lancaster, who was not competing, won the long jump with a leap of 18-8.
"I thought both meets we were successful." Rovelto said. "I took my best team to Eastern Michigan, where we did quite well. I thought the Kansas meet was a good test for our youngsters."
Rovetto said that two bright spots at the Michigan meet were in the mile and two-mile relays. The team traveled in both events to top-ranked teams.
in the mile relay, Kansas had a time of 3:50.1, behind Southern California, last year's national champion in the outdoor race.
DAY AFTER DAY! WEEK AFTER WEEK LOW FOOD PRICES
This week at your Checkers Food Store!!
WITH COUPON
U.S. NO.1
RUSSET
10 LB.
38¢
POTATOES... BAG
Checkers
Limit 10 lb. bag with this coupon per customer please. No minimum purchase required
Limit 10 lb. bag with this coupon per customer please. No minimum purchase required.
Offer good at Checkers Food Store from Monday, January 25, through Saturday, January 30, 1988.
(
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Tuesday January 26,1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 82 (USPS 650-640)
Reagan urges aid renewal
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Reagan, declaring America to be "strong, prosperous, at peace," asked Congress in his final State of the Union address last night to keep money flowing to Nicaragua rebels and to ratify the newly signed arms treaty with the Soviet Union.
Reagan, in remarks prepared for delivery before a joint session of the House and Senate, emphasized he will all agenda for the next 12 months.
"My thinking on the next year is quite simple: let's make this the best of eight. And that means it's all out, right to the finish line. I don't buy the idea that this is the last year of anything." said Reagan, who turns the White House over to a successor next January.
Without specifying a figure, Reagan urged Congress to vote next month to renew aid to the contra rebels in Nicaragua. "Let us be for the people of Nicaragua what Lafaty said," he said when he asked for our forefathers and the cause of American independence," the president said.
M
1 VIy thinking on the next year is quite simple: let's make this the best of eight. And that means it's all out, right to the finish.'
President Ronald Reagan
A senior administration official, briefing reporters at the White House on condition of anonymity, said the aid request would be "under $50 million," with about 10 percent of the figureearmarked for "lethal" military aid and the rest for non-lethal aid.
Reversing course from last year. Reagan called for increased spending for education and the war against drugs.
He claimed for his administration "an untold success story" — an increase in the number of young people willing to turn away from drugs. He praised his wife, Naney, for that development: "She has helped so many of our young people to say 'no' to drugs. Nancy, much credit belongs to you, and I want to express to you your husband's pride and your country's thanks."
In a separate legislative message transmitted to Congress, he requested $1.5 billion — roughly a 50 percent decrease — to fight the dead-AIDS virus.
Striking a bipartisan theme, Reagan told the lawmakers, "Yes, we will have our differences. But let us always remember: what unites us far outweighs whatever divides us."
Leaders of the Democratic-run Congress served notice that the legislative branch, not Reagan, would control the national agenda this year.
The president's "technicolor view of America and our people sought to make us feel good with images of our nation." (C. D. Burch, *Majority Leader Robert C. Byrd, D.*)
W. Va. in the official Democratic response.
But, he said, "The 'feel-good' slogans have gone flat with time. We've learned that bravado is not leadererly energy; the economy is no substitute for common sense."
House Speaker Jim Wright, D-Texas, praised Reagan for his arms treaty with the Soviets and called on him to work with Congress toward peace in Central America. But he chided the president for fighting Congress on priorities, including trade and domestic spending programs.
Reagan chastised Congress for its often-chaotic budget process of passing budget bills after deadlines have been reached. The federal spending in catehall legislation.
"Let's change all this." Reagan said. "Instead of a presidential budget that gets discarded and a congressional budget resolution that is not enforced, why not a simple partnership, a joint agreement that sets out the spending priorities within the available revenues."
The address sets the stage for the president's final 12 months in power.
Lineberry is finalist for UTEP position
Bv Brenda Finnell
Kansan staff writer
Robert Lineberry, dean of liberal arts and sciences, is one of five finalists for the presidency of the University of Texas at El Paso, a member of the interviewing committee for the finalists said yesterday.
Lineberry announced Sept. 1 that he would resign from his University of Kansas position this summer and stay at KU as a political science professor.
Lineberry could not be reached yesterday for comment
Committee member Judson Williams would not confirm who the other finalists were. He said UTEP and the Texas Regents system were not releasing any information about the selection process.
A president is expected to be named by the middle of next month he said.
The El Paso Herald-Post on
Saturday reported the other candidates to be Diana Natalicio, interim UTEP president; Ryan Amacher, dean of commerce and industry at Clemson University; John Michael Palmys, vice president of academic affairs at Emory University; and Samuel Kirkpatrick, dean of liberal arts at Arizona State University.
The final decision will be made by the Regents of the University of Texas system and the vice chancellor of UTEP, who is the chairman of the selection committee. Williams said.
The selection committee chairman did not return calls made to his office yesterday.
Williams said the selection committee had received more than 100 applications and had narrowed its selection before the final five were chosen.
He said the selection process began about seven months ago.
GALLARDO STATE
Initiation week
Craig Sands/KANSAN
Brad Harville, left, and Brian Kiesling, both Overland Park freshmen, wear enforced clothing as they walk to class. Harville, who is pledging the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity, and Kiesling, pledging Delta Tau Delta, were going through initiation week activities yesterday.
Plan ends boycott threat
By Christine Martin
Kansan staff writer
KU Athletic Director Bob Frederick and Black Coaches Association executive director Rudy Washington agreed Sunday to develop a plan for recruiting black coaches, ending the threat of an athletic boycott.
They met in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, after Harry Edwards, a professor at the University of California-Berkeley and an adviser to the Black Coaches Association, threatened a boycott by black coaches and athletes. He said he thought KU had not considered black candidates for the football coaching position that Glen Mason, who is white, recently accepted.
Fredricker said. "Basically the plan is very similar to our own Affirmative Action plan. The Affirmative Action plan is established to make sure you consider all the affected minority groups."
Frederick said that he and Washington had agreed in principle to the plan and but had not yet determined the wording.
Basically the plan is very similar to our own Affirmative Action plan. The Affirmative Action plan is established to make sure you consider all the affected minority groups.'
Frederick said that he wouldn't meet Washington again but that they
"B
- Bob Frederick athletic director
would communicate through phone calls and letters concerning the details of the plan.
"The matter is resolved," Frederick said.
Frederick and Washington will send the plan to the executive director of the NCAA, commissioners for athletic conferences, the American Council on Education and Equal Opportunity, and Affirmative Action officials.
An official statement from the Athletic Department issued yesterday said the plan was expected to be
a model for other universities in hiring black coaches.
The statement also said, "The University and the Coaches Association were concerned that educational opportunities be encouraged for black student athletes to prepare them for coaching and athletic administrative positions in the future."
In a taped interview with KJHK last week, Edwards said, "We are harboring universities which refuse to give blacks interviews for jobs. It's not just the University of Kansas but also at the university where I teach. They don't take black candidates seriously."
Frederick said that Edwards spoke for himself and did not represent the other.
Embezzler continues repaying debt to KU on Wheels
M. Wayne Webb, president of the KU Black Student Union, said in a KJHK interview last night that universities should only look at candidates' qualifications when hiring coaches, and not at their color.
"There are black coaches more qualified than the ones they do hire," he quipped.
Kansan staff writer
Bv loel Zeff
McMurry could not be reached for comment.
McMurray was arrested in September 1982 and charged with five counts
After making inconsistent restitution payments for the past two years, a former coordinator of KU on Wheels who embezzled more than $257,000 has begun payments again.
Steve McMurry, who embezzled the money from the campus bus system between 1978 and 1982, has made three $100 payments and one $150 payment in the past five months. The latest payment was made Friday, according to the Department of Corrections in Topeka.
the department records and the Douglas County clerk's office show McMurray has paid a total of $2,010 out of the $257,051.17 that was stipulated as part of his 1984 parole agreement.
The agreement states that McMurray repay the University in divided monthly payments. The size of the jobs would depend on his income.
"I'm certainly happy that he's paying, but I can't tell what the
Mary Prewitt, KU assistant general counsel, said she was pleased that McMurry was paying again but did not wish to comment on the future of the case.
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. McMurray was released on parole after spending 17 months in a Kansas state prison.
future will hold. It would be pure speculation on my part," Prewitt said.
McMurry, who lives in a Denver suburb, is under the supervision of the Colorado Department of Corrections. But Kansas parole officials still have jurisdiction over McMurry until July, when he will be automatically off parole.
Larry Cavnagh, McMurry's Colorado parole officer, said that he was glad McMurry finally was accepting his responsibilities, but that he was
skeptical McMurry would continue repayments after his July parole release.
"After his discharge on parole, there is no jurisdiction. I don't know. It's too hard to say one way or the other," Cavnaugh said.
Cavnagh said that the only binding agreement McMurry would have after the July parole expiration was a 1984 civil suit the University filed against McMurray. A Douglas County Circuit Court judge ruled that the University was entitled to restitution
in the parole agreement, Cavnagh said.
"I think he's realized that for the rest of his life he will be responsible for the money," Cavnagh said.
Condom machine plea by Hashinger denied
Angela Rinaldo, acting deputy secretary of programs at the Department of Corrections in Topeka, said her office intended to pursue the money until the debt was paid.
"We have a responsibility. Until he's off parole in July and backs to a civil matter, it's our responsibility," she said.
Bv Ric Brack
Kansan statt writer
A request by Hashinger Hall residents to purchase and stock a condom vending machine with hall money was turned down by the office of residential programs yesterday.
Ramaley said last week that the University should concentrate on education instead of short-term solutions as such condom vending machines.
Fred McEhlenie, director of residential programs, said he denied the request mainly because of the new University AIDS policy that Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, announced last week.
Bonnie Johnson, Hashinger president, said, "It's certainly a good thing to educate. But being told that getting a condom is a good thing and then not having any around isn't supporting what you're saving."
Ramaley issued the statement in response to a report by a University task force on AIDS. The task force report included a recommendation to install condom vending machines in restrooms on campus.
McEhlene said another reason for the denial was that the Kansas Union had exclusive vending rights for campus buildings.
Also, McElhenie said he was reluctant to approve the condom machine because minors stayed in the hall while attending camps in the summer.
Johnson said the condom machine idea had been in the works at Hashinger for two years. She said she asked the Union for a vending machine last year, but none were available.
Johnson said she thought the proposal would have been approved if it had been submitted earlier, before the task force report and distribution of safer-sex kits during fee payment generated publicity.
Hashinger's hall government allocated about $200 for the machine and two cases of condoms in November, but didn't submit a request for permission to purchase them until yesterday.
"I can understand them not having them (condoms) in Wesco, but a residence hall is like a small town," she said.
She said the self-contained nature of the residence hall created a special need.
"Lots of students don't have cars and can't get to the drugstore," Johnson said.
WKS J
Happy hunters
Brownie Troop 671 braves the cold to go on a penny hike in South Park. The second-grade girls were led by Mary Winter.
2
Tuesday, January 26, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Weather Forecast LAWRENCE
WEATHER Forecast
From the KU Weather Service
LAWRENCE
Warming
HIGH: 29°
LOW: 6°
Partly cloudy and cool with a high of 29.
Winds out of the south 5-10 m.p.h. Clear-
ing and cold tonight with a low of 19.
KEY
Rain T-Storms Snow Flurries Ice
REGIONAL
North Platte
33/3
Mostly sunny
Omaha
17/0
Mostly cloudy
Goodland
29/13
Mostly sunny
Hays
36/10
Partly cloudy
Salina
32/6
Partly cloudy
Topeka
25/5
Partly cloudy
Kansas City
19/3
Partly cloudy
Columbia
17/1
Mostly cloudy
St Louis
15/3
Mostly cloudy
Dodge City
38/16
Mostly sunny
Wichita
31/14
Partly cloudy
Chamute
29/8
Partly cloudy
Springfield
26/5
Partly sunny
Tulsa
34/14
Partly sunny
Forecast by Edward Levy.
Temperatures are today's
high and tonight's low.
5-DAY
WED
Sunny
37 / 19
HIGH LOW
THU
Partly sunny
50 / 31
FRI
Rain
52 / 32
SAT
Mostly cloudy
36 / 19
SUN
A.M. showers
25 / 10
Police Record
Eight tires, valued together at $700, were taken from the 1100 block of Pennsylvania between Wednesday and Friday, Lawrence police said.
■ A microwave, telephone and clothing, valued together at $180, were taken from the 2400 block of Alabama between Thursday and Sunday, Lawrence police said.
Antique brass statues, a hair dryer and a pair of tennis shoes, valued together at $260, were taken from the 1500 block of West 22nd Terrace on Thursday, Lawrence police said.
Two tires were slashed in the 2100 block of Kasold on Thursday. Damage was estimated at $200, Lawrence police said.
A Toyota Celica, valued at $1,200,
was taken from the 500 block of
Minnesota on Friday, Lawrence
police said.
A Taka 12-speed bicycle, valued at $300, was taken from the 2100 block of Clinton Parkway on Saturday, Lawrence police said.
■ Eggs thrown at a Ford pickup truck in the 2100 block of Ohio caused about $200 damage. Lawrence police said. The egg-throwing occurred between Saturday and Sunday.
A black 1978 Chevrolet truck, valued at $4,000, was taken from the 1700 block of West Fourth Street between Saturday and Sunday, Lawrence police said.
A Pioneer stereo and two Alpine box speakers, valued at $323, were taken from the 1000 block of Emery on Saturday or Sunday, Lawrence police said.
- Tools valued at $246 were taken from the back of a pickup truck in the 700 block of Arkansas on Saturday, Lawrence police said.
The Associated Press
Kids protest plastic utensils, get wish
GREENFIELD, Mass. — A restaurateur came to the rescue of fifth-graders fed up with eating with plastic forks and spoons by donating 300 stainless steel place-setings yesterday to end protests at the elementary school.
"I wanted the kids to know that if you speak up about something you consider is wrong and it makes enough sense, sometimes someone out there will listen," said William A. Sandri, who graduated from the school 30 years ago.
Sandri announced his gift to 250 cheering children seated on the floor of the Four Corners Elementary School auditorium.
"Mr. Sandri is giving us just enough, so if any of it ends up in the classroom, guess what happens?" Principal Mary Ann Clarkson asked the children.
Nearly every hand shot up to let her know the students were aware of a potential return to plastic
More than half the lunch-eating population at the 316-student school signed petitions a few weeks ago
asking that the school return the stainless steel utensils that had gone to the high school.
Food Services Director Sandra Herzig said she made the switch to plastic, reusable forks and spoons in every elementary school in the western Massachusetts town because a quarter of the metal flatware ended up in the trash every year and the plastic utensils were cheaper.
Led by three youngsters who were studying the non-violent tactics of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., stu
Praying dolls draw mixed reviews
The Associated Press
"Our studies have shown that Americans are turning increasingly to religion and traditional values." David Mauer, president of the company's Kenner division, said in a recent telephone interview.
BOSTON — A new line of dolls which kneel and clasp their hands in a gesture of prayer has drawn mixed reactions from some groups that worry that the saucer-eyed figures could inadvertently trivialize religion.
"When we talked to mothers, they told us they like to see toys that help a child develop faith and tradition, and teach them how to develop faith and tradition," he said.
Kenner Parker Toys Inc., says it is marketing the cherubic, 15-inch dolls under the name Special Blessings to capitalize on a growing national interest in traditional values. The dolls will be available on store shelves next month for about $20.
Store orders were brisk for the dolls, named Abigail, Angela, Christina and Matthew Blessing, said Dick Ostrander, the company's sales man.
ager for New England. Angela is black and the other dolls are white
Principal Clarkson, however, warned the youngsters that the next protest may not be so easy.
Spokesmen for some other religious groups said they saw no harm in such dolls, and others praised the idea. But several expressed worries.
"I think it might be wonderful to have a doll that portrays one of the noblest functions of human beings, not killing each other like soldier dolls, but praying," said spokesman Robert P. Dugan of the National Organization of Evangelicals, which represents 70 denominations.
"It's better than even the old, silverware," said Steven Berson, 101. "We didn't have knives before."
Local Briefs
DISTINGUISHED TEACHING AWARDS: Nominations for the Distinguished Teaching Awards are now being accepted by Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for academic affairs.
The awards are given each year to recognize outstanding faculty members on the Lawrence, Kansas City and Wichita campuses and are separate from the HOPE award.
dents decorated the lunchroom with posters proclaiming.; "School Is No Picnic" and "Real People Deserve Real Silverware."
Nominations should be in the form of a letter stating the reasons why the nominee deserves the award. They should be submitted to the office of academic affairs, 129 Strong Hall.
The fraternity, now located at 839 Mississippi St., will sign a lease for a new home in May, said Matt Brish, Lincoln, Neb., sophomore and chapter president. The new house is at 1232 Ohio St.
more than $100,000 in renovations over the summer before the fraternity moves in next fall.
The deadline for nominations is Feb. 19.
Brisch said that six Phi Kappa Tau alumni working for a Phi Kappa Tau housing corporation fraternity bought the house for $72,000. The house will undergo
FRATERNITY BUYING HOUSE: After moving four times in as many years, the Phi Kappa Tau fraternity is in the final stages of buying its first permanent house.
"You can't go out and write another petition tomorrow and expect it to work," she said.
Brisch said the chapter planned to pay the housing
funds of 30 members and land-launders. The KU chapter has 30 members.
Mel Dubnick, associate professor of public administration, said Brown had previously expressed willingness to speak to FacEx, and both sides had agreed to today's closed meeting.
FACEX, BROWN TO MEET: Kansas coach Larry Brown will meet with Faculty Executive Committee members this afternoon to discuss the relationship between academics and intercollegiate athletics at the University of Kansas.
Brown has made several controversial statements concerning the academic atmosphere at the University in relation to student-athletes.
"The meeting will involve specific students, different complaints and different issues." Dunbick said. "There has been the complaint about how basketball players and other student-athletes are treated. There has been a lot of misunderstanding before. We'll be able to get down to the issues instead of fighting it in the press."
On Campus
An affirmative action/equal opportunity workshop is scheduled for 10 a.m. today in the Governor's Room of the Kansas Union.
The first session of the seminar "Christian Faith as Simplicity of Lifestyle," will begin at 4:30 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
A women's resource center workshop titled "Choices: You Got a Vote! The Head of You," is scheduled for July 7th at the Pine Room of the Kansas Union
- The Lawrence Region Men and Women's Widowed Group will have a friendship and valentine meeting at 7 p.m. today in the Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont.
A Sigma Psi meeting featuring
Jacquie McClain, director of person-
nel at the University of Kansas
Medical Center, is scheduled for
p.m. today in the Walnut Room of the
Kansas Union.
■ A listening and notetaking workshop is scheduled for 7 p.m. today in 300 Strong Hall.
- An undergraduate philosophy club meeting is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. today in the International Room of the Kansas Union.
Correction
Due to incorrect information supplied to the Kansan, a calendar item was incorrect in Monday's Kansan.
"Managing Corporate Culture," an executive lecture series with Kay Ellen Consolder, Mobil Corp., New York, is scheduled for 2:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Pioneer Room of the Burge Union.
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Public: $14 & $12; KU & K-12 Students: $7 & $6; Senior Citizens & Other Students: $13 & $11
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3
Education school considers new undergraduate degree
Plan would lower special education requirements
By Kathleen Faddis
Kansan staff writer
University of Kansas education majors may soon be able to teach special education with an undergraduate degree instead of being required to complete a master's.
An education faculty assembly will consider in February or March a proposal to offer an undergraduate degree in special education, said Richard Whelan, chairman of the special education department. The proposal was presented to a School of Education committee last fall.
Whelan said he wanted to start the program in fall 1988 if the proposal was approved.
The school now offers special education degrees only at the master's, education specialist and doctorate levels.
One of the main purposes of the proposal is to increase the number of persons coming into the program, said Douglas Guess, professor of
1.
It will increase the pool of teachers, but we don't know how much.'
— Richard Whelan
chairman of the special education department
special education.
Whelan said, "It will increase the pool of teachers, but we don't know how much."
An annual education study by Emporia State University this year showed a shortage of special education teachers in Kansas.
Whelan said that special education teachers left the field for the same reasons other teachers did. If school boards could improve salaries and recognition, and develop career ladder, it would improve the morale and longevity of teachers across the board, he said.
Also, there are no salary incentives for teachers to go into special education. Whelan said.
Too few teachers can lead some school administrators to attempt to reduce the core requirements for teacher certification, Guess said.
A candidate for the proposed program would have to complete 12 hours of special education courses and a practicum during the five-year program required for regular teacher certification.
Graduates would be able to obtain temporary endorsement as certified special education teachers. They would be qualified to teach regular or special education classes. The graduates would be competitive in both situations, Whelan said, because many students with special problems are also found in regular classrooms.
To maintain their certification, graduates would have to complete the requirements for full endorsement within three or four years, Whelan said. To get full endorsement, teachers would have to take nine additional hours in special education and complete an additional practicum.
"We think, based on preliminary assessments, there's quite a bit of interest." Whelan said.
He said that professors had informally questioned students already in the school. He said he thought there were at least 20 or 30 students who had expressed interest.
No other Regents school in Kansas offers undergraduate degrees in special education, Whelan said. The proposed program would not require new faculty or added costs to administer.
"The faculty believes this is a very positive move and we would like to give it a chance." Whelan said.
Demand for night classes is low
Half those offered are grad classes
Bv Rebecca J. Cisek
Kansan staff writer
If you are busy between 8 a.m. an.
5 p.m., taking classes at the KU's
Lawrence campus probably isn't for
you.
Brower Burchill, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, said that typically night classes at KU were unfilled.
"Our population prefers day classes," he said.
Gary Thompson, director of student records, said KU offered about 240 night courses, more than half of which were graduate classes in education.
But demand for and availability of night classes varies from school to
Tom Mulinazzi, associate dean of engineering, said he had received an average of three complaints a semester because of the lack of undergraduate and graduate night courses in engineering.
"We can't do everything with the resources we have." Mulingzi said.
Mulinazzi said that not offering night courses was a question of catering to full- or part-time students. Offering both day and night classes would require two groups of faculty, he said.
"I've recommended that some students go to the University of Missouri-Kansas City," he said.
Vernon Schindler, a former KU student from Lawrence, is one student who has looked to Kansas City. But the question he can't get at night in Lawrence.
If a university is in an urban area
Schindler said he would like to go to engineering school at KU's Lawrence campus, but only night classes would accommodate his full-time job.
"I don't believe they will change enrolment starts to drop," he said.
The School of Business offers night classes to its graduate students at the Regents Center in Overland Park.
Ronna Robertson, assistant director of the master's program at the school, said that occasionally students commuting from Topeka to the center complained, but that the center was the school's outlet for students who wanted night classes.
'KU is primarily a university for the traditional college student.
Pam Houston
assistant to the dean of science
assistant to the dean of liberal arts and
Pam Houston, assistant to the dean of liberal arts and sciences, said that she had heard some complaints regarding the lack of night classes, but said that there might be more people who wanted them. She said complaints generally came from people who worked during the day.
"KU is primarily a university for the traditional college student," she
Houston said that with the current budget limitations, the college wasn't offering many classes at night.
The college now offers about 65 night courses.
But, she said, the college might consider holding more night classes in classroom
space during the day.
James B. Carothers, associate dean of liberal arts and sciences, said that night classes were offered at different times. In the past, night classes met once a week for two and a half hours, but now some meet for an hour and 20 minutes twice a week or for an hour four times a week.
He said that two types of students took night classes: non-traditional students who worked during the day and traditional students who were willing to take night classes if they could get the classes they needed.
But he said that the more night classes the college offered, the more scheduling conflicts there were at exam times because many departments held their exams at night.
Carothers said that basic English classes were offered, and language classes were offered as well.
Working full time at KU and going to school at night was not a problem for Ola Faucher, assistant director of personnel services.
Faucher completed a master's degree in public administration taking late-afternoon and night classes that accommodated her job and parenting responsibilities. But she said her situation was unusual.
Alice M.
Lawrence School Board President Barbara Ballard Istens to discussions on school pairing.
School boundaries will ease crowding
Bv Kevin Dilmore
Kansan staff writer
More than 200 children will be going to different elementary schools next fall because of boundary changes, but not because of any school pairings, the Lawrence School Board decided last night.
The board voted to accept a boundary realignment proposal submitted in November. The proposal drew new boundaries for most of Lawrence's 16 elementary schools.
some families had protested the changes. Parents in Gaslight Village, who did not want children in the neighborhood going to two different schools, petitioned against the new boundaries. About 100 children live in Gaslight Village.
The boundaries were created not only to ease overcrowding but to determine the enrollment of the new Quail Run Elementary School in west Lawrence, which will open next fall.
Barbara Ballard, school board president, said that although not everyone would be happy with the changes, the board would try to do what was best for the district.
After approving the new boundaries, the board considered the
school pairings, one set at a time.
The proposal recommended that six elementary schools be paired. One school in each pair would have housed kindergarten through second grades, and the other would have housed third through sixth grades.
The proposed pairs were: Pinckney and Riverside, Grant and Woodlaunch, and New York and East Heights elementary schools.
Maggie Cartart, board member,
proposed that Woodlawn and
Grant schools be turned into
multi-section schools by merging
instead of pairing. She moved to
house students from both schools
In Woodlawn, and put non-teaching
staff and consultants in Grant.
But board member Larry Moran said, "We would be looking at closing a school during a time of crisis. This seems not the time to do it."
The proposal was voted down 5-2, with Cartar and Mary Lou Wright dissenting.
After the votes were recorded, Ballard summed up her feelings: "I think it would have worked, and other people think it would have worked. But it was a change that no one could put together satisfactorily in their minds.
Paul Taylor Dance Company to perform once-controversial work at KU tonight
Kansan staff writer
The Paul Taylor Dance Company will perform at 8 p.m. today in Hoch Auditorium.
The company, which is in its 33rd season, will perform three dances at the public concert, including "Lost, Found and Lost," a partial reconstruction of Paul Taylor's controversial 1957 work, "7 New Dances."
Janet Hamburg, associate professor of dance, said the dance was controversial because Taylor had used everyday movements in the work.
"One dance had very little actual dancing," Hamburg said. "People were not used to that 30 years ago, so they left the performance.
"No one leaves today. He is simply a phenomenal choreographer. He has chosen to integrate pedestrian movements with dancing. It's captivating to look at."
The troupe also will dance to the music of Wagner's "Siegfried Idyll" and Baermann's Adagio for Clarinet and Strings, and will close with the entire company dancing "Le Sacre Du Prunetem," a work depicting a ballet school rehearsal interrupted by crooks, cops and dancers.
"This would be a highlight for any dance department anywhere in the country," Hamburg said.
Eighteen dancers perform in the company and have a repertoire of more than 90 dances, all of which were choreographed by Taylor. One of the dancers is Francis Huber, a native of Kansas City, Mo., who made her debut with the company last fall.
In its 32-year history, the company has performed in more than 300 U.S. cities and has visited 52 nations during 32 foreign tours.
In addition to the public concert, the troupe will give a closed, shortened version of the concert tomorrow at 1:45 p.m. to area sixth graders. The special showing is part of an educational outreach program sponsored by the Swarthout Society of KU.
Regents revise building plans
The Board of Regents recently revised its five-year capital improvements plan to eliminate challenges to the Margin of Excellence proposal
Stanley Koplik, executive director of the Regents, said yesterday that $13 million had been eliminated from the state general fund request for campus building programs.
Kopikl said that by eliminating the requests from the general fund, the money could be used for the Margin of Excellence. He said that the capital improvement plan would now rely on money from the Educational Building Fund, private sources, fee revenue and federal grants.
By Joel Zeff
"We're giving up state improvements for Margin of Excellence," Koplik said. "The sum total of the $13
Koplik said that the revision would cause only minor delays in new building and renovation proposals. He said current projects would not be affected.
Kansan staff writer
"Nothing is being eliminated. We're just reorganizing the five-year plan. Some of the projects will just be shifted from one year to another," Koplik said.
Allen Wiechert, director of facilities planning, said that the plan would not affect KU in the next fiscal year. Only future projects are in jeopardy, he said. Some of the projects that could be put on hold are the renovation of Broadcasting Hall (KANU) and an upgrade of major
million will be funneled to the Margin of Excellence. Therefore, the Margin of Excellence will have no challenges."
"The chairman of the board thought that other things interfered with the Margin of Excellence. Thus, change." Koplik said.
Donald Slawson, chairman of the Regents, was unavailable for comment but said in a news release that nothing was more important than faculty salaries. He said the Regents were willing to sacrifice new building construction to avoid jeopardizing funding for the Margin of Excellence.
Koplik said the revised plan would not only make the Margin of Excellence plan more attractive, but would show Regents support.
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Tuesday, January 26, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Condom machines needed as part of KU AIDS plan
Education is important. It is the basis for the University community.
But if education is to take root, an atmosphere must be created that encourages the practice of what is learned. Condom machines, as part of the University's response to the threat of AIDS, would create such an atmosphere.
Last week, Executive Vice Chancellor Judith Ramaley issued the University's response to the recommendations of the KU AIDS Task Force. The University will follow task force recommendations to use education as a primary weapon against the spread of AIDS.
However, Ramaley rejected the task force's request for Kansas Union concessions to provide condom vending machines in the men's and women's bathrooms in campus buildings.
"To dispense sexual devices throughout the campus at random may suggest implicitly that the University supports a certain value pattern." Ramaley said in her statement.
The machines would not send this message. In contrast, they would send the message that AIDS is a serious disease and that if one is going to have sex, precautions must be taken against sexually transmitted diseases.
More importantly, increased visibility and availability would be a step toward changing student attitudes about condom use. Watkins health officials estimate that virtually no KU students are using condoms to prevent the transmission of STDs. These same officials say that sexually active students who don't use condoms almost are guaranteed of acquiring some type of STD within one year.
Student health officials cite examples of students who have taken campus sex ed courses, yet found themselves seeking treatment at Watkins Hospital for an STD. These students had the education, an education far more concentrated than anything that can be provided University-wide.
Education alone is not the answer.
For the AIDS education the University seeks to enact to be effective, student attitudes must change. Students don't like condoms. They don't use them. At 21, it is easy to have a feeling of immortality. It's difficult to envision that just one bad decision could change or end one's life.
The availability of condoms in vending machines on campus will heighten awareness of them and reinforce the need for their use. Area grocery stores have helped do this by placing condoms in their check-out lines. The Student Senate has done its part by including condoms in its safer-sex kits.
By installing the machines, the University would be calling attention to the need for the use of condoms. It is a controversial move, especially in a community with Lawrence's parochial outlook.
Surgeon General C. Everett Koop has called for the use of condoms to prevent the spread of AIDS. KU should do the same and reconsider its decision not to allow condom vending machines in campus buildings.
Alison Young for the editorial board
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
Other Voices
In a recent display of short-sightedness and self-interest, University of Kansas basketball coach Larry Brown sharply criticized the University's faculty for not giving his athletes a chance to succeed.
Perhaps Larry Brown should keep his inane remarks to himself and remember that the University is an institution of higher learning.
Kansas State Collegian Kansas State University
Kansas has a new Wizard of Oz. In just two short sentences, Kansas senator and Republican presidential hopeful Bob Dole achieved the fondest wishes of President Reagan, Lt. Col. Oliver North and others distirbed by the Iran-contra scandal. He made the entire issue vanish.
Without the aid of mirrors, wands or even a lovely assistant, Dole told New Hampshire voters last week, "I don't think Iran-contra is a real issue anymore. It's kind of died on the vine."
The questions naturally arise: if it's not a "real" issue anymore, what has it become? A fake issue? Was it ever a "real" issue? Was it all a bad dream? Is the United States out of the cyclone and safely back in Kansas with nothing more than a bump on the head?
Daily O'Collegian Oklahoma State University
News staff
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Todd Cohen...Managing editor
Rob Knapp...News editor
Anne Piugno...Editorial editor
Joseph Rebello...Campus editor
Jennifer Rowland...Planning editor
Anne Luscombe...Sports editor
Stephen Wade...Photo editor
Richard Stewart...Graphics editor
Tom Eblen...General manager, news adviser
Business staff
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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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The Kansas reserves the right to retest or edit letters and guest columns. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom. 11. StuartFflight Hall.
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U.S. can't ignore Israeli violence
Humiliations and assaults will not dampen Palestinians' hopes for peace
In these last days, we have only begun to get a taste of Jewish brutality in Palestine. If U.S. citizens had any idea of what the Israelis have been doing to Palestinians in the last 40 years, I believe they would have pressured Washington to alter Israel's iron fist policy long ago.
These uprisings should remind Israel that it cannot forever rule the 1.5 million Palestinian Arabs in the occupied territories with such brute force, but they get by with denying them their human rights.
The revolts that began Nov. 29, the 40th anniversary of the partitioning of Palestine, are just a prelude to other anniversaries marking Jewish brutality and oppression of Palestinians, such as the Deir Yasin massacre on April 9, 1948, in which 250 men, women and children were killed. The 40th anniversary of Sabra wa Shafta, where 460 people, women and children among them, were killed.
The United States usually tolerates anything the Israeli government does, but the deportation of at least four Palestinians two weeks ago was the final outrage and should not be tolerated.
In recent weeks, we have seen the use of Palestinians as human armor, tied and bound to Israeli military vehicles to thwart stone-throwing, horrent beatsings and numerous casualties, which include the shooting of two young girls who were collecting their laundry, one at point-blank range, by trigger-happy Israeli soldiers. Still more of an outrage was the recent Israeli storming of worshipers leaving noon prayers at two of the most sacred spots for Muslims: the Al-Aqsa and Dome of the Rock mosques. One man's skull was fractured as a result of the assault.
Mary Jo Ward
Zeta Mattioni-Najib Guest Columnist
How can Israel "deport" a Palestinian from Palestine? Deportation is something a government does to foreigners who offend a country in which they are living temporarily. As a result, the person is ordered to return to his own country. Further, the term "exile" applies to one who has been captured from his own country, and thus, has no legal protection anywhere. He becomes a non-person.
In the last 40 years, Palestinians have suffered far more than Jews have, and they are willing to suffer even more to gain their freedom. Israel cannot continue with its dual system of military dictatorship for Palestinians and democracy for Israelis. The two sides do not negotiate with the Palestinians and the continued occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Israel is inevitably facing another war.
Palestinians are already stateless. They have no human rights, no vote, no protection against confiscation of their property, and worst of all, no citizenship.
This should be of particular concern to Americans because Israel is dependent on U.S. aid for its economic and military well-being. In the past year alone, Israel received more than $4 billion from governmental and private sources in the
United States.
Judging from the events of the last month and a half, the Israeli stand that they "will not negotiate with terrorists" is highly contradictory. Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir was leader of the terrorist Stern Group, who opposed British rule in Palestine in the days of the underground.
We consistently hear Jews condemning the mistreatment of Jews in the Soviet Union while they support harsher practices by the Israeli government against Palestinians.
It is regrettable that for so long Americans have scorned Palestinians for their acts against Jews, when in reality, the Palestinians have taken the beatings. There has never been an act of Palestinian terrorism in the United States, whereas in 1986 the Jewish Defense League was responsible for the bombing and murder of Palestinian-American Alex Awda in Los Angeles as a result of a television interview in which he made some anti-Iraeli comments.
I believe there is no greater time than the
patient to educate Americans as to what is
helping them.
Quoting the words of Rita Shukair, co-chairman for the Palestinian Human Rights Commission, who spoke at KU last semester, "The Palestinians are a peace-loving people, and their will for peace and justice cannot be wiped out by even a single assault or assaults. We, the American people, must go forward with renewed optimism about what we can accomplish through our political process."
Zeta Mattioni-Najib is a Tulsa, Okla., junior majoring in journalism.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Embrace might offend
I thought your front page photograph of two respectable and righteous Lawrence women engaged in what appears to be a "sexually-oriented" embrace was interesting. I can only hope that such an open display of affection between persons of the same sex doesn't offend the delicate sensibilities of the Alliance of Citizens for Traditional Values. Why, these women could lose their jobs, or their homes. Who'd protect them — the City Commission?
Nah, after all, the commission and the ACTV appear to be dedicated to preserving two of America's most cherished traditional values — prejudice and discrimination.
Hey, I feel better. How about a haircut and then dinner at Arthur Porters? Nah.
After discussion, the Lawrence City Commission voted 3-2 to not take action regarding amending the city's ordinance to prohibit discrimination based on a person's sexual
Gary Jennings Computer Operator III
City should have acted
Mrs. Praeger believes it is "unfortunate" that there are those who would perceive a vote of "no action" as a vote endorsing discrimination. Although she may believe this to be unfortunate, it is in effect what her vote and that of commissioners Mike Amyx and Bob Schumm has done.
orientation
The three commissioners who voted to take no action on the amendment followed the lead of Commissioner Praeger. After listening to testimony from citizens, Mrs. Praeger admitted she thought discrimination probably was occurring in Lawrence. She further said, with the particular issue of sexual orientation, public opinion does not yet support the type of ordinance Lawrence is considering, and to pass a law before the public supported it would be to allow the "tyranny of the minority."
It is unfortunate that we have elected leaders who cannot perceive truth and justice as the ultimate guidance and opt instead to act or not acted on biggory, fear and ignorance, whether these be the views of the minority or majority.
During World War II, in nazi Germany, with the vision and courage of our leaders, could more have been done to prevent the murder of millions of Jews? During the years preceding civil rights legislation, could there have been more our leaders could have done to stop the persecution and injustices toward minorities in this country?
In regard to Commissioner Schumm's remarks that more evidence is needed to show
discrimination, he may be interested to know there is a group that believes more evidence is needed to prove there was a holocaust in which millions of Jews were murdered.
Cast a vote for ignorance. What seems to be really unfortunate — we don't learn from our mistakes.
Gregg Stauffer Lawrence sophomore
Don't judge too quickly
Dear Timothy Downs: As an "intelligent" student-athlete who feels qualified to discuss academics and athletics, I felt compelled to respond to your letter. It is evident that you consider basketball players as non-intellectual. What makes you intelligent enough to pass judgment on another student? It is obvious that you are ignorant to the demands required of the student-athlete. No! A more intelligent individual will not necessarily make a better basketball player.
This statement projected your ignorance. Furthermore, it is not a matter of the school having to be divided between academics and athletics. As you are probably too blind to see, they both have long gone hand-in-hand, and they will continue to complement each other!
Milton M. Newton Washington, D.C., senior
BLOOM COUNTY
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, January 26, 1988
TuesdayForum
5
Press freedom Owners control presses
"Freedom of the press belongs to whoever owns one." That line may have been uttered cynically at first, but it deserves a sober second thought in light of a decision from the Supreme Court of the United States. In a 5-to-1 vote, the court upheld the right of a school principal to turn down articles for a student newspaper. In such a case, he was performing the function any publisher would. He was supervising the editorial content of the student paper on behalf of those to be recruited to fill the role the people. The public — not the students — owns that paper, and the public has a school administration to supervise its content.
Yet some sensible observers, including three justices of the Supreme Court, don't seem to grasp this simple principle. If the owner of a press can be told what to print on it, freedom of the press is gone. In the past, the Supreme Court has recognized that danger where private publishers are concerned. In a landmark case, it once refused to order a newspaper publisher to print a letter from an irate citizen
P. G. H. S. M.
- on the sound principle that government has no business dictating the contents of the country's newspapers.
Yet some of the same papers that welcomed that decision may decry this one. Distinguished journals whose highly responsible publishers would never dream of giving reporters or anybody else the last say on how their papers should be run may oppose this latest decision as an example of what happens on the contrary, it upholds that freedom. Because if freedom of the press doesn't belong to the fellow who owns one, then government will be called on to become editor-in-chief and ar伯er-in-chief among
Paul Greenberg Syndicated Columnist
reporters, students, letter writers and anybody who ever wanted to run somebody else's newspaper.
Unfortunately, the court assigned the writing of the majority opinion in this case to Byron "the Whizzer" White, who contributed his usual inflicities to the record, none of which turned out to be sufficiently relevant to obscure the basically sound position of the majority. The dissenting opinion, by William J. Brennan, grandson of the late Jonathan of the digged where Justice White zapped. Byron White has a tendency to call a spade a digging implement, while Justice Brennan calls it a bloody shovel. Both wrote all around the issue without ever summing it up concisely.
The crux of this issue is: Who owns the press? If the public does, its representatives must take final responsibility — and make the final decisions. If their editorial judgment is wrong, or even if it's correct, students and press critics have every right to criticize it. But those critics have no right to dictate what will be printed in a paper they don't own. The public has entrusted administrators to run its schools and, yes, its school curations and other extracurricular activities. This case is not about whether the final decision on these articles was good or bad journalism, or anyway it shouldn't be, but about who has the right to make that decision on behalf of a public school district.
It needs to be emphasized that this decision applies only to the
official school newspaper and that, if students disagree with its policy, they can start their own, unsupervised paper — and be fully responsible for the consequences. Many of this country's great newspapers got started in 1946 as a product dissatisfied with the product that was available decided to offer his own — rather than force his ideas on a newspaper he didn't own.
It's a fair and practical principle if you think about it. Freedom of the press belongs to whoever owns one.
Student editors lose rights
What an ironic turn of events! When the writer was asked to react to the 5-3 decision by the Supreme Court in the Hazelwood v. Kuhlmeier case, she recalled a paper researched and written in the early '70s. In part, it said, "Scholastic journalism has a vital role to play in the secondary schools today. That it stands on the threshold of a new era of freedom can no longer be questioned in light of current evidence."
And so it was for nearly two decades. Syndicated columnist
BARRINGTON PRINTER
CHICAGO
A
Jackie Engel
James Kilpatrick commented, "Student editors are the only untouchable editors in the land . . . a theory that is hogwash." Well, the Supreme Court did as Kilpatrick, and others wanted. They ruled on a question they had heretofore not addressed directly; namely, what are the rights of a student editor at a public institution?
In 1967, the Supreme Court had ruled that neither the 14th Amendment nor the Bill of Rights was for adults alone. Suddenly, high school students shed these rights as they enter the school house doors.
Columnist
What will be the consequences? Frightening. It will not just have a chilling effect but will put student views at many schools into a deep freeze. Further, it fosters hypocrisy that all honest educators deploy. The student learns about his freedom of expression in his government class, then crosses the hall into the journalism room and is told he can't practice it. What kind of a mixed message does that give? Is it any wonder that the adult society is accused of a double standard?
Henry David Thoreau once wrote, "Don't sit down to write until you have stood up to live." Today's students have been thrust into a alembstrom of events, many not of their own liking. They have not been given the opportunity in their short span to stand up and live. They believe that if they wait to sit down to write, the events will have passed them by. It will be too late.
Those who favor the decision purport that those who "own" the press have the freedom. By virtue of their chronological years, the opportunity to "own" a press is not practical. Must they wait for ownership to have a voice in issues surrounding them?
What most students read in their high school newspapers is trivial nonsense. Whenever they try to say something worthwhile, they get censored. Teen pregnancies have skyrocketed. One out of every three students who enter a classroom today come from a single-parent home. Frequently, the first adult seen by the child is Yet, when someone entristing students wanted to write on relevant issues such as abortion and divorce as in the Hazelwood wood. Kuhmeier them, they were denied this right.
The irrelevant high school press is dead. If this comes as a startling revelation to those closely associated with secondary school curriculum and administration, it should not. Today's youth is an integral part of a generation that is demanding new answers to old problems and wanting an honest appraisal of their world and society. Can society feign surprise that no longer are they interested just in the outcome of Friday's game, the Saturday night dance or 10 innovative ways to drag their town's main street? They want to make the world their beat.
Media critic Ben Bagdikian pointed out, "If freedom of expression becomes merely an empty slogan in the minds of enough children, it will be dead by the time they become adults." Is that the message the Supreme Court intended to give?
Jackie Engel is a lecturer in journalism and executive secretary of the Kansas Scholastic Press Association.
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Tuesday, January 26, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Fund drive set for May KUEA hoping to raise $100 million for KU
By Brenda Finnell
Kansan staff writer
The money has not been raised yet, but visions of ways to spend it are dancing in the heads of some University of Kansas officials.
But whether the dreams become reality depends on how much money the Kansas University Endowment Association raises in the Campaign Kansas fund drive, which begins in May.
Jim Martin, executive director of Campaign Kansas, said that $100 million was the tentative campaign goal and a definite goal would be set by May.
The money will pay for KU projects that state money does not finance, Martin said. He also said the money would help KU attract and retain the best students and faculty.
"In order for it to maintain its position as the leading university in the Big Eight and one of the leading public universities in the country, private resources are essential to support other resources," Martin says. "We make the difference between a satisfactory education and a truly outstanding one."
School deans, department chairmen and other officials were asked last fall to submit requests for the money's use.
"We've just made a big shopping list," said Marilyn Clark, director of resource development at Watson Library.
The University's requests totaled $550 million. University administrators then examined the requests and trimmed that amount to the $100 million figure.
Martin said the tentative amount was a goal the Endowment Associa-
'We've just made a big shopping list.'
W,
Marilyn Clark
director of resource development at
tion thought it could reach based on a feasibility study by a Chicago fundraising firm.
Committees of volunteers will be organized to ask industries, corporations and foundations for donations, Martin said. The volunteers will be KU alumni, faculty, students and friends of the University.
Planning for Campaign Kansas began about a year ago. The campaign is supposed to last four more years.
Clark said the largest portion of the library's money would go toward buying new books. She said specific subject areas such as American sports and recreation, Kansas photographic history and Kansas mapping would receive new materials.
Another big item on the library's list is a new music library. Clark said the Murphy Hall music library was too small.
"It's so crowded, you can hardly turn around." she said.
Scholarship funds for both undergraduate and graduate education students are a priority for Edward Meyen, dean of education. Meyen will conduct a lecture fund for the school would benefit both students and faculty.
John Tolleifson, dean of business would like scholarships and fellowships for his school, too. He said the
business school might also use money to do research in industry and finance.
In addition, a field study program to give students and faculty contacts in the business community might be created, Tollefon said.
Marlin Harmony, chemistry department chairman, said his department also would welcome scholarship and fellowship money.
Laboratory equipment is needed, too. Harmony said. Both small and large items are on the department's list.
Micro-sized flasks, which cost $20 to $50, are among the least expensive items, Harmony said. The most expensive items include spectroscopic equipment, which measures radiation wavelengths and can cost $30,000 to $100,000.
Gunther Schlager, chairman of the biology sciences division, said his department would like to have money for new facilities to do research in molecular genetics. A new electron microscope also is needed.
Philip Humphrey, Museum of Natural History director, said the museum would like to establish an endowment to improve its collections. Fellowships for graduate students working on their degrees in the museum also are important, he said.
Humphrey said he was optimistic at alarms and was pleased by the campaign effort.
"It's a wonderful thing, and we are doing our best to help it succeed," Humphrey said.
Rather angers Bush on TV
WASHINGTON — Vice President George Bush and CBS anchor Dan Rather engaged in a contentious interview on live television yesterday evening, Bush saying that the network had impugned his integrity on the Iran-contra affair and misled him about the tonic of the interview.
The Associated Press
Bush said that CBS officials had told him he would be interviewed for a political profile, not a report on his role in the sale of arms to Iran.
The interview, on the CBS Evening News, became so heated that on several occasions both men talked at
once, making it impossible to understand the words of either.
A clearly angry Bush referred to an incident last year in which Rather reportedly left the CBS News set when a sports event ran into time scheduled for a newscast, resulting in several minutes of blank airtime.
"It's not fair to judge my whole career by a rehash on Iran," Bush said. "How would you like it if I judged your career by those seven minutes when you walked off the set in New York?" Would you like that?"
Rather's response was unintelligible, and then Bush said. "I have
Rather cut off Bush at the end of the interview after asking if the vice president would agree to answer Iran-contra questions at a news conference before the Feb. 8 Iowa caucuses.
respect for you, but I don't have respect for what you're doing here tonight."
As Bush began to respond, seemingly beginning to say that he had held numerous news conferences, Rather said "I gather that the answer is no," and ended the interview.
Lab president takes command
By Stacy Foster
Kansan staff writer
Floors shine. The men's and women's bathroom signs are Post-It Notes. A new carpet smell fills the air and boxes are stacked in the corners.
Everything in the new Oread Laboratories is new, including the boss.
[Image of a man smiling and gesturing with his hands outstretched.]
William Duncan, the new president of Oread Laboratories, 15th and Wakarusa, replaced Albert Adelman this January.
He's been on the job for two weeks and hasn't unpacked everything, but he says he's excited and ready to assume command of the business enterprises at Oread.
William Duncan, Oread Laboratories president
"The possibilities associated with Oread Laboratories are unlimited. It provides unbelievable insight into the moment of our business." Dungan said.
Oread Labs develops pharmaceutical technologies and puts new drug products on the market.
Howard Mossberg, chairman of the board at Oread and Kuen de of pharmacy, said Duncan was the ideal choice for the job.
"If we were to list the activities needed to be chief officer of Oread, Dr. Duncan has experience in all of them," he said. "The activities will be slightly different here, but he is very well trained for the job."
Duncan received his master's degree in organic chemistry from Pittsburgh State University in 1966. He received his doctorate in organic synthesis from Oklahoma State University in 1972
For the past ten years he was the head organic and radiochemical synthesis at Midwest Research Institute in Kansas City, Mo.
The institute develops pharmaceutical technologies used for drug analysis and identifies environmental contaminants, Duncan said.
"We did work for the National Cancer Institute and the Environmental Protection Agency," he said.
For example, the EPA would bring the institute a sample
thought to contain contaminants. The institute provided them with authentic contaminant samples so the EPA could conclusively identify the actual contaminants, Duncan said.
"We were not in the field to regulate pollution but merely to identify the chemicals in a certain substance," he said.
Duncan's pharmaceutical background prepared him for his job at Oread, because most of the business he saw new drug developments, he said.
for BioAnalytical Research, on West Campus. Oread Labs, founded by Takeru Higuchi in 1983, was designed to commercialize developments at the research center.
Oread Labs works closely with the University of Kansas Center
Higuchi was a KU Regents distinguished professor of chemistry and pharmacy. He died last spring.
The research center developed a detector for liquid chromatography that Oread has commercialized, said Ted Kuwana, director of the center. The detector analyzes the amount of peptides in drugs, and Oread sells this service to pharmaceutical companies.
Mistaking gun for toy, boy shoots brother
By a Kansan reporter
both 15, were playing in a bedroom in the Austin home Friday afternoon when the shooting occurred.
Austin's brother entered the room with the snub-nosed revolver, told the boys to freeze and fired the gun once, both boys in the legs. Dalquest said.
released from Lawrence Memorial Hospital on Friday.
Both boys were treated and
Sgt. Don Dalquest said the two victims, Shera Austin, 1404 E. 15th St., and Steve Clark, 1600 Haskell.
Austin had a bullet removed from his thigh and Clark's leg was only grazed by a bullet, a hospital spokesman said.
There were no adults at home at the time of the shooting, police said.
LISTENING AND NOTETAKING INTENSIVE WORKSHOP
A 12-year-old Lawrence boy who mistook a 22 caliber revolver for a toy accidentally shot his brother and them to the hospital. Lawrence only
Learn and practice skills to:
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(1) use notes for exam reviews
- Use notes for exam reviews
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TRW inc. 1988, TRW is the name and mark of TRW Inc.
A
TRW will be on campus February 9,1988. 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?
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.
A company called TRW. Here's the story.
TRW offers you the freedom to move among a wide variety of opportunities in 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.
If you are unable to see us on campus, please send your resume to: TRW, College Relations. E2/4000, One Space Park, Redondo Beach, CA 90278.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, January 26, 1988
7
NationWorld
Sandinista agents question survivor of downed plane
The Associated Press
MANAGUA, Nicaragua — Security agents yesterday questioned a crew member of a rebel plane shot down by Sandinista troops, and the army searched the southern jungle for others who may have parachuted to safety.
Government troops hit the DC-6 on Saturday with a Soviet-made C2-M rocket, a Defense Ministry communique said. It crashed at Lomas de Arena, 80 miles southeast of Managua in Rio San Juan, a province bordering Costa Rica.
Lt. Col. Roberto Calderon, chief of the 5th Military Zone, said the army had found four bodies — a Colombian and three Nicaraguans. The bodies may include those of the pilot and copilot. No Americans were aboard.
The survivor. Alejandro Sanchez Herrera. 25, told reporters Sunday in
San Carlos, near the crash site, that at least two crew members parachuted from the plane with a supply drop before it was shot down.
Calderon said the two might be U.S. trained oxyloses experts.
He said the plane took off from Swan Island, a Honduran possession in the Caribbean that had been used for years by U.S. military forces. He also said that 30 U.S. military personnel directed the contra supply effort from there and that the operation was guarded by 45 Hondurans.
Barricada, the newspaper of the ruling Sandinista National Liberation Front, published a photograph yesterday showing Sanchez Herrera with three people in military uniform. It said the survivor identified one of them as an American who helped direct the Swan Island supply operations.
Death-row inmate gets sixth reprieve
The Associated Press
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — A convicted killer whose cause has been championed by a Nobel Peace Prize winner and activists worldwide won an unprecedented sixth reprise yesterday from Florida's electric chair when the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to review his appeal.
Willie Jasper Darden, who has steadfastly maintained his innocence during his 14 years on death row, had been scheduled for execution Feb. 3.
terday went into recess until Feb. 22.
Darden's case become a cause celebre as former Soviet dissident Andre Sakharov, presidential candidate Jesse Jackson, attacker Margot Kidder and British rock star Peter Grabriel joined Amnesty International in asking Gov. Bob Martinez to grant him clemency.
There was no immediate indication as to when the appeal would be considered by the Court, which yes-
The Southern Christian Leadership Conference, the Southern Coalition of Jails and Prisons and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People also believe Darden may be innocent.
Onlookers at Dallas shooting sought
The Associated Press
DALLAS — Hundreds of people rallied to support the beaguered police department yesterday as authorities said they would try to prosecute bystanders who yelled "Shoot him, shoot him" before a vagrant killed a police officer.
"It is good to see this support in the community for a change. Most of the time we only see the negative side," said officer Thomas Cicio, observing the crowd of about 400 who marched
from the John F. Kennedy Memorial to City Hall and back.
Some carried signs reading "God
Bless Our Men and Women in Blue."
Meanwhile, police Capt. John Holt said officers were trying to identify the two to 10 onlookers who, according to witnesses, yelled "Shoot him, shoot him," encouraging the vagrant to shoot officer John Chase after he took Chase's revolver. If any are identified, murder charges could be brought against them, Holt said.
Shultz pushes for treaty ratification
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Secretary of State George P. Shultz assured conservative critics yesterday that the United States will respond vigorously if the Soviet Union violates the new arms reduction treaty in Europe, but Sen. Jesse Helms declared that the Soviet Union already was exploiting an "engraved invitation to cheat."
Helms claims that Soviets have already violated pact
As Shultz led off the administration's campaign for Senate ratification of the treaty, Helms, R.N.C., waving a document marked "TOP SECRET" in bright red, contended he had obtained classified information proving that the Soviets already have violated the pact which calls for the elimination of medium and shorter-range nuclear missiles.
told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee he had received confirmation of the document's authenticity - its contents still undisclosed - from CIA Director William Webster
Helms, an outspoken conservative,
Shultz declined to discuss or even look at the document on grounds he was surrounded by photographers and television cameramen.
But Sen. Paul Sarbanes, D-Md., complaining that Helms had not read aloud from a key section of a letter from Webster, quoted the CIA chief as saying that while the document represented excerpts from a draft of
a CIA national intelligence estimate, it did not tell the whole story.
Reading the full Webster letter, Sarbanes noted that the CIA director had said the judgments reached in the document "by themselves do not constitute a sufficient basis on which to draw conclusions" as to whether Soviet compliance with the treaty can be adequately and effectively verified.
The Foreign Relations panel will examine the major further during a meeting.
Helms is leading a band of Senate
conservatives expected to oppose the pact. Ratification requires a two-thirds Senate vote, which is 67 votes if all 100 senators are present and voting.
The treaty was signed last month by President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev, climaxing negotiations that began even before the Reagan administration came to office in 1981.
The treaty provides that within three years of ratification, both countries would finish eliminating all their nuclear missiles with ranges of 345 or 3,125 miles. These weapons account for 4 percent of their nuclear arsenals.
Shultz told the Foreign Relations Committee that the treaty was the work of level-headed negotiations and represented an improvement in the security of the West.
Mecham faces recall election, impeachment
Rose Mofford, the Democratic secretary of state who would replace the Republican governor if he resigns or is removed from office, said 301,032 signatures were verified. The Mecham Recall Committee needed 216,746 valid signatures to force a vote.
The Associated Press
PHOENIX, Ariz. — Gov. Evan Mecham will have to face a recall election or resign after the secretary of state announced yesterday that Mecham's opponents had collected more than enough signatures to force such a vote.
Meanwhile, an Arizona House select committee resumed hearings yesterday on whether Mecham should be impeached. Mecham is expected to be the last witness before the panel, either late this week or
Mecham, who also faces legislative impeachment hearings and criminal charges in connection with a campaign loan, repeated his assertion that he will not resign, a spokesman said.
early next week.
The governor also faces a March 9 criminal trial on six felony counts connected with his alleged concealment of the $350,000 campaign loan he received from a developer.
Mofford said through a spokesman that she plans to notify Mecham today that he has five days to resign, according to state law. If he does not, she is expected to schedule a recall vote by Monday, probably for May 17, when a number of local elections are planned.
Recall Committee founder Ed Buck said he would be "pleasantly surprised" if Mecham resigned, but gubernatorial spokesman Ken Smith said the governor will not.
"Never not during this term," said
he who said the govern-
ment believed he was not doing so.
When the recall petition campaign kicked off last July, Mecham questioned whether "a few homosexuals and dissident Democrats" could raise enough signatures.
News Roundup
COLOMBIAN OFFICIAL KIDNAPPED: In Bogota, Colombia, gunmen believed to be working for cocaine barons kidnapped Colombia's chief prosecutor yesterday, and a radio network said they had killed him. Billionaire drug traffickers who call themselves Los Extraditables have declared war on all who favor extraditing them to the United States for trial.
ACID RAIN TREATY: The United States presented proposals for a treaty on acid rain to Canada yesterday, but Canadian officials said they were disappointed by the lack of a U.S. commitment to limit northbound air pollution. Canadian officials presented a draft treaty calling for a reduction in the flow of sulfur dioxide from the United States to Canada from about 3.6 million metric tons a year to 2 million tons
HOUSTON, TRAVIS WIN: Whitney Houston won favorite pop-rock female vocalist, and former dishwasher Randy Travis won the favorite country album award at the 15th annual American Music Awards last night. Anita Baker won the favorite female soul-rhythm and blues trophy, and Paul Simon's "Graceland" won favorite pop-rock album.
RUSSIA INTERESTS POPE: Pope John Paul II yesterday called for stronger ties between the Russian Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches in the Soviet Union to celebrate the 1,000th anniversary of Christianity there. The pope, who often has expressed interest in visiting his flock in the Soviet Union, spoke during a visit to Rome's Basilica of St. Paul Outside the Walls.
FURTHER SHUTTLE TESTS: Top NASA officials decided yesterday to take another look at the agency's ability to get the space shuttle engines and rockets ready for flight before setting a definite date for launch of the first post-Challenger shuttle. It was decided that a third test of the troublesome solid rocket boots was needed before attempting another shuttle mission, which is estimated to take place about mid-August.
TOUGHER ATV PROHIBITIONS: A task force of state attorneys general in Washington called yesterday for tougher prohibitions on all-terrain vehicles, saying an agreement between the federal government and manufacturers fails to adequately protect young riders.
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Merchandise transferred from all of our fifteen stores for one last sale on men's and women's fall and winter merchandise
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Tuesday, January 26, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Sex mags may go undercover
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — A Senate committee heard testimony yesterday on a bill that would require merchants to put sex magazines and other material considered harmful to children behind blinder racks.
The bill, which the House approved last session, is almost identical to a Wichita city ordinance that has been held constitutional by the 10th U.S. Court of Appeals.
Current law prohibits the sale of obscene material to minors, but supporters of the new bill say the state also needs restrictions on material
that is not "obscene" according to the legal definition, but is "harmful to minors."
"Kansas. No. 1 priority is our children and grandchildren, and we spend more on their education than on anything else," said State Rep Marvin Smith, R-Topeka, the bill's sponsor. "It seems logical to have laws restricting the harmful material they can see."
The bill would make it a mismeanor to display, sell or provide material that is "harmful to minors."
"Harmful to minors" is defined as
material showing nudity, sexual conduct or sexual abuse.
The restrictions would apply to books, magazines, newspaper, posters, records, video tape and other materials. Merchants would be in compliance with the bill if they placed such material behind blinder racks that show the magazine's title but cover up the rest of the magazine.
Many stores already place magazines such as Paxby and Penthouse
The committee will hear more testimony on the bill today, including from opponents for the first time.
Halfway house grants von Ende early leave
By a Kansan reporter
Richard von Ende, former KU executive secretary, was given an early release from a Kansas City, Mo, halfway house Jan. 19.
Perry Mathis, a federal probation officer in Kansas City, Kan., said yesterday that the U.S. Parole Commission had ruled that von Ende was eligible for the curfew release program. Von Ende was convicted of federal cocaine charges in September 1986.
Under this program, von Ende will have a curfew of 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. every day. Although he is still required to hold a job, von Ende does not need to check in with a probation officer when he is not required to be at home or work. Mathis said that von Ende currently was living and working in the Kansas City area.
Von Ende will report only to his
probation officer while he is on the curfew release program.
Angel Harris, head counselor of the Dismas House, the halfway house that released von Ende, said that the curfew program was designed to alleviate some of the overcrowding problems within halfway houses. Harris said the program also helped people adjust to being on the outside again. The Dismas House now holds about 44 people.
On Sept. 22, 1986, von Ende pleaded guilty to one charge of conspiracy to distribute cocaine and one charge of distributing cocaine. He was indicted along with 21 other people in Lawrence on cocaine-related charges in an investigation that included federal officers.
Von Ende was KU's principal lobbyist to the state Legislature from 1972 until he resigned in September 1986.
Margin plan goes before committee
By a Kansan reporter
Stanley Kopil, executive director of the Board of Regents, will address the House Appropriations Committee at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow in Topeka about the proposed Margin of Excellence plan.
The committee will meet in Room 514 South at the Statehouse.
"My plan is to talk to the committee about the objects, outcomes and requirements of the proposal," Koplik said. "I will also answer any questions for clarification of the proposal."
The program, which calls for an infusion of $117 million into Regents schools during the next three years, will not be voted on immediately after Koplik's presentation, said Rep. Rochelle Chronister, R-Needesha, vice chairman of the House Appropriations Committee.
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RAG BACKSTUDIO - COILED METHOD Tuesday, February
SPRING CLASSES
BEGINNING QUARTZ (6 weeks) - Monday, February 1.
8-22, 28. March 7 and 21. Both morning 10-12 noon
and evening 9-10. The first class (Feb. 1) will be three hours, morning 10-1 and
evening 6-9 p.m. You will make a *for all* block wall
BEGINNING QUILTING (6 weeks) - Monday, February 1.
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QUILT-IN-A-DAY LOG CABIN WORKSHOP (all day)
The cabin is a spacious room with a mack and a snack lunch and make a quick you can take home and put on your bed that night. Fabric selection should be chosen with the help of a Stitch On $13.00 per square foot.
QUILT-IN-A-DAY LOG CABIN DEMONSTRATION
Monday, February 8, 7-p.9 p.m. you will be shown how to make a quilt by machine in a very quick and efficient manner to make a quilt pattern to many quilt patterns. $4.50 demonstration only.
BEGINNING QUILTING (6 weeks) - Wednesday, Feb. 3,
10, 24, March 2, 9 and 23, 79 p.m. You will make a
quilt that is 28 inches by 25 inches.
**INTERMEDIATE QULTING** (one class per month) •
Monday, February 15, March 14, April 18, May 18
7-9 p.m. The project and pattern are of your choosing.
6 month commitment. $3.50 per month plus
supplies.
**BEGINNING KNITTING (6 weeks)** Thursday, February 4-25, March 3 and 10, 7-9 p.m. Selection of pattern and supplies should be done prior to the first class with help from a Sitch On Employee. $8.10 plus supplies.
BEGINNING CROCHETTING (2 weeks) - Monday,
February 29 and March 7, 7-9 p.m. Pattern and yarn
should be selected in advance with the help of a Stitch
On employee $8.00 plus supplies.
KNITTED YOKE ON SWEATSHIRTS (2 weeks) Tuesday, February 9 and 25 at 10 a.m.
(Reg. time) DISTRIBUTION Monday
BEGINNING STENCILING Tuesday, February 9, 7-9
n.m. 55.00 plus sunlunches
INTERMEDIATE KNITTING/NORGIEWAN (8 weeks)
Wednesday, February 2-34 and March 2-30, 7-p.m. (no class on March 16). You will learn new techniques. A variety of patterns and patterns will be available. $20.00
COLLARS AND NEEKLINES FOR SWEATTHIRTS
DEMONSTRATION Monday, February 21, 79 p.m. Stop
Meadowview High School at 365 W. State St.
CROCHETED HERIGHT RUG Thursday, March 24, 7:0
m.p. must know how to chair and single crochet it.
BEGINNING COUNTED CROSS STITCH - Tuesday,
March 1, 7-9 p.m. $5.50 supplies provided.
10% DISCOUNT ON CLASS MATERIAL Look for our coupon in the Lawrence Book
Stitch On Needlework Shop
CROCHETED COLLAR (2 weeks) - Thursday, March 31,
and April 7. 7-9 p.m. Must know how to chain and single
crochet. You may select from several patterns. $8.00 plus
COUNTED CROSS CROSS WITH WASTE CANVAS
Wednesday, March 30, 7-9 p.m. $8.00 supplies provided.
ADVANCED COUNTED CROSS CROSS (2 weeks)
Saturday February 20 and 27, 10-12 noon An opportunity.
ADVANCED COUNTED CROSS STITCH (E)
Saturday February 20 and 27 at 10-12 noon. An opportunity to learn ten evenings of Class Project is a gift of Kathryn Murphy's Sampler'. Designed and taught by Kathryn Murphy. $8.00 plus supplies.
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(19) Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
--in your own Kansas Union Bookstores. For a normal roll of 36 exposures, you could drop it off on your way to class before noon, then
KU
Something's Developing!
KU
Why go off campus to have your film processed when you have all the photographic capabilities right
pick it up around three the next day. At the KU Bookstores, we are here for your convenience... so drop in and see what develops!
12 prints - $1.49
15 prints - $ 1.99
24 prints - $ 2.99
36 prints - $ 3.99
Any Exposure -
110, 135, Disc, 126
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KANSAS UNION
BURGE UNION
Sports
Tuesday, January 26, 1988 / University Daily Kansai
9
Tennis co-captain's success on the court and in class requires organization skills
Bv Tom Stinson
Kansan sports writer
Larry Pascal is a student-athlete.
With a 75-44 career singles record, a 91-33 doubles record and the 186 Big Eight championship in the WTA, he was captain of captain Jairus Palacca is an athlete.
As one of three Kansas students nominated in December for the prestigious Rhodes Scholarship and as a member of Phi Beta Kappa, political science major Larry Pascal is a student.
"Larry exemplifies the true meaning of student-athlete," said men's tennis coach Scott Perelman. "He's the type of guy you want in your program.
"you know he'll be in class, you know he'll be on time to practice and you know he'll give his all every day."
Pascal, a three-time Academic All-Big Eight team member, said organization was the key to his success.
His daily routine includes early-morning conditioning at 6 a.m. and classes until 2:30 p.m. He has tennis practice from 9 p.m. to about midnight. Between classes and practice, Pascal studies.
Pascal considers his demanding schedule a challenge.
Through seven semesters at Kansas, Pascal's organization has produced A's in all but one class.
"My sophomore year I asked myself, 'Why am I doing this?' the Dallas senior said. "But during the last two years I've really enjoyed myself. It is demanding and takes a big commitment, but now I realize that it is a once-in-a lifetime experience."
Some of Pascal's other honors include the Martha Cook Clarke Scholarship for scholastic excellence in the social sciences and humanities, the Veta B. Lear Award for the highest academic achievement in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences as a graduate, and the university honor roll.
He has also finished well at the Big Eight championships all three years and was runner-up for the No. 5 singles crown last season.
Pascal said that his most dramatic moment as a Jayhawk came when Kansas won the Big Eight team championship last year. His goal was to win the All-American championship and being an All-American in doubles play.
Pere尔曼 said Pascal takes a great deal of pride in his doubles play. At Jesuit College Preparatory School, he was ranked the No. 1 doubles player in Texas.
"Larry doesn't do anything but win." Perelman said. "He's been a big part of the foundation here. He's such a solid individual that you only expect good things from him."
Pascal said that expecting a lot of himself and having a good work ethic had enabled him to be sure in the majority of his ventures.
"I'm just lucky," Pascal said. "I've been taught good basic values. If I take something up, I usually try to do it well or not at all."
Pascal has encountered the "dumb jock" stereotype in a few instances since being at Kansas. But he said it was a pleasure to destroy that myth.
Cassia Creek
"When I came to Kansas, I came to play for Coach Perelman," Pascal said. "But I knew I was going to have to give equal time to both school and tennis."
Kansan File Photo
Cyclones to play against Sooners twice in a week
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Iowa State coach Johnny Orr just wishes somebody would have asked him before scheduling the Cyclones in back-to-back games against Oklahoma.
In a rare bit of scheduling, Ort's Cyclones must play Oklahoma tomorrow night in Ames and then travel to Norman on Saturday.
"I don't like it," Orr said yesterday in the Big Eight's weekly news conference. "I would never have done it if I had any say about it. Maybe if I had to talk about it, maybe if I but, I don't think anyone wants to play Oklahoma back to back."
Oklahoma coach Billy Tubbs said he asked for the change so he could schedule a non-conference game Feb. 20 with New Mexico. He said he could look on the positive side of the oddity.
Larry Pascal
"We only have to prepare for one team," Tubbs said. "We're going to play with it and not worry about the reason why it is. If we win both of them, then I think it would be the thing to do in the future. If we lose both of them, then I will never do it again."
"I don't know, how many schools have won that many?" he asked. Told that the Sooners would be the fourth in the Big Eight with 1,000 wins, Tubbs said. "It's a significant number. I don't think it's going to get much better." We our program. We come a long way. But when I came to Oklahoma, it had already been proven here that we could compete in the Big Eight
A victory Wednesday would be the 1,000th in the history of Oklahoma, a number Tubbs did not find very significant.
and win in the Big Eight.'
State on Saturday, Missouri coach Norm Stewart said he was still fielding questions about why Derrick Chievous is starting games on the bench.
"They always try to read things into it," Stewart said. "Derrick just hasn't performed very well. I think the fact of just being able to take him out and let him sit and watch helped him.
"In this instance, I think it really helped him to sit and watch his teammates go out there and know they have to try and make up for him and see that they are able to do that. So there was no pressure on him to produce when he went in. He was allowed to play comfortable and I think it really worked out well for him."
Chievous sat out 8 minutes and then led all scorers with 30 points.
Kansas Coach Larry Brown thought the Jayhawks should have won the game they lost to Notre Dame on national television.
"In spots, we forget the fact that we were playing with Danny (Manning)," Brown said. "You know, at least we forget Danny is on our team."
The Jayhawks lead the Big Eight in
caught advantage, making 53
percent of the shots.
Three-point basket not a factor for KU
"Well, Danny is a career 60 percent shooter, so that helps right there," Brown said "I think for the most part I never had to be responsible in their shot selection."
Kansas State, meanwhile, is hanging tough in close games by making 80 percent of the tree throws it tries in the last minutes.
By Elaine Sung
Kansan sports writer
College basketball coaches around the country generally have accepted the three-point shot as a factor that is here to stay.
The shot has decided the outcome of many games, but unlike other schools, Kansas has been slow to use the three-pointer. Big Eight statistics prove this year to be no different.
Kansas is at the bottom of the conference in three-point attempts and completions. 15-for-62 for 24 shots at Nebraska. Nebraska 42, 122 for 34 percent.
Oklahoma leads the Big Eight in attempts, with 128-for-342 for 37 percent. Kansas State has the highest average, with 50-for-121 for 43 percent.
Junior forward Milt Newton is Kansas' leading three-point shooter, with 7-for-17. In last weekend's game he scored Dame, Newton completed 3-for-4.
"Once you hit one, it'll get you into the groove, and that gets you going." Newton said. "You have to have the mentality to shoot that shot. If you ask yourself, 'Should I shoot or not,' then you'll miss it."
"I don't think it will hurt," he said.
"The only time we really use it is when we're down and there's not much time left. But with Danny (Manning) on our team, we don't have to take the three-pointer."
Newton said he did not think the team's lack of three-point tries would make a difference in the Big Eight race.
Kansas relies on the inside game
instead of long field goals. But with the departure of forward Archie Marshall and center Marvin Branch, a lot of that inside game has been lost, sophomore guard Jeff Gueldner said.
("Kansas coach Larry") Brown is letting us use the shot more," Gueldner said. "But with Archie's loss, we have to play guys like Newton the three-pointer."
Even with the problems inside, Kansas' ability to shoot the three-pointer appears diminished from last year.
Gueldner, who completed 4-for-7 three-point shots last year, is 0-for-7 this season.
"I think we much better three-point shooters than we've shown," Brown said. "When we have guys like Milt and Kevin (Pritchard) and Scooter (Barry) who can't hit it, it's because they cause they're capable of shooting it."
He said that while the shot was not much longer than a regular shot, it still was long enough that a slight mistake in positioning would cause the shot to stray.
Jayhawk forward is looking past basketball
Sophomore guard Kevin Pritchard also prefers going inside to taking the three-pointer, which he said was why he had taken only 15 three-point shots, completing three for 20 percent.
"A lot of it is concentration," Guelder said. "We might go for it at the end of the game, when we need some points. But there's usually not a lot of time when you're trying to hit it."
Time also is a factor
By Keith Stroker
Kansan sports writer
If Lisa Baker can thread a needle like she threads passes through an opponent's defense, she'll have no problems reaching her goal.
A 5-foot-9 senior forward on the Kansas women's basketball team. Baker enjoys sewing while she is not playing basketball. Majoring in personnel administration, Baker plans to graduate in December and move to Oxon, Md., where her older sister Donna lives.
"I want to open a sewing shop in Maryland with my sister," Baker said. "That is where I lived before we moved to Oklahoma."
As a track and basketball star at Putnam City North High School in Oklahoma City, Baker received numerous honors, including first team All-Conference, All-Conference guard-of-the-year, All-State, Big All-City first team and Big All-City guard-of-the-year. Putnam City North is the same school that Kansas men's freshman forward Mike Maddox attended.
At the end of high school Baker was recruited by only a nearby junior college, so she decided to play Amateur Athletic Union basketball in the summer with the Norman Angels, an all-star team in Oklahoma. The Angels went to the national tournament that summer, where they finished 27th out of 100 teams in the double-elimination competition.
"Our team did real well in the tournament," Baker said. "My coach knew Dixie Woodall, the coach at Iowa, decided to play basketball for her."
While playing for the Angels, Baker met Lynn Page, a sophomore
Lisa Baker KU forward
My friend and I went to Oklahoma State to watch a men's game, and the Kansas women were playing. It was the first time I had ever seen them play. I really wanted to play for Coach Washington.'
'Mw
center on the Jayhawks women's team, who was then playing in the 16-and-under AAU league.
Baker played two years of junior college basketball at Seminole Junior College in Oklahoma, the same school that men's senior forward Archie Marshall played for. She led Seminole both years in scoring and rebounding, averaging 17 points and 12 rebounds a game.
Hitting 60.5 percent of her shots, Baker led the state and region in field goal percentage.
An honorable mention Bi-State Conference player, Baker got her first look at the Kansas Jayhawks as a freshman.
"My friend and I went to Oklahoma State to watch a men's game, and the Kansas women were playing," she said. "It was the first time I had ever seen them play. I really wanted to play for Coach Washington."
In her sophomore season, Baker made first team Bi-State Conference, second team all-region, the Oklahoma team, and the dean's honor roll.
12
Lisa Baker
Sue Schellie/KANSAN
with a 54.9 field goal percentage,
scoring in double figures nine times.
She said the difference between the
Kansas team and her team in Seminole was the closer relationship the team had here.
As a junior, she led the Jayhawk:
This season, Baker tied a 1983
school record set by Vickie Adkins,
hitting 12 of 13 baskets for a 92.3 field
goal percentage against Oklahoma
City on Jan. 9. Adkins accomplished
the same feat against Nebraska.
Baker is the sixth child in a family of seven.
The Redskins, five tons of hungry players, hit the restaurants like a stampede of bulls when they arrived Sunday night.
Redskins all shook up at start of Super week
SAN DIEGO — If there was any doubt that the Super Bowl is an earthshaking event, some evidence came at 5:15 a.m. yesterday when a strong earthquake jolted the city and rocked the Washington Redskins in their beds.
The Associated Press
Some players snored through the earthquake, which measured 5.3 on the Richter scale. For others who had just nodded off, it was a rude awakening after their cross-country flight and midnight meals. Russ Klein said he thought 348-pound tackle Wake Kleine had fallen out of bed.
Skyscrapers swayed as if saluting the magnitude of the affair, an interest that has been a topic for years.
"It's a dream come true for me," Clark said softly, almost reverently.
A few bright shops filled with Super Bowl paraphernalia were still open. The harbor was silent but beautiful as the sailboats and Navy ships sat dressed with lights along their lines like long strings of pearls.
Wide receiver Gary Clark, one of the smallest of the herd, was particularly hungry and joined the first wave of players venturing into the cool, clear evening in search of food and fun.
Some of the 70,000 to 80,000 tourists expected this week were out strolling after dinner and greeted the players with cheers and requests for autographs. The city wore a festive smile, welcome signs everywhere, and the trees in La Jolla, where the Denver Broncos pitched camp Monday afternoon, twinkled with white Christmas lights.
Here are the bonuses earned by each member of winning and losing Super Bowl teams since 1966. SUPER XXII BOWL
Super Bowl bonuses
Here are the bonuses earned by each member of winning and losing Super Bowl teams since 1966.
Games 1 - 11 $15,000
$7,500
Winners Losers
Games 12-16 $18,000
$9,000
Games 17 - 22 $36,000
$18,000
Games $15,000
1 - 11 $7,500 Winners
Losers
Games $18,000
12-16 $9,000
Games $36,000
17 - 22 $18,000
Under the 1982 NFL collective bargaining agreement, replacement and reserve players are entitled to half the Super Bowl bonus if they were on the Redskins' or the Broncos' active or inactive lists for three games. They qualify for the full bonus if they were listed for eight games.
SOURCE: NFL
Knight-Fldder Graphic
Team handball squad wins first tournament
Imagine a sport combining basketball and soccer rules, played on a basketball-size court, each team with six players and a goalie on the court, and two soccer-type goals.
ado Springs, Colo.
Emil Nagenast, a Kansas team member, said the first night he had a brain injury.
It's called team handball, an Olympic sport now being promoted in the United States. Kansas has its own version of team handball, and the team won a tournament last weekend at the Air Academy in Color-
By a Kansan reporter
"We competed against the Air Force Academy, the Denver Rockies and the Wyoming Team Club." Nagenga said. "We were very surprised to win. The other teams had competed before, and this was our first time. In fact, we only had a week to prepare for it."
Nagengat said the team's coach, Baha Hamil, knew the Olympic coach, who invited Kansas to play in the tournament. The team took 10 members with them, including a woman who owled goalie.
The team's goal is to make it to the national championships in late April in Marquette. Mich., where approximately 30 teams will compete.
The team practices at 6 p.m. Fridays, in the north gym at Robinson Center. Nagengast said that they need more players and that anyone is welcome to come to practice.
Correction
Due to a reporter's error, the scores of the TCU swim meets were incorrect in yesterday's Kansan. The Kansas men's swimming team defeated Texas Christian 72-35, and the Kansas women's team won 65-50
10
Tuesday, January 26. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Faculty union plans alive Supporters regrouping after 'no' vote last fall
By Rebecca J. Cisek
Kansan staff writer
Faculty at the University of Kansas voted last November not to form a union, but the effort to organize hasn't stopped.
The KU chapter of the National Education Association has met three times since the beginning of December and will meet again before the fall semester to organize efforts to organize, to organize, to organize, to Tom Madden, organizing director for the group.
Also, the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors met yesterday to discuss collective bargaining efforts, said Robert Dugan, associate professor of sociology and the chapter's collective bargaining committee chairman.
Madden said KU-NEA received formal affiliation with the Kansas National Education Association and with the National Education Association. The KU chapter, which now has about 20 members, also is planning a membership campaign for February. Madden said
He said that the group also had
Tb
The KU-AAUP chapter plans to lobby the Legislature for the Margin of Excellence plan and other University concerns.
considered the possibility of a coalition with KU-AAUP. But Hohn said KU-AAUP had not discussed such action.
Hohn said KU-AAUP would hold a luncheon in Topeka with businessmen to lobby for the Margin of Excellence and other University issues.
2721 West Sixth St.
Suite C
(913) 841-9808
The Margin of Excellence is a three-year program for Regents schools to bring their total funding to 95 percent of their peers' average and to bring faculty salaries to 100 percent of the average. Peer schools are similar to KU in size, scope and mission.
fied "critical issues" for the University including:
- Too many administrators as compared to faculty members.
- Job performance evaluations for faculty. The chapter complained that there were no campus-wide evaluation standards and that there was a lack of flexibility in the amount of time faculty must spend teaching, doing research and writing.
Advertise in the Kansan
Madden said KU-NEA had identi-
TRAVEL
- Peer institutions. The chapter questions whether KU's peer schools accurately can compare to KU.
- Cost and coverage of health insur-
Cost and coverage of health insurance.
The budgeting process.
- The budgeting process.
- Working condition requirements for the growing numbers of part-time faculty.
- Faculty salaries.
James Mayo, professor of urban planning and KU-NEA member, said that faculty members couldn't rely on the Margin of Excellence to solve problems such as salary compression. Salary compression occurs when new faculty members are hired at salaries that are higher than those of current faculty.
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MONKEY
K. U.'s Legal Service Office, located in THE BURGE UNION provides free legal advice and services to K.U. students.
THE BURGE UNION WHAT A GREAT IDEA!
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reserved for Reservations, call 913-864-3982
LEGAL SERVICES
By Charles Jones Adapted from the 16th c. novel, Monkey, by Wu Ch'Eng-En
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Park Inn INTERNATIONAL
One year ago, what was formerly the Master's Inn became the Park Inn International of Lawrence. Built as a Ramada Inn in 1972, the motel had been purchased by the J.N.M.J. Corporation, a corporation owned by the John Leipzig family. The Leipzigs brought thirteen years of experience in the motel business with them when they moved into the Lawrence area, and they put that experience to work as they began renovating the facility and assembling the staff needed to make the Park Inn a place where guests could find both comfortable accommodations and courteous service at an affordable price.
With a staff that utilizes the culinary talents of Head Chef Nick A. Danielski and recently hired S.U. Chef Mark Rainey along with the services of Pub Manager Michael Ferwell, the Park Inn's Cafe in the Park and Pub in the Park are ready and waiting to cater to the needs of the patron who wants quality and courteous service at an affordable price. Backing them up are the friendly, professional personnel manning the front desk, maintenance, and house keeping departments. With over 100 rooms, a banquet facility that can accommodate 300, meeting rooms, the Cafe's weekend breakfast buffet (Chef Danielski has a Sunday brunch in the planning stages), the Pub's nightly entertainment & 'Sunday Night Jazz Jam Session', and the motels ideal location just off K-10 and the Kansas Turnpike, the Park Inn International of Lawrence is ready and waiting to serve you!
Over the past twelve months, the Park Inn of Lawrence has made great strides in that direction. Recently, however, conditions arising from the properties former reputation and other economic circumstances moved the Inn to file for protection under Chapter 11. This filing is not a sign that either the Park Inn or its managers are abandoning their goals. Instead, it is a sign that they are committing and rededicating themselves to offering the Lawrence area a full service motel with a restaurant, pub, and banquet & meeting room facilities at its command.
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KU
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, January 26, 1988
11
Committee displeased with last course book
By Dayana Yochim
Kansan staff writer
Although the Jayhawk Course Source committee is displeased with the results of this spring's booklet, the director said yesterday that it was a step in the right direction.
Committee members agreed they could have produced a better booklet with more money and a larger staff. Their budget of $7,940, overspent by $600, was half of last year's. Even so, the booklet was twice as big in previous semesters.
For now, the committee will get advertising commitments and bids.
STUDENT DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE
CALL (913)841-9808
Pulliam's Music House 2601 Iowa 843-3008
Sound Systems-Guitars-Pianos
The guide was designed to outline course requirements and give detailed descriptions of classes.
"It should give more background into the courses so on day one, the students know what to expect in their classes," Fossland said.
weeks it will meet again to see whether it can afford to print a Course Source this semester, said Kevin Fossland, director of the Jayhawk Course Source Board.
The committee sent questionnaires to each College of Liberal Arts and Sciences department, but only a fraction of them replied.
University Balloons
Give the unique gift
- Mylar * Basket Bouquets
* Latex * Candy Bouquets
* Glitter & Mugs
9
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CPS, RECORDS, POSTERS and MORE! The MID AFRICA RECORD CONVENTION! Over 80 dealers from many states. Great price! Don't miss out! 10-5 at the HOLIDAY.
COMMUTERS: Self Serve Car Pool Exchange,
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we deliver call 841-7595
*don't forget Pepsi hour daily between 3 and 4*
*only only $3 at Kickstuff's Drive in 4th and Iowa.*
FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY SKILLS PROGRAM
Help for students of any foreign language. Thursday January 21; 7-9 p.m. @
304 E. 4th St, Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hill, 864-404.
ATTENTION GRADUATING SENIORS
SCIENCE and CHEMISTRY majors,
are now in progress at the
University Placement Center.
Companies will be arriving
starting February 1. Don't
miss out.
Hillel
Events
Sign up now at the
University Placement Center Level One, Burge Union.
ON-CAMPUS INTERVIEWS sign ups for sales, management, and other types of positions open to students in ANY MAJOR, as well as positions for COMPUTER
Lunch — 11:30-1:00 Sunset Room Level 2, Kansas Union United Jewish Appeal Solicitation Training 7:30 p.m. Hillet House
NEED A RIDE/RISE! Use the Self Serve Car Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union. Spinister Books and Webbery, Lawrence's woman's, children's, lesbias and feminist bookstore and resource center welcomes KU students back to town. Drop for a fun book, browse our bookstore or join us afternoons Wed. Sun., thurs. tl 8: 80 1/2 Mass. St. Suite D, 8th St Entrance.
7:30 p.m.
Hillel House
Thursday, January 28
Kansas Legislative
Breakfast - 7:00 a.m.
TUTORS. List your name with you. We refer student inquiries to you. Student Assistance center.
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 121
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749-3872.
GET INTO THE GROOVES Metropolis Mobile club and radio DJ's. Hot spins. Maximum Party club and radio DJ's.
J 8 M FAVORS AND FLASHBACK FOTO. The perfect combo. Game party favors and last party pics. Call 843-6770 or 811-6434 to book your next party.
M\$iSC\*\*\*\*\*
Carpeted room apartment at 945 Missouri. Bay window, dressing room. 749-0166 eyes.
Completely Furished Studios, 1-2-3 & 4 bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call 680-2858, or 749-2491. Mastercraft Management
Duplex, one bedroom, within walking distance of KU. Low utilities $265/Mo. 843-6798
OWN ROOM Sunrise Place $175/Mo. +钱
female roommate, preferably quiet and non
smothered room. Enroll at Grad. Student in Spanish Crest Ap. 301
W27th on bus route 185/m plus utilities. Swim
room/marina.
Female nonskender needer bus route. YOUR
ROOM Sunrise Plate, $175/Mo. 749-0810
MASTERCRAFT-AFTERS offer beautifully furnished classrooms designed with the K.U. student in mind. Call (855) 267-4010.
grounds. If interested, call 843-9492 and ask for Elizabeth or Spanish Crest Apts. at 841-6688.
Female roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom.
Near campus. 8108 1/7 utilities. 749-3809.
M/F/Mo-mobile needed to share two bedroom
room on 1719-M/1'/2 utilities and call.
Room route: 1719-M/1'/2 utilities and call.
Furnished room for rent, most utilities paid, with off street parking, two blocks from university, quiet, studious atmosphere, and no pets please. 841-500
Needed non-smoking male roommate to share 3
room apartments in Delaware. $130.00
Plus 250 square feet of room space.
Male Nanaim Hall dawn contract for sale. Will
call security deposit plus rentable reme-
tial 842-390-3900
Roommate wanted: Great Apt. just seconds
843-975. keep trying.
843-975. keep trying.
SHANNON PLAZA CLUB APARTMENTS on K.U. bus route. Washer/derfer included, water, trash paid. Dishwasher, microwave, coiling fan, towels. Swimming pool/basketball courts. 6 or 12 month lease. 841-7726
BRAND NEW COMPLEX
Quiet, non-smoking, female wanted to room with 3 upper-cabinete women in 4 br. duplex: $313 plus 17%
EDDINGHAM PLACE
New 1 and 2 bedroom apartments, 842-5227.
New 2 and 3 bedroom townhomes, 842-5227.
NAISMITH PLACE OUSDAHL & 25th Ct.
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
PLACE
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
- Large Jacuzzi
- Fully equipped Kitchen
- Fully equipped Kitchen
- Satellite TV
- Exercise Weightroom
- Two Bedroom
- 10 or 12 month contract
- Private balcony or porches
- Laundry Facilities
- Satellite TV
* Radio/TV
- Laundry room
- 24th & Eddingham (next to Gammons
- Swimming pool
- Furnished or Unfurnished
* Local labour only
Open the doors to
- Free Showtime
- Energy efficient
PLACE
... and much more!
Professionally managed by
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Naismith Place Apts.
25th Court & Ousdahl
841-1815
Sublease. Duplex two bedroom, i. bath, 1844,
Missouri, great location for KU student, $380/m.
Room is fully furnished.
Try cooperative living _SUNFLOWER HOUSE
Sublease Furnished studio in Meadowbrook,
near Elysian and cable included. Call:
643-8344, eavens.com
Sunflower House has private rooms, low
rates and a great location. Call evenings.
Wanted: female roommate to share furnished
Апт. $17.20, no utilities. Private room. 841-6194.
Wanted preferred two female roommates. Cam-
puter/electronic devices. $150 per month. No utilities. College At George at
Frihläggare townholdet för felf.
On KU bus route. Immediat! Call 849-7333
Vicontront störg att flera male, male KU
victoriens Mo. plus deposit. Rent paid thru
January, (3143-1432-897) or (314) 694-4315.
Trialship Townehouse for. Three bedrooms on KU. bus route. Immobile. Call 843-7333
Villa 26 Apartments-Townhomes BRAND NEW 1 Bedroom Apartments
- Microwave
- Energy Efficient
- On KU Bus Route
- Excellent Location
- Open Daily
- Washer Dryer Hook-ups
- Move In Today
2201 W. 26th/Apt. E-102 phones
FOR SALE
842-5227 • 842-6454
841-6080
An absolutely Awesome Array of Antiques, collectibles and neat stuff we- have; hardback and 1/2 price paper back books, full line of new comic books, art books, fine art, jewelry, costume, Indian, and costume jewelry (glitter and good stuff), the right vintage clothes for any occasion, fine art, miniatures, fiesta, and the best selection of antique furniture in the area. Quinnris Flea Market, 11 New Hampshire, Open Sat & Sun.
BABYSITTER NEEDED - Need a reliable person to babysit for $50. WO 843-288-987, 7:3 p.m.
Previous experience needed. Paid. 841-2383
Artist* Artist* Artist* Looking for talented cartoonist ready to take on unbehead and crazy challenges. Call for details. Mr. 913/432-4599
1979 Gibson Les Paul, 1987 Salomon ski-61 skis.
Best offer. 749-1757, ask for Bill.
1888 Chevrolet Cavalier Z2 $49,976; Camaro Izore Z-12 $9,047; Monte Carlo as 32 $15,886; Ford MK II as 25 $18,476; Turbo $14,791; 1888 Mercury Cougar XY1 $35,165; 1888 Pontiac Fierce Couper $48,086; Firebird $82,223 Trans AM $12,501. FACTORY warranties apply. You choose options colors you want $84,849
New Brent Genets 4K goldgump watch appraised $1,900. Must sell. Best offer 843.7252. Jeremy Drafting tools, beds, lamps, chest of drawers, Everything But Ice, 616 Vermont.
AUTO SALES
Rock-n-tell-Thousands of used and rare albums
10 a.m. to 5 p.m every Saturday and Sunday.
$69 for three weeks.
Leaving town - Need to sell: Double bed, desk,
sofa chair, counter. Call 'Hugh' 749-8292
**MOTHBIRL GOOD USED FURNITURE**
10:00 p.m. Thursday. Thurs-Sat 10:00 p.m. 5:12
F u b a
Aplause 12 - string guitar for sale 'Excellent condition!' Call after 5.79-3244
Apple II C with color monitor, 5 months old, has
Deuter Corei 600 #600.84741
Are you skilled with woodworking or solving mechanical problems on smaller projects?
BERTONE X19/9, 1844. 438. Excellent condition.
BERTONNE X19/9, 1844. 94-160 weeks.
38-41 weeks in dorm.
MGB Convertible '78, great shape, no rust,
F/Macase/low mileage, $250 or best. Gret
Bucky's Drive-In is now taking applications for part time employment. Flexible hours. Half price meals. Apply in person between 10 and 8 at Bucky's Drive-In 9th and 10th. Thank you!
Red Hot Bargains® Drug dealers' cars, boats,
Red Hot Bargains® Drug dealers' cars, boats,
Buyers. Guide. 903-657-6000 s - 476-7
903-657-6000 s - 476-7
Car won' start! Mobile repair service on foreign cars. Call Aaron at 814-4629.
CPOSTAL JOBIS! $2.064 Start! Prepare Now!
Exam Workshop (918) 444-4444 Exit! Exam Workshop (918) 444-4444 Exit!
Bass player wanted for recently relocated wet-cast band. Reliance on congeniality and a com- pact with the team was important, but we have bass们 rig. 749-3732 after 2 p.m. BE A REFEREE. Intramural Officies are needed for football leagues forming now. Attend a recent January, Tuesday at 8:30 p.m. in 156 Robinson
constant positions for Small Business Development Center are available. Positions are paid above minimum wage, hours are flexible. Work requirements include a bachelor's degree and graduate students needed in the areas of business, engineering, law, and computer science. If interested, apply to 432 E. Summerfield Hall, 847-7575.
Found Blue and green plaid scarf between Lippincott and Bailey. Jan 24 around 10:30. 842-255.
Lusturgay and black plaid scarf between Litton and Bailey at 9:30 and 10:00. Great sentimental value. 842-256.
Datsun 2102 1975, 86Ki M84, 49s runs beautiful. New
tire, battery, $1,700 GDO, 400铝 40Lake
Cash for sketches of 2141 Century autos and
trains. Original work only. 841-2382.
Camp Searing Hawk, a Christian camp, is interviewing counselor Monday, Feb. 26, in the hospital.
HELP WANTED
**Creative person for sketching 21st Century life**
Original work only: 841.282 Paid Leave message
Are you looking to make extra pocket money? You can do it with a fashion catalogue to your University. We are looking for highly motivated students to market our products. For more info call Toll-free 1-800-219-7400.
$$EARN EXTRA MONEY$$$ WHILE GOING TO
HARVEY $$$ PLEASE WRITE: P.O.
891 Day 94th Harrisonville $$$
LOST-FOUND
Director of Child Care Program. P/T afterschools.
Must have pre-school teaching experience,
courses in child development and office management skills. K640. Mo Resume and 2 Letters of Reference.
Career Opportunities:
Care, 925 Vermont, Lawrence, KS. 66444. EOE.
Due to new product development, three to four art students are needed that are proficient with airbrush to work on a per job basis. Will be given training on airbrush techniques, schedule, evenings or weekends. If interested,
contact Laurie Clark, Scotch Industries, 843-6639.
EDITORIAL & RESEARCH ASSISTANT KU GERUNG Laboratory. Half-feed, Feb.-Aug. 1988; possible continuation. Write. Will be assigned to professional who assists families caring for elderly. $400/Mo.
Required:
Master's degree in minimum of one hour KU
credit. Preferred: word-processing skills, ability to abstract and critique studies from behavioral science. Required: experience. Application deadline: Feb. 3, 1988.
Submit letter of resumé, writing and resume to the office at 727-450-6500, Hall斯 60045. An E.E.O./A.A. Employer.
E. R. Clerk, part-time position in Admissions for an emergency room clerk. Hours are 2:45 p.m.-6:30 p.m., Monday through Friday. High School Diploma or equivalent. 6-month required. Testing test needs to be completed at job center before applying. Applications to the Personnel Department, Lawrence Memorial Hospital, and the Personnel Department, Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
Evening line person, part time $30.00 Hr Apply
FEMALE VOCALIST wanted for established dance hand 749-364
GOVERNMENT JOBS $10.44k $25.92k yr. Now
Hiring in NY, NY 878-907 4000 or 879-958
for Federal job.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $10,045-$19,200/yr. Now:
GOVERMINT 8700-6901 use! 87548 for
current Federal List.
CALL (312) 212-2222.
GRADUATE RESEARCH ASSISTANT. Housing Research Associate. Resources includes develop/maintain computerized databases of research findings and development and implementation of research programs.
tional data collection activities; prepare written and graphic research reports. QUALIFICATIONS: Undergraduate degree in field related to social science or environmental design research, computer science, engineering or use of personal computers, acceptable writing use. Preferences: Background in housing design and/or programs and services for people with disabilities; prior experience in social work.
TERMS OF APPOINTMENT: 50% time position with experience. Send resume to WILLIAM H. SATURAND, satisfactory performance. Salary commensurate with experience. TO APPLY: Send letter of application to ABRITI TERRAZ, LAWRENCE, KS. Director, A201 Bristol Terrace, LawrenceKS.
NEW YORK: Live-in babysitters needed for young families throughout affluent suburbs of metropolitan New York, beginning in January/February. Airfare paid, plus room. Contact Cressa Claussman, (203) 665-0770, 5 Laurel Lane, Darien, CT. 06820.
Personnel Secretary: qualified applicants must possess good communication, training (60 wpm), experience working with people. Word processing and personnel experience bleak but not required. Walt train in information technology and word processing. Hours are 36 per week. If you believe you fit this job, please contact us at 749-7611. Our onsite operation, please call us today at 749-7611.
Pinal Jobshl $200.06 start! Prepare Now!
Workshop Workshop (1019-9444) Ext 153
Workshop (1019-9444) Ext 153
RESORT HOTELS, Cruiseline Airlines &
Airbus for assignment jobs, careers and
career positions. For information & application; write
National College Recruitment, P.O. Box 8074 Hillon
Qualified individuals earn up $340 / Mr. Fr/ 59th and 740th m/ Jr./ Sr years. Requirements: In physical fit, willing to join the AROCFTE program, Military Science Building 844-3111
Research assistant - Graduate or advanced undergraduate student. Duties include scoring child behavior some video tape! Experience with a variety of media. Pay $14,500/day. Salary range $15,900/Mo. for 12-20 hours/WO.
- "sarding Summer for sophomore and older students in Colorado mountains working with children in remote wildlife, many outdoor programs. Write now: include program interests and goals. Sanborn Conservation Foundation."
in 20 rows in 20 columns.
Send or bring letter of application to
haworth by January 21st.
No phone calls required.
The Adama Alumun Center is now hiring a.m. m. p. d. mismatch therapists and pae time services. Applications are available at reception 8:30 a.m. to 11:45 a.m. experience. We are an experienced employer. Warm caring people - who like children ages 3-5 are needed for a 2-hour per day, one day per week between 7:30 and 3:30 M-F. Day care volunteers need 2 hours per day. For more information call RB293.
MISCELLANEOUS
Secret grade point increasing techniques revealed. Results guaranteed! Free details for Dean's Writers Write. Report Card Rambong, Ca. 94900. P.O. Box 318-USK, San Amethyst, Ca. 94900.
Attention Colony Woods Teams! We are in connection with the tenants meeting conference to elect representatives for contact Holly or Janell at KI or 841-5641. The meeting will be held on Thursday we have interested more we can attend.
GRAUDITAD SENIOR SEEKING COMPANION FOR EXCICTING TRIP TO THE BAHAMAS! ENJOY SAILING, SCUBA DIVING, ISLAND HOPPING AND MORE IN FREEBERT ON THE BAHAMAS ISLAND. YOU MUST BE 21 WITH JUNILE Fever. CALL TROPICAL BOB 843-3823
BUS. PERSONAL
$80 Value when presented toward new patient ter-
minal. **Exam** Dr. Johnson, Chiroprator, Spina
Exam Dr. Johnson, Chiroprator, Spina Exam
Don't get mad, eat even!! Send a bouquet of daffodil flowers to your girlfriend or signify the end. Each bouquet comes with a personal message. Pick-up or REVENGE (424-7253) preal. CALL SWEET REVENGE (424-7253)
Pregnant and need help? Call Birbright at
212-549-7082. Confidential free/freegroup
testing
KU basketball fans: Souvenir distributorship-small investment required for immediate large profit. Excellent fundraiser for individual,fraternity, sorority, ect. (913) 791-4070.
Getting into shape for spring? Start taking care of your skin. Call Michele 749-1039 for men and Wome
South Padre Island deluxe condominiums · the new Ft. Lauderdale for spring Break. Call 1-800-HI-PADRE or your travel agent for reservations.
Cheri
I LOVE YOU
L.B.S.
Hey Bunny wuf. NO make that a double wuf.
Available Only at
THE ETC SHOP
MM, ONCE AGAIN GET OFF YOUR HIGH CROSS
PERSONAL
House Row cotton and ragwool weaters - a 100 year tradition of quality and design
732 Massachusetts
SPRING BREAK
DON'T DELAY
You may also have:
* OD's late use IDs and other alcohol related offences
* OD's medical license Md/Major Practice Products liability
* Other legal matters related to students
16 East 13th St. 842-1133
Association of Collegiate Entrepreneurs
Information meeting regarding
activities for spring. New
members are welcome.
Date: January 23, 1988
Time: 9 a.m.
Place: Pioneer Room
Level 3, Burge Union
Speaker: Kevin Wickliff
Subject: Legal aspects
of entrepreneurship
---
Want to win a cruise? Have a complementary facial with friends. Call Michele 749-1659
SERVICES OFFERED
Become a Valentine always remembered, with a photo of her holding her phone. Photo's Fla. 749-706. Free consultation.
Photo's Plan, 749-3706. Free consultation.
DRIVE INSTructor offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years. driver's license obtainable, transportation license available.
HAIR CIRTS 2$ off with KU D or the month of
March. AUX LONGS 2$ off with KU D or the month of
April. Aux Illumination at Standing Vane, 14 E
and 75 W.
Handmade Moccasins, custom sized Elkhide ticks,
thick soiled. Cfmv $45/ $5, Patrick 842-8099.
HELP: Frustrated by red tape? Needing a movie or game time? Just don't know where to turn?.Call the UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER at 864-3506, 24hrs a day.
THE FAR SIDE
Kim's Alterations Quick Service Suits, coats,
shoes, and accessories 2201 W 8th St
46-641-6128 (Before Food 4 Leaf)
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ektachrome 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.).
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
(Overlap Park) (911) 491-2360
Professional married couple would like to house
mothers of 182-482 year old or 841-121 ext. 328 day
age. 182-482 evening or 841-121 ext. 328 day
age.
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence 841-5716
QUALITY TUTORING Statistics, Economics,
Mathematics. All levels. Glen Dennis
842-1055
25th & Iowa • Holiday Plaza • 749-5192
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-2316.
UMC'S COPIES
4¢
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Ac-
cumulatively, 829-745 or Latest.
TYPING
The college of Liberal Arts and Sciences offers tutoring in math, english, business, and economics courses at a reasonable charge. The college of International Services, apply at SES Building 844-3971.
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS
service available 823-795 before 8 p.m. please
823-796 after 8 p.m. please
cessing with letter quality printer . 843-7643
Aaccurate, affordable typing experienced in term papers, theses, mice. IBM correct Selectic, spelling corrected. 843-8554
1-der Woman Word processing. Former editor transforms your scritles into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of a large textbook. Also offers training sessions. *Fax proofs only*. *All training sessions.*
1. Reliable Typing Service: Term papers.
2. Available type of IBM Electron Trouwerer 482-8384.
3. Available type of IBM Electronic Trouwerer 482-8384.
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term papers, maps, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter quality
printing, spelled corrected. 842-7247.
For professional typing/word processing, call
Professional special $180, Spring special $210, page
space pics.
Quality typing. Includes excellent spelling, gram
matical use and punctuation.
Pick-up delivery. 841-0247
Stock up delivery. 841-0247
WANTED
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes. HAVE M.S. Degree 841-6254
Typing at a reasonable rate. Call Holly at 845-0111.
Female roommate needed to share huge room in rm ap. Pursued roommate 1,1/2 baths / $300 per month. Pursued roommate 1,1/2 baths / $300 per month. Female roommate wanted for nice 2 bedroom apt. on bus route 160. Mo / 2 utilities. Call
Flutist looking for celtic or folk group to play with. Call events. 843-1163 or 797-0482. Debbie Hiring! *Government Jobs.your area.* $15,000
$68,000. Call 802-8388 ext 4055.
Male/Female roommate needles to 3-bedroom
apartment with room/unit 1/3 sece. On bus route.
Phone: 841-8555
Email: bdrabb@hotmail.com
Needed female non-smoking roommate at Pinecrest. Own room. 165 plus utilities. 842-268-268
RESPONSIBLE MALE ROOMMATE needed for 2 br apartment at Griststone, adjacent to Trailrider on bus route. Non-smoker. $180/mo.
References to Utilities. Reference helpful. Eric 499-2085.
Male roommate wanted to share Alvaram Cordo.
$225/Mo plus usages. Washer, dryer, fireplace,
tennis, swim, private bath/bedroom. Call
842-4106. References and deposit required.
Roommates needed for pleasant four bedroom home with two wives and laundry at 941 Mo. Wayne St.
Roommate wanted. Spacious two 2 br apartment, private room. WAD. Available immediately.
On busurse. 812 low utilities. Call 842-3185, 749-5753 or 841-1969.
Wanted K-State student B-Ball tickets. Call Jeff
842-3907
Wanted non-student basketball tickets. 427-6733.
Wanted: part-time kitchen utility help. Flexible hours. Call Frank at Lawrence Country Club, 483-2866.
Wanted: Third male roommate to share 2-bedroom apartment. Call 749-9412 (7:10 p.m.) Wanted to share spacious, clean, warm bedroom. Call 749-9412 (7:10 p.m.) Prefer grad student or working person. Walk 2 blocks to KU. Central heat and air conditioning, washer and dryer $175/month plus 1/2 of reasonable rent.
W T C.S. SHELER for battered woman is beginning weekday training sessions starting January 30th. Strong sensitive people who are interested in be-
problems of women* and children's programs. Call 844-761-8527.
Bv GARY LARSON
Oh my goodness!.
Vinnie's mutating!
© 1986 Universal Press Syndicate | 24
Embarrassing moments at gene parties
C
O
--offer expires 2/9/88 1 per person
Cornucopia
--offer expires 2/9/88 1 per person
O
1801 MASSACHUSETTS MONDAY-FRIIDAY 11 A.M-10 P.M.
SATURDAY & SUNDAY 10 A.M-10 P.M.
Aerobic Studio
THE Fitness Factory
$3.25 WITH COUPON
EXTRAODINARY FRUIT, SOUP & SALAD BAR $3.25 WITH COUPON
1 Month Aerobics for $20
CHECKERS
PIZZA
2-12" TWO-TOPPING PIZZAS
$7.99 + tax £exps 31/08/2018
2214 YALE RD. 841-8010
---
$5 HAIRCUTS
Downtown Barbershop
824 Massachusetts 843-8000
CHECKERS
Sub & Stuff Sandwich Shop
PIZZA
No Appointment Necessary
FREE MEDIUM SOFT DRINK with the purchase of any sub 1618 W.23rd St.
16 " TWO-TOPPING PIZZA, TWO SOFT DRINKS
$6.99 + tax express 3/11/88
2214 TALE RD. 841-8010
---
1/2 PRICE MOVIE RENTAL
expires 2-8-88
not to be used with any other promotion
VIDEO BIZ'
832 Iowa Street
Lawrence, KS 66044
(913) 749-3507
VIDEO BIZ
1/2 PRICE MOVIE RENTAL
expires 2-8-88
not to be used with any other promotion
VIDEO BIZ
852 Iowa Street
Lawrence, KS 68044
(913) 749-3507
ANIN
---
20% off ALL
PET SHOP
CHECKERS PIZZA
843-PETS__2201 W_25th (Behind Gibbsons)
Aquarium Setups
2214 YALE RD. expires 3/11/88 841-8010
12 " TWO TOPPING PIZZA
+ SOFT DRINK
$3.99 + tax
Standing Ovation
Runza Sandwich
ndwich, polish dog, Runza)
2700 Iowa
Lawrence, Ks.
749-2615
Offer Enquiries 22/88
30% OFF Permanent waves reg. $50.00
RUNZA.
DRIVE · INN
RESTAURANT
30% OFF Haircuts req. $15.00
CHECKERS
749-0771 14 East 8th expires 3/1/88
PIZZA
ALL YOU CAN EAT-PIZZA, PASTA,
SALAD DAR
Ask for experienced hairstylist Ann Reaney
2214 YALE RD. expires 3/11/88 841-8010
214 HALL ID 841-8010
$1.00 off Evening Buffet (7 days a week)
50¢ off Luncheon Buffet (7 days a week)
749. 4244 544 W.23RD
FREE DELIVERY
PIZZA BUCK! PIZZA Shoppe $1 OFF
PIZZA Shoppe
PIZZA LASAGNA SALADS
SPAGHETTI MANICOTTI
Valentino's
Tues., Jan. 26 / 3-5 p.m.
TWO HOUR BLOW-OUT
25% OFF
All CD, Lp, pre-recorded cassettes*
with coupon only. No limit*
802
PIZZA Shoppe
Pizza
Dine-in
or
Delivery
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS
AUDIO / VIDEO
CINCH
--limited to the first time rental of a
chance. Special offer merchandise
is not included.
There is any other discount,
quarantees and supplies are limited.
NEW SEMESTER
NEW YOU
843-2899
$10.00 OFF WITH PURCHASE
OE ANY PACKAGE
PIZZA Shoppe
catch the rays
1 Pound
SPAGHETTI
Garlic Toast
32 oz Pepsi
No Membership — YOU DECIDE
1st SESSION FREE
$4.95
King Size
PIZZA
single topping
32 oz Pepsi
10 Tanning
Sessions (30 min.)
$25
20 Tanning
Sessions (30 min.)
$8.95
842-0600
2619 w. 6th near Becerros, on KU Bus Route
CHEESE BOSS
Prime Cut Hair Co.
1341 Massachusetts
841-4488
$2.00 OFF
Any 3 or more pizzas
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
--limited to the first time rental of a
chance. Special offer merchandise
is not included.
There is any other discount,
quarantees and supplies are limited.
842-1212
rent-a-center
GRAND OPENING!
Band name home theater • stereo system • Appliance • Band name first Week Rental On Any Item
The Malls
Shopping Center
711 W. 23rd
Suite 2
842-8890
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
First Week Rental On Any Item ONLY $9.95
Count On Us For A Great Deal.
Expires 5/31/88
BASKIN-ROBBINS
ICE CREAM STORE
2 Dip Hot Fudge Sundae
$139 + tax
Reg. $1.82
Two Locations To Serve You
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
$100 OFF
Any 2 or more pizzas
842-1212
MORRIS SPORTS 20% OFF Everything In Store
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
$5 off $12 off 9 TANS $20 Ask about our MONEY SAVER special
HAIRCUT PERM
includes • Russel Sweats • L.A. Gear • Basketballs
• Sports Apparel • Aerobic and Basketball Shoes
843-0412 1012 Massachusetts
$5 off $12 off
HAIRCUT PERM
9 TANS $20
Ask about our
MONEY SAVER
special
Tans to be used by 2/29
EUROPEAN
HOLIDAY PUAZA
25th & IOWA
BODY HEALTH & BEAUTY
Expires 5/31/88
1012 Massachusetts
2 23/88
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
--he delivery is Fast. Friendly, and
842-1212
$100 OFF
Any Pizza Ordered
11 a.m.-4 p.m.
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
$2.00 OFF
Any Large
PRIVATE HOT TUB $5 per person includes stereo, cable TV. WEIGHTS $15/monthly or $45 til May 31 includes sauna, open hot tub. 9 TANS $20* Ask about our MONEY SAVER special
PYRAMID PIZZA
With 2 or more toppings
We Pick You!
n. 2/20/88
PRIVATE HOT TUB
$5 per person
includes cable TV,
optional VCR & movie rental
WEIGHTS
$15/monthly or
$45 til May 31
includes sauna, open hot tub
& optional tanning
9 TANS $20*
Ask about our MONEY SAVER special
*Tans to be used by 2/29
EUROPEAN
TAN, HEALTH, & BEAUTY
expires 2/6/88
HOLIDAY PLAZA
25th & IOWA
841-6232
FREE.
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Wednesday January 27,1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 83 (USPS 650-640)
Lawmaker criticizes Washburn proposal
By Stacy Foster
Kansan staff writer
A local legislator fears that Gov Mike Hayden's plan to have the Board of Regents begin administering some of the state funds given to Washburn University could eventually result in less money for Regents schools.
The legislator, State Sen. Wint Winter, R-Lawrence, criticized Hiden's plan yesterday and said that it could be a disastrous move.
Hayden's plan calls for the state board of education, which currently governs Washburn to allow the school to teach English and the school receives from the state.
The state already has enough on its hands with the seven regents schools, Winter said. "It would be like adding a million to an already malnourished family."
Winter said he saw the proposal as an attempt by Hayden to bring Washburn closer to becoming a Regents school.
About 22 percent of Washburn's funds come from the state. The school gets the rest of its money from property taxes and tuition.
Stanley Kopik, executive director for the Regents, said that Hayden's proposal would help Washburn financially by keeping its tuition at a competitive level with the other Regents schools.
David Monical, vice president of planning and governmental relations at Washburn, said that it was time his school became a Regents institution.
"Washburn is supported by a property tax in Topeka," Koplik said. "The proposal would change that, and the school would be supported by the state."
He said that changing Washburn to a Regents school would cost the state between $5 million and $12 million. If the school changed gradually, that would keep the cost down.
"Washburn needs to be assessed according to the other Regents schools. We want to move to more appropriate funding," he said.
Winter said tighter controls on how Washburn University spends its state money were necessary.
"They are getting millions of dollars of the state's money, but the Board of Regents has not one ounce of control on how they use that money," he said.
Winter said he thought the Regents could provide tighter control but he worried that Washburn might become too cozy with the Regents system.
direct competition with the Regents schools for financing and that could compromise the academic programs for all the schools.
He said that adding Washburn to the Regents system would put it in
"Washburn University should not become a full-fledged sister institution because it duplicates programs that are available at the other institutions," Winter said. "We are not talking about an area that is in need of accessible universities. This area of the state is well served by academic institutions."
Monical disagreed. "The change wouldn't make us a sister institution; it would make us a cousin," he said.
Winter said that funds should be appropriated according to the basic operating rates of the Regents schools but that Washburn's funds should not increase.
Monical said that it would benefit the state to have Washburn's academic programs coordinated with other Regents schools. He said that if Washburn were to become a Regents member, Kansas would have all its public universities under the same governing body.
Kopilak said, "The proposal doesn't increase state aid. And many people would think this is an important symbolic step to becoming a Regents school, but you can't say for certain that it will be a Regents school."
[Image]
Mike May, Chicago senior, forms a project called "Electric Surge" for a sculpture class. May would not identify the artist depicted in the sculpture. He said the idea was to leave the identity to the viewer's imagination. The class met last night in the Art and Design building.
Electric art
M. K. HENRY
Margin support
Chancellor Gene A. Budig speaks with a state legislator during a luncheon in Topeka. The event yesterday was sponsored by the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce and the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors. See related story p.6.
KUEA donations decline
By Elaine Woodford
Kansan staff writer
The Kansas University Endowment Association has recovered about a third of the $8 million it lost during the stock market crash in October, the president of the association said yesterday.
But donations to the Endowment Association have been affected by the unstable economy, said Todd Seyourm. The organization is still in need of funding.
"If people think they have been hurt economically, they will quit buying, which affects the amount of dividends that companies can afford to pay." Seymour said.
Jeff Davis, the association's treasurer, said that if the economy continued to decline, donations could decrease even further, resulting in a loss in the total value of the Endowment Association's assets.
"The stock market predicts what direction the economy will take and how much money will be contributed." Davis said.
During the crash, the Dow Jones industrial average plummeted 508 points and the value of U.S. stocks
decreased by about $503 billion. The Endowment Association had about $90 million of its total $200 in assets invested in various stock pools.
"It was a very unsettling time," Davis said.
Seymour said, "The losses are only on paper, but I can say that we are not at the same place that we used to be." A stock market loss is often described as a loss only on paper.
Thomas Weiss, professor of economics, said that a loss on paper described the devaluation of the stock. But he said that for the owner, the loss would be felt only if the investor had decided to sell stock after the price dropped.
Davis said that it would be difficult to precisely determine how much of the stock portfolio had been recovered because the value of the stocks were calculated in different ways.
"It would be safe to say that we have recovered a portion of the loss that was sustained in the crash," he
The Endowment Association is separate from the University, and it receives funds from private sources.
College develops computer advising
Experimental system would help students with schedules, requirements
By James Buckman
Kansan staff writer
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is developing a new computer advising system that could be ready for experimental use this semester.
"The purpose of having the students up on Monday is to provide suggestions for the refinement of the system before we go public with it," he said.
Bob Adams, associate dean of the college,
said a small group of students would try the
new system Monday in Strong Hall. He said
the college wanted students' ideas about the
system in order to perfect it.
Students using the new system would have their academic records printed on a computer disk. Students would have to pick up these disks the same way they currently pick up their confidential folders, Adams said.
The new advising system is being studied this spring. KU administrators have not yet approved the plan.
Dave Mannering, systems analyst for the college, said the information on the disks could be taken from the University's mainframe computer system and given to the student in less than five minutes.
Students would go to special advising computers to complete their schedule. The computers would not be linked to the main computer, and many problems with the system, Mannering said.
Advisers want to talk about the content of courses. They want to do more academic advising and get away from the administrative aspects of it.'
'A
assistant to the dean of liberal arts and sciences
With the information on the student's disk, the advising computers would tell the student which of the school's class requirements he had fulfilled. It also would tell him what remaining requirements he needed to meet and which classes would meet them. The student's disk wouldn't list class sections that were closed.
The process would start with a blank time schedule on the computer screen. Students would be able to adjust their class schedules until they were satisfied.
The location and time of classes would be listed on the screen, along with the number of spaces left in the class. When finished, students would be able to get a printout of their desired schedule.
For electives, the computer would list the available classes in the various departments that would count toward graduation, allowing the student to choose between them.
He said the advising computers could be placed in locations such as residence halls for students' convenience. The computers could be operational 24 hours a day.
To keep enrollment data current, the system would be updated daily. Adams said.
Students would still need to enroll at their appointed time, but the system should help that process run more sn. smoothly by preventing students from selecting classes that are filled, he said.
Mannerly said that the new system was not designed so that students could complete the entire advising process by themselves.
"It certainly is not meant to replace advisers, but it will help with the more mundane questions advisers get," he said.
Pam Houston, assistant to the dean of liberal arts and sciences, said the system would free advisers from spending most of their time flipping through the timetable to tell students whether classes met requirements.
"Advisors want to talk about the content of courses," she said. "They want to do more academic advising and get away from the administrative aspects of it."
Adams said that the college was still in the process of refining the program and that the system could be used with a limited number of students this spring.
KU business, education enrollment matches trend
By Kathleen Eaddis
Kansan staff writer
KU freshman enrollment reflects a national trend of increased business and education majors but contradicts another national trend by showing an increase in engineering and computer science majors.
The 22nd annual UCLA-American Council of Education study, released Jan. 13, showed a significant increase in interest in business and teaching and a continued decline in the number of engineering and computer science majors.
The survey found that 24.6 percent of freshmen planned to major in business, more than double the 1966 figure of 11.6 percent who were surveyed in the national study.
Dave Shulenburger, associate dean of business, said the summer orientation for pre-business majors was well attended. The number of freshmen indicating their intention to major in business increased from 22 percent to 22 percent in 1986. Shulenburger said.
Although it has been said that there is a trend away from material interests, the choices students are making for degrees don't indicate that Shulenburger said.
The UCLA study also found that 75.6 percent of the students surveyed said their most important life goal was to be well off financially. This was up from the 39.1 percent recorded in 1970.
Brent Remer, Kansas City, Mo., freshman, a pre-business major, fits the recent trend.
"I've always wanted to work for a big corporation," he said. "I want to become part of a corporation, become successful in it, and one day become chairman of the board."
His motivation for entering business?
"If no money is required."
The UCLA study also showed a surprising, increased interest in teaching, a relatively lower paying field. In 1987, 8. percent of the freshmen surveyed planned careers in teaching, compared with only 4.7 percent in 1982.
"We've got more students in freshman courses than we've ever had before," said Rashad Baldwin, the associate head of the college.
"I think part of it is because of an overall societal increase in awareness of a need for quality people in the classroom," said Bailev.
Tara Whitworth, Iola freshman, is planning to become a teacher because she thinks the job is prestigious, even though it doesn't pay well.
"There will always be a need for good teachers," Whitworth said. She said that teachers were responsible for the education of the next generation.
See BUSINESS, p. 6, col. 1
2
Wednesday, January 27, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Weather Forecast LAWRENCE
LAWRENCE
Warming Trend
HIGH: 37°
LOW: 25°
Expect a few high clouds this afternoon.
Otherwise mostly sunny with a high in the mid-30s. Mostly clear tonight with a low around 25.
KEY
Rain T-Storms Snow Flurries Ice
REGIONAL
North Platte
47/20
Mostly sunny
Omaha
12/18
Partly cloudy
Goodland
50/26
Mostly sunny
Hays
47/25
Mostly sunny
Salina
43/25
Partly cloudy
Toronto
37/23
Partly cloudy
Kansas City
35/21
Mostly sunny
Columbia
30/17
Sunny
St Louis
27/15
Sunny
Dodge City
50/27
Sunny
Wichita
40/25
Mostly sunny
Charlotte
40/25
Mostly sunny
Springfield
37/25
Sunny
Forecast by Kevin Darnotmol.
Temperatures are today's high and tonight's low.
Tulsa
46/28
Sunny
5-DAY
THU
Sunny
45/30
HIGH LOW
FRI
Partly cloudy
52/33
SAT
Showers
47/30
SUN
Sunny
42/25
MON
Sunny
38/22
On Campus
- "Search, Screening, and Selection," an affirmative action workshop, is scheduled for 10 a.m. today in the Governor's Room of the Kansas Union.
- "Guatemala Accord in Crisis," a University forum with Charles Stansifer, director of Latin American studies, is scheduled for 11:40 a.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Croad Ave.
A matinee for the children's concert series with the Paul Taylor Dance Company is scheduled for 2 January. It is prior to school on children only.
An executive lecture series, "Managing Corporate Culture," with Kay Ellen Consolver of the Mobil Corp. is scheduled at 2 p.m. today in
the Pioneer Room of the Burge Union.
The first session of the seminar "Nuclear Weapons and National Security" will meet at 4:30 p.m. today at Owen Hall, Ministry of Nations, 1204 Oread Ave.
A Campus Christians meeting is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. today in the Daisy Hill Room of the Kansas Union.
■ An architecture lecture, "Recent Works of IKOY," with Ronald Keenberg. Winnipig, Canada, is sched-ed 9:00 p.m. today in 3139 Wesco Hall.
A poetry jam is scheduled for 8 p.m. today at the Sunflower House, 1406 Tennessee St. Bring instruments, poems and short stories.
Troupe elevates the art of dance
By Regan Brown
The Rites of Spring, according to ancient Slavic legend, concerns a young girl who is selected to dance herself to death as a sacrifice.
Kansan staff writer
The legend was the core of "Le Sacre du Printemps" (subtitled "The Rehearsal") which was the crowning dance in last night's performance by the Paul Taylor Dance Company. The New York City company performed before about 1,000 people in Hoch Auditorium, and will perform again today for area sixth-graders.
Modernism prevailed in the minimalist costumes and lighting, and the innovative choreography was brilliantly calibrated to Igor Stravinsky's "The Rites of Spring." But when dancer Kate Johnson, who portrayed the Girl, performed her frantic and languid song-song sequence, the performance was intenseness and restraint were as evocative as Greek tragedy.
Much of the power of this dance troupe, now in its 33rd season, lies in its ability to blend restraint and powerful emotional content. The three dances in the concert ranged in mood from delicate nuance to lithe athleticism and drew as much from classical ballet motifs as from gymnastics.
"Roses," the evening's first dance, was lyrical and encircling in form, interspersed with moments of cart-wheeling vigor. Even when their movements approached those of gymnastic floor exercises, the 12 dancers were lithe but restrained. Just as the power of a symphony lies in its ability to play well at low as well as at full decibel level, much of the strength of this company lies in its flair for sooty voce expression.
The second dance, "Lost, Found and Lost," was probably the most notorious offering on the program — considering that it was a partial reconstruction of a work that audiences walked out on in 1957. That
piece, Paul Taylor's "7 New Dances," was controversial because it featured everyday emotions and motifs.
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Like "7 New Dances," the dance "Lost, Found and Lost," is firmly rooted in the world of the routine. Dancers stand in line, yawn, stretch, wait, then explode in bursts of frenzied activity.
Background music, described in the program as "wallpaper music," explained much of this dance's irony and audience appeal. To the lush strains of "As Time Goes By" and "Red Roses for a Blue Lady," the black-clad dancers performed against a harshly lit white backdrop.
The dancers managed to convey smoothly calibrated and almost robotic unison movements disrupted by random outbursts of fragmented individual release. The accompanying strains of classic elevator music served as a humorous counterpoint to the stark setting.
"Le Sacre du Printemps" was an effective showcase for Taylor's superb choreography and the talents of the entire company. The classical overtones and restrained tragic lines were broken up by the presence of henchmen, bar dancers and private eyes as the tale approached resolution.
One might almost think Stravinsky wrote "the Rites of Spring" to suit Taylor's choreography and not the other way around. The remarkable ability of the two works was enough to justify attending the performance.
From gangsters with silver daggers to ancient Slavic rituals, and from Stravinsky to wallpaper music. Taylor's company showed last night's audience the meaning of diversity and the power to be found in both restraint and expression.
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Valentine's Day
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The University Daily Kansan is proud to announce our annual "Valentine's Day Classified Section" on Friday Feb. 12th. It's the perfect way to say it all to your Valentine.
Here's how it works. For the very special price of five dollars you can send a one of a kind personal ad to your Valentine. The special section will feature a colorful red heart border. All you have to do is fill out the form below and drop it by or mail it to the Kansan. We'll do the rest. On Friday Feb. 12th they'll be no guessing about how you feel.
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Former Israeli pilot speaks to ROTC cadets
By Brenda Finnell
Kansan staff writer
The "60 Minutes" segment he showed presented the Israeli air force as dedicated and well-trained.
Such images are important if they convince enemy forces not to attack, Oved Dahari, a former Israeli air force pilot told about 80 Air Force ROTC cadets yesterday.
Dahari was an Israeli flying officer from 1971 to 1977.
"The best air force is an air force you
would go to fight in wars in the Middle
East don't always work that."
Dahari is concerned about the recent skirmishes between Israeli soldiers and Palestinians who live in the Israeli-occupied Gaza strip. But, he said he didn't know whether an all-out war would be better.
"I see it as a part of the long process of conflict when two people have a claim on the same country," Dahari said.
During his speech, Dahari spoke about the history of the Israeli air force and its training phases.
"The army is just part of society," Dahari said. "That's how you feel when you're in and when you're out."
Dahari, who was born and raised in Israel, is currently a post-doctoral fellow at the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore. He is studying active galactic nuclei in the astronomy program.
Most Israeli forces that their country's defense forces are extremely significant, Dahari said. Sometimes, there seems to be no alternative to fighting, he said.
"If we lose one, most Israelis believe there will be a second Holocaust, or at least millions of people will be forced out of the country," he said.
Dahari said he last visited Israel in May.
Most Israelis serve in the military and then go into other careers, Dahari said. The Israeli professional army is small, and Israel depends on its reserve army, he said.
Israeli men have three years of compu-
sional service and many hours to be paid.
"The root of getting an effective air force is in education." Davari said.
He said that education was a strong Jewish tradition and that Israelis wanted to create a large pool of talented people to serve their country.
But the number of young people who become fighter pilots, like Dahari, is small.
Competition is tough. Only one in 10 students graduates from fighter pilot school, Dahari said
Air Force Capt. John Heidrick, who organized Dahari's visit, said he was pleased with the speech.
"I think it is good for our cadets to hear about other countries" air force operations."
After his speech, Dahari said he believed it was important to tell U.S. people about Israel.
"Americans are concerned by what is happening," he said. "Just look at the percentage of media coverage Israel gets."
New chairman establishes goal
By Jeff Moberg
Kansan staff writer
The Senate Student Rights Committee plans to consider within the next two weeks an amendment that would improve ways to handle legislation within five senate committees and would define the duties of those committees.
At a meeting last night, the committee elected Kevin Fossland, Roeland Park junior, as its chairman. Fossland said the first piece of legislation the committee would deal with this semester was an amendment to rewrite Article Five of the Senate rules and regulations.
The amendment was originated by Roger Templin, a member of the Student Executive Committee. It deals with reorganizing the five committees of the Senate. Those committees are cultural affairs, finance, University affairs, minority affairs, and student rights.
"The rules we have right now with Article Five are extremely vague." Templin said. "It's a comprehensive revision of the article."
Laura Ambler, off-campus senator, said that the amendment not only would better define how committees should handle legislation handed down by the senate but also would show ways for them to generate their own amendments. The amendment would help increase the productivity of the committees.
"When you have an inexperienced chair with an inexperienced committee, not a lot gets done," Ambler said. "This will give the committees structure."
Templin said the student rights committee could also expect to see some activity early this semester with the Board of Grade Appeals and organization of a more unified tenants association for off-campus students.
High electricity bills upset some students
Kansan staff writer
By Christine Martin
"Obviously, there's something wrong." Slaughter said.
Some KU students who live in Colony Woods Apartments and who went home for winter break are upset by unusually high December electric bills.
Holly Slaughter, Leawood sophomore, said her electric bill was usually $40 to $68 but went up to about $130 in December.
Slaughter, a resident at Colony Woods, said she and her roommate went home for the break and were confused because the December bill was higher than November's.
She said she had heard of 20 other Colony Woods tenants who had similarly high bills. She has decided to have a meeting Thursday night to discuss the problem with other tenants.
Slaughter said she contacted KPL Gas Service in Lawrence and asked them to check her electric meter again.
KPL, checked her meter and said her bill was correct, she said.
Slaughter said KPL told her to talk to her apartment manager. She called the Consumer Affairs Association, 819 Vermont St., and asked whether they could help her. They suggested she hold a tenants' meeting.
Gerald Burkhart, manager of Colony Woods, said he told tenants with electric bill complaints to ask KPL to double check their meters.
"I wish I can help them out," Burkhart said. "But it's between the
kids and KPL."
Burkhard said he had spot-checked several apartments to make sure they were insulated properly but he didn't think the problem was with the apartment buildings.
Doris Bartkoski, a customer service representative for KPL, said electric bills were calculated by what was read on the meter. She said KPL would double check meters if customers requested it.
Electric bills aren't estimated, Bartkoski said, unless a meter reader can't get to a meter because it is blocked off by something, such as a fence.
Bartkoski said electric bills during the winter were more expensive because of the cold weather. She also said apartments with all-electric utilities, such as Colony Woods, were more expensive to heat.
Some tenants in Trailridge Apartment are concerned about high electric bills.
She said that one tenant had been gone two weeks in December and that her electric bill had gone up from $60 in November to $88 in December.
Ricky Pierson, manager of Trailridge Apartments, said two of her tenants had complained about their December bills.
Jalene Burch, manager of Heatherwood Apartments, said she hadn't received any complaints about electric bills. The apartments are run by gas and electricity, she said.
Apartments in Trailridge are run bv gas and electricity. Piersan said.
TOM HALFORD
Stringing along
Barbara Becht, St. Louis senior, practices the C and G-7 chords on her guitar after her first Guitar 121 class. She was playing Monday night in her architecture studio in Marvin Hall because her roommate would not let her practice at home. She worked on the two chords for about half an hour with the radio turned up to cover her practicing.
Brown, FacEx have closed meeting
By a Kansan reporter
The Faculty Executive Committee met with University of Kansas basketball coach Larry Brown yesterday in a closed meeting.
to talk to FacEx because he did not want problems between Brown and the faculty to be fought out in the press. Brown had expressed concern recently over relations between the faculty and student athletes.
Mel Dubnick, associate professor of political science and FacEx member, said that he invited Brown
The meeting was closed, Dubnick said, because grade point averages
of specific students were discussed. Under state law, a meeting can be closed when student records are being discussed, he said. He said that FacEx decided to close the meeting to protect the privacy of the athletes.
FacEx took no action after Brown spoke on the subject.
Brown declined to comment.
Women to speak at forum
By Rebecca J. Cisek Kansan staff writer
Issues surrounding maternity and parental leave will be the topic of a forum sponsored by the University of Kansas women's studies department at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the Lawrence Public Library auditorium, 707 Vermont St.
The annual forum commemorates the February Sisters, a group of KU women who took over the East Asian studies building, formerly at 1332 Louisiana St., on Feb. 4. 1972.
The annual forum commemorates the February Sisters, a group of KU women who took over the East Asian studies building, formerly at 1332 Louisiana St., on Feb. 4, 1972. The group demanded a campus day-care center, a women's studies program, an increase in the number of women in senior administration positions and the introduction of gynecology services at Watkins Hospital. The building has since been destroyed.
Susan Noakes, director of women's studies, said the forum was to serve as a catalyst for community discussion on maternity and parental leave. The forum will feature four speak-
The forum will feature four speakers.
■ Elinor Schroeder, KU professor of law, will explain the impact of labor laws and legislation being considered by Congress this spring. She will give the history of the ways businesses have treated pregnant women.
Peggy Billings, president of the Lawrence National Organization for Women, will speak on the organization's views and action on parental leave.
■ Linda Wimberly Freking will describe her experiences when she was denied re-employment and unemployment compensation for maternity leave in Missouri. Freking is the attorney at the Grande Court last year, and lost
Shirley Martin-Smith, owner of Martin-Smith Personnel Services, 1012 Massachusetts St. will speak on how Lawrence businesses handle maternity leave and the problems small companies have in providing parental leave. Smith's company provides temporary employee services and has dealt with firms that replace people who take parental leave.
Noakes said this year's topic was the result of a poll taken at the forum last year on the top issue currently facing Lawrence women. A similar poll will be taken tomorrow to determine the topic for next year.
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For students who care about people, this program will help you understand what it is like to cope with AIDS. Several persons with AIDS and their loved ones will share their stories.
Living with AIDS
Virginia Allen, coordinator of the Good Samaritan Project will introduce the speakers.
Woodruff Aud.
February 1
7:30 p.m.
SUA
KU Student Senate
SUA
4
Wednesday, January 27, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Installation of traffic lights would help end congestion
Traffic light at these intersections would greatly facilitate traffic flow and prevent a few gray hairs for Lawrence drivers
It's rush hour, and Lawrence drivers are zipping home on the city's well-planned street system. But when they get to the intersection at 19th and Louisiana streets or the one at 19th Street and Naismith Drive, they stop zipping.
Most often, drivers will stop at the same time and then look at each other. They will then inch ahead at the same time and stop again. This brake-pedal toe dance continues until one of the drivers gets angry enough to stomp on the gas.
... prevent a few gray hairs of Lawrence drivers.
As it is now, rush-hour drivers can expect to spend anywhere from one and a half to two minutes creeping toward the 19th street stop signs at Naismith Drive and Louisiana Street. It doesn't sound like an eternity, but it's time that needn't be wasted.
Traffic lights would stop this nonsense while relieving rush-hour congestion at these intersections.
Stop lights, on the other hand, would halt traffic for only 30 to 50 seconds, and green lights would last about the same length of time. The lights also could be fitted with sensors that would prevent drivers from waiting when streets were clear. Thus, traffic flow would be enhanced.
These two intersections are just too busy to be served by four-way stops. When two people pull up to a stop sign at right angles, the person on the right is supposed to go first. It works well in theory but not on the street.
City officials should consider and approve a plan to install these lights. The intersections would have consistent traffic flow, and they would also be safer.
It is the same song, fourth verse for enrollment at the University of Kansas.
It's time for the toe dance to end
It's time for the toe dance to end. Alan Player for the editorial board
And the problems will not go as long as the present system of admissions continues.
KU must curb enrollment
Juniors and seniors should be able to expect their classes to be open. Competing with 818 students attempting to get into closed communication studies classes is ridiculous.
Formulating committees to solve the problem has yet to produce results. Talking about the problem for four years has resulted in nothing but four years of closed classes, long enrollment lines and crowded classrooms.
The University does not have the resources to accommodate an unlimited number of students. Imposing and enforcing qualified admissions for all students would ensure that students who were serious about receiving a good education would prepare themselves for admission to KU.
This problem demands more than talk.
Jody Dickson for the editorial board
This problem demands more than talk.
Jody Dickson for the editorial board
The selective admissions proposal has the unanimous support of the Board of Regents but will face a stern test in the Legislature.
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
Regents proposal needs changes
Other Voices
It is making a student achieve the standards outlined by the Regents, it puts undue pressure on both the students and teachers to ensure they successfully comply with the guidelines. Not only must they pass all tests, but also have to take certain mandatory classes to comply with the proposal.
This, in turn, cuts down on electives that the high school student might want to take. Rather than taking classes that could possibly prepare him for his eventual career choice, he now must take foreign language, mathematics and science for a selected amount of years.
So, the Legislature now has a tough decision before it. The future of a college education for an average high-school student in Kansas rests on the president's judgment.
Let's just hope they keep the best interests of the youth in the state in mind and force the Regents to make some modifications in this proposal.
The University Leader Fort Hays State University
News staff
Alison Young...Editor
Todd Cohen...Managing editor
Rob Knapp...News editor
Alan Player...Editors office
Joseph Rebello...Campus editor
Jennifer Rowland...Planning editor
Anne Luscombe...Sports editor
Stephen Wade...Photo editor
Richard Stewart...Graphics editor
Tom Eben...General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Kelly Scherer...Business manager
Clark Massad...Retail sales manager
Brad Lenhart...Campus sales manager
Robert Hughes...Marketing manager
Kurt Messersmith...Production manager
Greg Knipp...National manager
Kelsey Schroemm...Traffice
Jannie Brown...Classified manager
Jeanne Hines...Sales and marketing adviser
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
**Letters** should be typed, double-spaced and less than 200 words and must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University of Kansas, please include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest columns. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom. 111 Staffer/Fell Hall
the grammar, punctuation and columns are the opinion of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views of University Daisan Kanari. Editorials are the opinion of the Kansan editorial board.
The University Daily Kansas (USP5 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stairfer Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in annual subscriptions by mail are $40 in Douglas County and $50 outside the County. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the student activity fee.
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
VIMES KEEMAN
CINCINNATI
ENQUIRERDEK88
ST. LOUIS FOOTBALL FANS DO THE WAVE
Brain jocks also have problems
A simple breathing test can end a computer athlete's promising career
It doesn't seem fair.
I'm a big fan of that well-discussed team that competes this time of year in that famous building on the edge of campus, and when a top player is declared invisible because of some silly rule, fans can't help but be disappointed.
I'm referring, of course, to the sad situation regarding Melvin Blossom, the star player for the University of Kansas top-ranked computer programmer who recently was declared athletically inelegible.
For those who aren't keeping up with the computer programming team, here are the basic facts: Undefeated in their last 39.75 matches in the NCAA Tournament, Jayhawks were off to a shaky start this year.
To make up for the loss of several seniors, KU scouts tried recruiting players from schools like Southern Methodist, whose programming program was erased after reports about _sex and money being offered to high school seniors with high SAT scores were disclosed.
KU also looked at junior colleges like Bartles-
ville Technical Institute, where Blossom broke
school records in bytes scored and defensive
debugging.
Blossom played as well as expected after he signed with KU. He was a great programmer, and he helped KU remain undefeated at home with upsets over teams like Cal-Tech. With Blossom processing, KU had a shot at every team's dream, finishing in the final 4.0.
Michael Merschel
Then it happened
Staff Columnist
As with other intercollegiate competitions, computer programming has a giant rules-making organization overseeing competition. The National Computer Competition Association has strict guidelines regarding who can and can't program.
Among other things, the NCCA guidelines call for everyone competing in academic events to pass a simple physical. All a player really has to do is take a deep breath to be allowed to stay on the team.
The reasoning behind the rule is that in a college environment, where people are supposedly being trained to function in society, nobody should be able to get by on sheer academic ability. After all, in the real world, much more token amount of athletic ability is expected.
But the test isn't designed to weed anybody out. It's a token measure. And programmers are given extra-special attention during the year: they have tasks, etc. It takes a lot of effort to fail the physical.
That's why it was so shocking when Blossom did.
Oh, everybody expects smart people like Blossom to be physical wimps. But in big-time college academics, these guys usually squeak by. When they don't, as in Blossom's case, it seems like the system has failed.
That's what the team's coach says. He wants an exemption for Blossom, and he wants the University to start a special program for geeks on the computer that they need more help than other students.
But even though I'm a big fan of the team and the great coach, I have to disagree with him this time. I know it doesn't seem fair for our star student. It doesn't seem fair for our school's stars don't, but it is probably for the best.
Once he graduates, Blossom won't have much help. He'll have to function on his own. And in today's society, if he can't breathe, he's as good as dead
The coach needs to keep that in mind before he starts calling for special programs for academic students. And he needs to remember that, in spite of the challenges this school doesn't really rework around his team.
It may not seem fair to the coach or fans, but players need to function at least a marginal level in both the glorious world of academics and the more mundane world of athletics.
Michael Merschel is a Lakewood, Colo., junior majoring in journalism.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Letter was too harsh
Barbara Paris' letter in the Thursday issue of the Kansan struck me, as I am sure it did many others, as extremely harsh and unfair. Her belief that KU students expect things to go their way all of the time is nonsense. It is really too much, though, to ask for things to go our way every once in a while?
Of the four semesters that I have pre- enrolled, all have left me in the add-drop "party" lines because of closed courses or a University fax pas. Incoming freshmen should be told to expect five years at the University of Kansas instead of the traditional four to make up for unplanned six-credit semesters.
I guarantee that some of their apathetic attitudes toward students would change.
The fact that Paris is upset with the apparent rudeness of many students also shocked me. The only people that I have found rude are the numerous instructors and secretaries I have approached regarding necessary schedule changes. Maybe some of these impolite people ought to march back and forth across campus for two days in search of an open class
I have one final question for Paris. Have we met before? I seem to remember spending one morning in the English department last year being scolded for questioning a conflict that arose due to your very own department. The dialogue used in that brief exchange closely parallels that of your letter. By the way, Ms. Paris, I went to Burger King last night for a burger with the works. The girl gave me a plain hamburger, not what I ordered. Somewhat similar to life, isn't it?
Jeff Moriarty
Omaha, Neb., sophomore
Beerbower Hall
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, January 27, 1988
5
Notetaking tips Students, teachers learn to listen
Bv Davana Yochim
Kansan staff writer
Last night, the 25 students who attended a listening and notetaking workshop were asked to describe the role of the velopharyngeal port closure in speech sound production.
Those who didn't take good notes did not know that it helped make nasal and oral sounds.
The program was offered by the Student Assistance Center.
The question was asked to test the students' notetaking abilities after two instructors lectured students on how to listen in class and take good notes.
The workshop was one of 10 offered by the center this semester. The workshops are aimed at enhancing academic skills.
Sara Martin and Lorraine Michel, assistant directors of the assistance center, presented the workshop to a varied group of people, including freshmen, graduate students and teachers.
"This will help you listen more carefully, organize as you listen, and take better notes on what you hear," Martin said.
The listening and notetaking workshop gave students an opportunity to test what they learned by requiring them to take notes over two mock lectures given by Michel.
Martin offered a few tips to help students listen to their teachers more offe-
"Listening is active," Martin said. "When you are good at listening, you can be a few steps ahead of the speaker. It is an all-consuming and exhausting activity."
"Sit in the front of the class," Martin said. "Teaches take more of an interest in helping you if you sit in front. Try to stay alert by getting more sleep, or sitting in an uncomfy chair. This will enable ability to concentrate by preparing for class. Don't go in cold without looking at the assignment."
Kathy Matthews, a teacher at Haskell Indian Junior College, attended the workshop with nine of her students. Matthews said she taught a class at Haskell that was similar to the workshop.
"I brought my students here to get more practice," she said. "I've been here a couple of times before, and it's excellent preparation for the final exam."
Lisa Leinacker/KANSAN
City OKs study
By Ric Brack
The Lawrence City Commission last night decided unanimously to give city staff the go-away to search for a firm to carry out a feasibility study for a proposed municipal golf course near Clinton Dam.
Kansan staff writer
Last November, commissioners received a proposal prepared by citizens requesting a study. That proposal was backed by a petition signed by 2,826 Lawrence residents.
Lawrence now has two public golf courses.
The proposed site is south and east of Clinton Dam and is located on 180 acres of land owned by the Army Corps of Engineers.
A preliminary study, completed in December by the Lawrence Parks and Recreation department, recognized the need for a municipal golf course because the concession probably wouldn't be profitable enough to cover its cost.
Fred DeVictor, director of parks and recreation, said after the meeting that the park is one of the nation's finest.
the need, but where does the money come from to make that a reality?
Stan Harris, 2106 Kasold Dr., who led the citizens group, said after the meeting that he conceived the idea for the course last March after visiting other municipal courses and finding lower rates than were available at private courses.
Harris said commissioners gave up on the proposal after the preliminary study. But after attending a conference where they learned that municipal golf courses could be profitable, the commissioners decided to go ahead with the more detailed study.
DeVictor said the study, which could cost up to $20,000, was necessary to evaluate whether the proposed location was adequate, what alternatives were available for financing, and whether Lawrence could support the course.
The commission also approved a revision of a site plan for the Sanctuary Apartments at 1401 W. 7th Street. The revised plan includes a reduction in the number of apartments from 81 to 71.
LACE CORPS
Marshalline Letcher, area representative for the Peace Corps, explains the application procedure to Jennifer Gamble, Evanston, Ill., senior. Letcher said the University of Kansas was the biggest contributor of Peace Corps volunteers in Kansas. In the 26 years the organization has existed, 463 volunteers have been KU students.
Corps call
Local Briefs
REPUBLICANS TO MEET: About 10 University of Kansas Republicans will attend the Federation of Kansas College Republicans meeting Saturday afternoon at Washburn University in Topeka. The group will discuss the upcoming state and national conventions and sales of Dole-for-President sweatshirts, said Brenda Eisele, president of the College Republicans.
POETRY, MUSIC SCHEDULED: An evening of music and poetry is schedued for 8 p.m. today at the Sunflower House, 1406 Tennessee St. Guests are
invited to bring their own poetry, short stories to read aloud or a musical instrument. For more information, call the Sunflower House at 749-0871.
PARK NAME CHANGED: The University Corporate and Research Park, 15th and Wakara streets, has a new name: Oread West. Bob Billings, developer for the research park, said that the new name would help associate the park with the University of Kansas.
be anywhere in the country," Billings said. "We liked Oread because of its association with the University."
"We just felt that the University Corporate and Research Park could
The reason for creating the park was to assist the University by providing entrepreneurial possibilities, consulting opportunities for the faculty and full-time job opportunities for graduates, Billings said. "There would be no need for a research park if there was no university," he said.
Most of the firms in the park are associated with the University, he said.
Thursday is last day to change, add classes
By Julie Adam
Kansan staff writer
Tomorrow is the last day students can add classes or change sections.
Gary Thompson, director of student records, said the enrollment center would be fully staffed tomorrow. The center also will be open from noon to 1 p.m., instead of closed. He said people who are busy to be busy but he didn't expect many people to be waiting in line when the center closed.
If people are still waiting to add classes at 5 p.m., the center will stay open until all students have had a chance to enroll, he said.
"We're not K mart. We won't close the door in anyone's face," Thompson said.
For the first nine days of the add period, an appointment schedule was used. Students adding classes had to go to the enrollment center at an appointment time based on the last two digits of their KUIDs.
But tomorrow, the procedure will be first-come, first-serve, Thompson said.
He said he had not seen any problems with add-drop procedures this semester and the center had been able to stay on schedule.
The add-drop period went more smoothly than last fall, he said, mostly because students were familiar with the procedures. In the fall, he said, many students were new to KU and confused about what to do.
Lori Pam, Highland Park, Ill., junior, said that the line moved quickly but that the only problem she had going through add-drop was getting the classes she wanted.
Andy Agnew, Prairie Village freshman, said he had spent only 15 minutes in the enrollment center from the time he got into line until he received his new schedule.
The enrollment center will open at 8 a.m. Thursday.
Feb. 16 is the last day students can withdraw without receiving a 'W' on their test成绩.
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Wednesday, January 27, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Business
Continued from p. 1
Edward Meyen, dean of education,
said, "We're particularly pleased
because our increase is in very
capable students."
The UCLA study indicated a continuing slump in interest in engineer-
Carl Locke, dean of the school of engineering, said that enrollment in the school had decreased along with national trends until 1984 and 1985, when it leveled off. Locke said that in the fall of 1986, enrollment began increasing at the rate of 5 to 6 percent a year.
Locke said the increase could possibly be attributed to the overall increase in enrollment at the University. Other institutions in the region have had a continual decline in enrollment, he said.
Although he said the statistics for freshman enrollment showed a drop in 1986 and 1987, two-thirds of those who enrolled went into aerospace or electrical and computer engineering, three-fifths of those majors had remained fairly high, he said.
In computer science, increased enrollment at the University of Kansas went against the national trend.
William Bulgren, chairman of the department of computer science, said the department had seen a 5- to 10-percent increase over the last two years.
Bulgen said that other schools in the region had continued to show a decrease in enrollment. Students who were choosing not to go to those schools might be coming to the University, he said.
"We are being identified as a center of excellence by students and their parents," he said.
Luncheon speakers tout plan
By Kevin Dilmore
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA - The trouble with the Margin of Excellence proposal is that it is only a step in the right direction, House Minority Leader Marvin Barkis said yesterday.
Barkis spoke briefly at the first of two Topeka lunches sponsored by the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce and the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors. The second luncheon is at noon today.
About 50 people, 20 of them legislators, attended the luncheon to discuss the Margin of Excellence proposal. The leadership of both the House and the Senate was invited to the luncheons, said Gary Toebben, a Lawrence Chamber of Commerce member.
Members of the Senate's Economic Development Committee and the House's Taxation and Appropriations committees also were invited.
The Margin of Excellence is the Board of Regents three-year, $47 million funding proposal that would increase funding of Regents schools to 95 percent of peer averages. It would increase faculty salaries to 100 percent of the peers.
Peer schools are similar to KU in size in size,scope and mission.
come out in support of the proposal.
"I have always been a proponent of investments in
small beings, he said.
Barkis said he saw two sides to the Margin of
At the luncheon he said, "Some of us feel that Kansas is almost morally negligent in addressing the needs of its people."
Chancellor Gene A. Budig said he agreed with Barkis that Margin of Excellence was an important step toward a commitment to education.
Excellence. "I like the program as a whole," he said in a telephone interview yesterday afternoon. "But it doesn't really address the infrastructure needs and the absolute quality of education.
"His observations were valid," Budig said yesterday afternoon. "I appreciated his candor."
Senate Minority Leader Mike Johnston, D-Parsons, said he was pleased to have the chance to discuss the Margin of Excellence.
"When the gavel finally falls this year, I hope we were able to make some progress for your welfare," Johnston said.
Budig said he considered the first luncheon a success
Budig said he considered the first luncheon a success. "I was encouraged by the legislators' level of understanding of the Margin of Excellence," he said after the luncheon. "And most were optimistic about the Margin's chance."
"They realize that special attention must be given to faculty salaries for us to regain the initiative," Budig said. "No one questions the need for increased salaries."
Budig said it was essential that faculty members and legislative leaders know and respect each other, especially this year.
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ACE
The Association of Collegiate Entrepreneurs
The ACE chapter is alive and thriving this semester at the University of Kansas. The organization is one of over 500 internationally affiliated college chapters that consist of students who either currently own their own business or have interest in doing so in the future.
ACE provides a unique opportunity for all members to meet entrepreneurs from both the local and national levels through a series of "Guest Lectures" sponsored solely by ACE. Through this process, the organization provides a communication network between student members and the business world.
ACE would like to invite students from every school to attend our first general meeting this Thursday, January 28 at 7 p.m. in the Pioneer Room Level 3, Burge Union. Kevin Wickliff from legal services will make a presentation on the legal aspects of entrepreneurship.
For more information and meeting location call 843-3277
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, January 27, 1988
7
Noted Soweto youth killed
JOHANNESBURG South Africa
The Associated Press
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — A black teen-ager interviewed in a CBS News documentary on aparthied was found shot and killed five days after police questioned him about the films, family and police said yesterday.
Godfrey Sicelo Dloom was shot in the head. His body was found under a tree near his grandmother's house on the outskirts of the Emudi section of Soweto on Monday, his
Dilome, 18, was interviewed in the CBS documentary "Children of Apartheid," which was broadcast in December in the United States. He also appeared in a news show on the Dutch television station Klu.nl in 2006. In 2015, he said he was also interviewed by the BBC.
Asked if his life was in danger, Dлом said in the CBSH him, "yes" because I might have been there.
Dilomo was questioned Jan. 20 at Johannesburg police headquarters about statements he made in the documentaries, said Brig. Leon Mellet, a spokesman for the Law and Order Ministry.
Mellet said Dlomo "was identified as the
one who had made serious allegations" against the police about being mistreated during detention.
In the CBS documentary, narrator Walter Cranko quoted David Damey as saying he had been "the most wonderful man in history."
Mellet said police wanted to question Dlomo to investigate his charges but during the three-hour interview, he had signed a statement saying he had been coached by an interviewer on what to say.
That interview, which Domo allegedly said was conducted by a "news agency director," 'took place a year ago, Mellet said. Domo did not identify any particular news agency, Mellet said.
"We want to know why he was killed after giving a statement to us," said Mellet.
Jele said her son "was afraid of the police because they once caught him and told him they would kill him."
She said her son had been in hiding and only visited his family in the township on weekends and holidays.
his pocket bearing his name and address.
Police said they had received an anonymous telephone call that a youth was lying dead. They arrived 15 minutes later to find the body, which they identified by a book in
A spokesman for the Detainees Parents Support Committee said she witnessed Dlomo's detention on Jan. 20 during a police raid on the organization's offices. She said Dlomo told her after he was freed that police had tried to force him to say he was coached during the news interviews.
The spokesman said that when security police raided the offices last week, Dilomo "was going down the stairs and a black security policeman said to the other, 'Here's the guy who appeared on TV talking about his detention.' They took him, but they wouldn't tell us why."
When he returned after the interrogation,
"He said the police were forcing him to admit
that what he was saying in the interviews
was coached by DPSC or CBS. He said
nobody coached him," added the spokesman,
who declined to give her name.
Mellet said the CBS documentary: "This film was made in South Africa and sent into the world claiming this person had been arrested four times, been assaulted and beaten up, been tortured. If those allegations he had made in the movie had been true, obviously we would like to find out who those persons are who are responsible."
Colombian president vows to continue war on cocaine after prosecutor's murder
The Associated Press
BOGOTA, Colombia — President Virgilio Barco vowed not to be blackmailed by cocaine barons who killed his chief prosecutor in the first salvo of a "total war" on efforts to extradite them to the United States.
The nation's largest newspapers voiced support Tuesday for the U.S.-educated president's pledge to bring to justice the billionaire smugglers whose bribes and private armies have allowed them to operate with near immunity.
An autopsy showed that Attorney General Carlos Mauro Hoyos was killed Monday about nine hours after his abduction in a fusillade that shattered his skull. Twelve bodies were found in the body. His two bodyparts also were killed in the ambush.
In a nationwide television and radio
address Monday night, Barco said the government would not "surrender to vile blackmail and infamous threats."
Drug traffickers "will not intimidate us," he said.
Barco has made it clear that he isn't backing down in the face of threats from the "narcotraficantes," who possess private armies, bands of assassins and influence in Congress.
His government, through Hoyos, said this month it intends to renew efforts to arrest and extradite Colombia's leading traffickers to face criminal charges in the United States.
A group calling itself "Los Extraditables" said it killed the attorney general because he persisted in extradition efforts. On Sunday, the group declared "total war" on Hoyos' ilk.
Enjoy smooth, creamy Frozen Yogurt I Can't Believe It's YOGURT! Frozen Yogurt Stores 97%
97% Fat Free!
--Five Samples--
Louisiana Purchase Shopping Center
OPEN: 11 a.m. - 11 p.m. Daily
Noon 11 p.m. Sundays
Be a NANNY
- Seaside Connecticut towns near New York City.
- Great salary & benefits,
airfare provided
ESQUIRE BARBER SERVICE
TRACEY GARCIA
Haircuts...$6.50
for appointments call 842-3690
2323 Ridge Court
- Choose from warm, loving families pre-screened by us
- Must enjoy working with children
- families pre-screened by u
* Year round positions only
* Must enjoy
Care for Kids, Inc.
Pin 27 Reprint # C/T 0453 2013-85
PIZZA Shoppe and pub
842-0600
Pullall's Music House 2601 Iowa 843-3008
Sound Systems • Amps Guitar • KeyboardsAccessories
KING SIZE PIZZA
single topping
32 oz. Pepsi $8.95
DELIDERED!
BORDER
BANDIDO
WEDNESDAY SPECIAL
ALL YOU CAN EAT
$3.79 5-9 p.m.
ALPINE
Choose from: tacos, enchiladas, chili, Spanish rice, taco salad, salad bar, burritos and more!
(across from post office)
842-8861
SKI • SKI • SKI • SKI • SKI
MARCH 13-17 VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
• • STAY AT BEAUTIFUL AVON CENTER •
BAGAGE INCLUDES:
- 4 NIGHTS AT AVON CONDO
- 4 DAYS SKI RENTAL AND LIFT TICKETS FOR EUTHER SKI AREA.
PACKAGE INCLUDES:
• TRANSPORTATION
- DR EITHER SKI AREA
• FREQUENT SHUTTLES
$360.00 per person double room
REAK FOR CANCUN MARCH 12-19
• ROUNDTRIP AIR ON AMERICAN AIRLINES
• 7 NIGHTS LODGING
• TRANSFERS FROM AIRPORT TO HOTEL
$650.00 per person
Based on 4 per room
Full payment by Feb. 5
2172 West 20th Street Holiday Plaza
Lawrence, KS 65046 841-810
Holiday Travel
Holiday Tra
Royal Peking Restaurant
Highly recommended by both the Kansas City Star and Wichita Eagle Beacon, the Royal Peking Restaurant stands out as Lawrence's premiere Chinese restaurant, featuring outstanding authentic Oriental cuisine served with flair and elegance.
proudly introduces
Dining Hours: 11:30.3 and 4:30.1 Tuesday-Saturday
12:00.9-30 Sunday Closed Mondays
711 West 23rd Street • Lawrence, KS (913)841-4599
FREE DELIVERY!
Tuesday through Sunday
5 : 00 p.m. to 9: 30 p.m.
(SORRY, CLOSED MONDAYS)
SOCIAL WORK
— SOCIAL WORK HAS IT ALL —
Compassion, Caring, Commitment
Come To Career Day and hear about career opportunities.
Friday, January 29, 1:15 Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union
KU
IT'S TIME AGAIN FOR THE ALL-CAMPUS TOURNAMENT
---
Sunday, Feb. 7 — 1:30 (8-ball pool & table soccer Sign up at SUA by Friday, Feb. 5 Entry fee: $5.00 — Qualified winners go on to regional tournament. Information 864-3477 (Kansas Union)
925 Iowa
749-2424
JUNKYARD'S
JYM
535 Gateway
YOU CAN TAN
FOR
$2.00
A TAN
AT
JUNKYARD'S
BODY
BOUTIQUE
The Women's Fitness Facility
JYM
WOLFFE SUNTAN SYSTEMS 7 BEDS AVAILABLE NO MEMBERSHIP REQUIRED!
842-4966
BODY BOUTIQUE
The Women's Fitness Facility
---
SPRING CLASSES
BEGINNING QUILTING (6 weeks) - Monday, February 1; morning, morning 10-12 noon and evening 9 p.m. classes are the first class (Feb.1) will be three hours, morning 10-1 and afternoon 9 p.m. make a for wall block hanguing bait pack $18.00 plus service.
BEGINNING QUILTING (6 weeks) - Wednesday. Feb. 3,
10, 24. March 21, 27. You make a blanket.
Then you finish quilting it $18.00 each.
INTERMEDIATE QUILTING (one class per month)
Monday, February 15, March 14, April 18, May 16
7-9 p.m. The project and pattern are of your choosing.
6 month commitment. $3.50 per month plus
supplies.
QUILT-IN-A-DAY LOG CABIN DEMONSTRATION
Monday, February 8, 7-p.m. You will be shown how to make a quilt by machine in a very quick and efficient manner and is compatible to many quilt patterns.
$4.50 demonstration only.
BEGINNING KNITTING (6 weeks): Thursday, February 4-25, March 3 and 10, 7-9 pm. Selection of pattern and supplies should be done prior to the first class with help from a Stitch On employee. $18.00 plus supplies.
QUILT-IN-A-DAY LOG CABIN WORKSHOP (all day workshop) -Sunday, March 6, 9-5. Bring your sewing machine and a sack lunch and make a quilt you can take home and put on your bed that night. Fabric selection should be done ahead with the help of a Stitch On employee. $18.00 plus supplies.
INTERMEDIATE KNITTING/NORGIEWAN (8 weeks)
Wednesday, February 2-34 and March 2-30, 7-pm. (no class on March 16). You will learn new techniques. A variety of projects and patterns will be available. $20.00
MACHINE APLIQUE DEMONSTRATION - Monday
February 15, - 7 a.m. m.q. 45 demonstration, January
COLLARS AND NECKLINES FOR SWEATSHIRTS
Stop and see the models. $4.90 demonstration only.
RAG BASKET - COILED METHOD Tuesday, February
23, 7-9 p.m. Turn mornings and fabric bags into useful
and colorful baskets. $5.00 plus supplies.
BEGINNING STENICLING Tuesday, February 9, 7-9
KINITED YOKE ON SWEATSHIRTS (2 weeks) - Tuesday, February 23, 2019 at 7:30 a.m. $80 m.p. plus supplies.
7 pm. $5.00 plus $1.00
SUPPLIES
INVITING (2 weeks) - Monday,
February 29 and March 7, 7-9 pm. Pattern and yarn
should be selected in advance with the help of a Stitch
on employee. $8.00 plus supplies.
$CROCHETED HEART RUG> Thursday, March 24, 7-9
1:30 m. must know how to chain and single crochet
CROCHETED COLLAR (2 weeks) - Thursday, March 31,
and April 7, 7-9 p.m. Must know how to chain and single crochet. You may select from several patterns. $8.00 plus supplies.
BEGINNING COUNTED CROSS STITCH - Tuesday,
March 1, 7-9 p.m. $5.50 supplies provided.
COUNTED CROSS STITCH WITH WASTE CANVAS -
Wednesday, March 30, 7 p.m. p.m. $6.00 supplies provided.
ADVANCED COUNTED CROSS STITCH (2 week(s))
Saturday February 20 and 27, 10-12 room. An opportunity
to get a back-to-school project is a bookmark titled "Kansas Sampler". Designed and taught by Kathy Murphy. $8.00 plus supplies.
10% DISCOUNT ON CLASS MATERIAL Look for our coupon in the Lawrence Book
Stitch On Needlework Shop
Happy Holidays!
926 Massachusetts
842-1101
---
8
Wednesday, January 27, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
NationWorld
China's hostile-nation status kept secret to help relations
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Defense Department has kept secret for more than a year its listing of China as a nation hostile to the United States to accommodate steps aimed at improving U.S.-Chinese relations, officials said yesterday.
Secrecy on the hostile-nation declaration will end later this year, however, with the public release of a new Pentagon list, said officials who discussed the subject on condition of anonymity.
The Reagan administration believes that China is providing antisiph missiles to Iran, the sources said.
Pentagon moves on China's designation were disclosed in an unrelated
legal battle in U.S. District Court here. The case involves a lawsuit by two civilian Navy employees who are challenging a regulation governing when naturalized citizens from countries deemed hostile to the United States are eligible for a military security clearance.
Phong T. Huynh and Vien U. Huyhn, born in Vietnam, fitted the suit. Among other arguments, they asserted the regulation was unfair as a communist nation like Vietnam, was not on the list of hostile nations.
To counter that argument, the Pentagon had to disclose to the court recently that China had been dropped from the public list of hostile nations but in reality had never been dropped
Survivors tell of Mexico mine blast
The Associated Press
LAS ESPERANZAS, Mexico Survivors of an explosion that killed at least 33 coal miners Monday described from their hospital beds yesterday how they escaped the underground inferno after being bowled over by a blast of searing air.
Gerardo Acosta Garcia, an investigator with the federal Public Ministry, said 138 men were inside the government-owned Sidermex Steel Co. mine when an electric transformer at one of the mine's substations short-circuited and caused the explosion and fire. Most of the men got on their own right after the blast.
Workers dug for more bodies at the mine outside this northern town in Mexico's coal-rich Carbon Region.
The owner of the funeral home where the dead from Monday's disaster were being taken said 27 corpses had been found and told him to expect at least 10 more.
Seventeen miners remained hospitalized yesterday in Palau and Nueva Rosita, said Dr. Carlos Aguirre municipality. He was at the Social Security, Hospital in Palau.
Dallas mourns murdered officer
DALLAS — Thousands of law officers, their badges masked in black, gathered at a Baptist church yesterday to mourn a policeman shot three times in the face by a transient.
marshals, paramedics and park rangers.
The Associated Press
"We're hurting this morning, O God. We don't understand the tragedy of this man whose life was taken from him because of the uniform he wears." Sgt. Carroll Prutt prayed before the lawmen, who were
Thousands of Dallas residents offered a silent show of support for the police department yesterday as they drove to work with their headlights on. A group of homeless people marched yesterday afternoon to back police, and other citizens held a candlelight vigil last night.
Chase, 25, died Saturday in a downtown parking lot when a man who
had lived on the streets wrestled Chase's gun away and, ignoring the officer's pleas for mercy, shot him in the face.
Carl Dudley Williams, 34, then walked away. He fired a shot at two pursuing off-duty officers and was killed by return gunfire.
Williams, who had a police record dating to 1978, including an August arrest for assaulting an officer, and a
history of mental illness, was urged by two or three men in the group of six waiting at the bus stop to shoot Chase, said Lt. Jerald Calame.
"I came without answers. I came without frustration. I came without bitterness but with a lot of questions," said the Rev. Dennis S. Henderson, a reserve officer and senior pastor of the Marsh Lane Baptist Church.
Israeli border police fire on protesters
The Associated Press
JERUSALEM — Israeli border police in the West Bank opened fire on Palestinian protesters yesterday, wounding one, and Arabs hurled firebombs at soldiers in the Gaza Strip.
Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin said the policy of using beatings to quell protest applied only during violent demonstrations.
Border policemen shot a Palestinian in the leg when dozens of protesters, many covering their faces with checkered Arab headresses, surrounded a patrol in the Jenin refuge camp, an army spokesman said.
He said the patrol used tear gas he had found in their lives when in danger.
Brezhnev's son-in-law will face trial
The Arab-ran Palestine Press Service said Israeli gunfire wounded
Muslims stall U.S. hostage release
BEIRUT — Muslim kidnappers holding three U.S. citizens and an Indian hostage said yesterday that the release of the hostages had been delayed by the Israeli round-up of Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
Israel's main ally, was "not out of reach for punishment because of all this. Every action against America is worthy and useful."
The Associated Press
A statement from the kidnapers, who call themselves the Islamic Jihad for the Liberation of Palestine, did not define the threat against the United States. The
They also said the United States.
statement, handwritten in Arabic,
was delivered to a Western news
agency in Muslim west Beirut
two Arabs, one 12 years old, during protests at the West Bank town of El Bireh and the Jalazon refugee camp near Nablus.
It said the arrests of hundreds of Palestinians in the Israeli-ocupied territories since protests began Dec. 8 meant any hostage release "will remain suspended without a foreseeable solution."
said a large demonstration began at Jalazoon after two foreign television crews entered the camp and two Arab women were injured, one by a rubber bullet and one by beating.
An army spokeswoman denied that any Palestinians were wounded by shooting at El Bireh or Jalazoon. She
The Associated Press
Riots began Dec. 8 in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, which Israel
captured from Jordan and Egypt in the 1967 Middle East war. Thirty-eight Arabs have been killed by Israeli gunfire, according to U.N. figures, and Rabin said the policy of using beatings rather than bullets took effect Jan. 5.
MOSCOW — The son-in-law of late Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev will go on trial for abuse of power during his stint as deputy interior minister and for accepting bribes equal to 270 years' pay for the average Soviet factory worker.
The official news agency Tass said that the investigation of bribery and corruption charges against Yuri Churbanov had been completed and that "the case will be handed over to a court."
News Roundup
Tass did not mention Churbanov's relationship with Brezhnev, who has been the target of criticism and dishonor in the three years that Mikhail Gorbachev has been Communist Party chief.
The government earlier this month stripped a city, town squares and a Moscow neighborhood of Brezhnev's name, claiming citizens had demanded to break away from the late leader's legacy of corruption and economic stagnation.
SOVIET PULLOUT ANTICIPATED: Nervous Afghan officials are buying foreign currency and passports in anticipation of a Soviet pullout, and some Soviet civilian dependents may have left already, diplomatic sources said yesterday. The reports came after Moscow announced that it wanted to remove its troops from Afghanistan by the end of the year.
MECHAM GETS ULTIMATUM: Gov. Evan Mecham was officially notified yesterday that he must resign by Saturday or run in a recall election, but a spokesman said the governor had no plans to quit. Secretary of State Rose Mofford, a Democrat, would replace the Republican governor if he resigned or was removed
BOY'S RECOVERY 'REMARKABLE': A 9-year-old boy who was rescued two weeks ago after being trapped 40 minutes beneath pond ice and wrote out his name yesterday in what he called an "absolutely remarkable" recovery. Kendall Smith, of Dillon, came out of a coma Monday.
VIETNAM TO RETURN REMAINS: Vietnam plans to turn over five sets of remains of Americans missing from the Vietnam war and has developed information in 16 other cases, the
ANTI-SEMITIC VANDALISM INCREASES:
Anti-Semitic vandalism increased 17 percent nationally in 1987, with a 121 percent jump in
California sparking a reverse in a five-year downward trend, the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith said yesterday. Nationwide, there were 648 reported incidents, up from 594 a year earlier.
MINESWEEPING WILL DECREASE: Plans for the United States and its allies to cut minesweeping in half in the Persian Gulf might tempt Iran to sow more mines, diplomats and shipping experts said yesterday.
SOVIETS REVIEW TESTING: Twenty Soviet scientists began a review of the United States nuclear testing program at the top-secret Nevada Test Site yesterday, a step that could lead to a nuclear test ban.
Winter Price Thaw
DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
Jan. 28-30
Downtown Lawrence Association
TWO PENGUINS RUNNING UP A SHORE.
If you missed Tuesday's Savings there's still a chance 25% to 50% OFF Fall and Winter Merchandise
M-T-W-F
9:30-6:00
Thursday 9:30-8:30
Sunday 12:5
MISTER GUY
MEN'S & WOMEN'S TRADITIONAL CLOTHING
842-2700
920 Mass.
Lawrence, Kansas
Dare to be Different with Ethnic Fashions
SAVE 25% - 75% OFF
unique dresses, musical instruments, jewelry fine leathers, etc. from around the world 7331/2 New Hampshire Next to Bottlenecks
MORRIS SPORTS
20% OFF
Everything In Store
includes • Russel Sweats • L.A. Gear • Basketballs
• Sports Apparel • Aerobic and Basketball Shoes
843-0412 1012 Massachusetts
exp. 2/3/88
C
McCall's Shoes
Est.1969
"WINTER PRICE THAW"
829 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence
SALE PRICES REDUCED AGAIN!
EVERY PAIR OF JANUARY SALE SHOES HAVE BEEN SLASHED IN PRICE!
OPEN SUN.
1-5 p.m.
H
Women's Shoes values to $63
$10 to $42
WERE $ 18^{90} $ to $ 52^{90} $
NOW
Your place for a wide range of sizes the best selection and personalized service!
Men's Shoes
Values to 588
WERE 18⁹⁰ to 62⁹
$12
to $45
Boots Men's, Women, Youth WERE 10% to 50% OFF
NOW
20% to 60% DISCOUNT
Children's Shoes values to $35
WERE 1290 to 2890
NOW
$8
to $24
CLOSEOUTS Values to $36
Were 8 $ ^{90} $
$5 While they last
OUT THEY GO! YOU SAVE!
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, January 27, 1988
9
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, January 27, 1988
Winter Price Thaw
DOWNTOWN
LAWRENCE
Jan. 28-30
Downtown Lawrence Association, 123 W. 8th (913) 842-3883
Penguin walking on ice.
Attention Students Blue Country has it for you
For your sister, neighbor, friend or yourself. Full line of miniatures that do not require much room in your small amount of space.
Downtown Lawrence Association 123 W.8th·(913)·842-3883
Come in and get that special someone a gift today
10% DISCOUNT WITH THIS COUPON
COUPON GOOD THROUGH JAN. 30
NANCEE DAVIS 17 W. 9th Hours: Tues.- Sat.
OWNER LAWRENCE 10-5
NEEDLEWORK SALE NOW
742 Massachusetts 841-2117
Colored aida cloth $21.00/yd $10.00
22 ct. handanger $15.50/yd $8.00
Damask squares $2.10 $1.60
Ribband .5/yd
DMC embroidery floss .25
Danish flower thread .70 .25
Cross stitch books 20% OFF
(selected books 1/2 price)
Paternayan persian wool. 6/strand 4/strand
Needlepoint Canvas $11.00/yd $8.00/yd
Stretchen bars .25
Wooden frames 1/2 price
x5, x6, x8, x10, x5, x7, x8, 10x10, x79
Colored mats 1/2 price
Floss caddies $13.50 $10.00
$5.00 $4.00
THE LOFT
50-75% off
All Fall & Winter
Merchandise
All sales final
THE LOFT
3 DAYS ONLY Jan.28-30
Winter Price Thaw...at WHITENIGHTS
3 DAYS ONLY Jan. 28 - 30
Thurs - 9:30 a.m.-8:00 p.m.
Fri & Sat - 9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
918 Mass.
YARNBARN
Dress trousers
Suits
Sportcoats
All weather
coats
Corduroys
Sweaters
Jackets
Rugbys
Sport shirts
as much as 50% OFF
WHITENIGHT'S
the men's shop • 839 massachusetts • lawrence, kansas 66044 • 843-5755
no refunds or exchanges some alterations extra
Winter Price Thaw
Thursday, Friday and Saturday only.
75% off All fall and winter merchandise.
Patricia's
Fashions & Accessories
735 Massachusetts (913) 843-1202
FOOTWEAR up to 40% OFF ACTIVEWEAR up to 40% OFF
The Athlete's Foot.
Choose from our tremendous selection of Nike, Reebok, Brooks, Avia, or Fila footwear or activewear, whether it's high-tech running gear or low impact aerobic shoes. From the biggest name in the business
942 Mass.
841-6966
WINTER
PRICE
THAW
SALE ENDS
SATURDAY!
January Jubilee 1/2 PRICE CLEARANCE!
All Fall & Winter Merchandise is at Least 1/2 OFF! Many Items are Marked up to 75% OFF.
- All Fall & Winter
1/2 All Fall & Winter Sweaters Wool Skirts PRICE Wool Slacks Fleece Coordinate
- Fleece Coordinates
New Spring Merchandise Arriving Daily from Beverly Hills Polo, Organically Grown, Outback Red and More! All Fall & Winter Merchandise Must Go!
HARDERS
BARRIER LABEL LANDSCAPE FOR LEISURE
945 Mass., Lawrence
SPECTATOR'S
YEAR-END
CLEARANCE SALE
Ends Saturday
Jan. 30th
All fall and Winter
Merchandise
Reduced
by as much as 70%
Don't Miss
This Savings
Opportunity!
Spectator's
For women who believe that dressing is half the fun
737 Massachusetts
843-1771
A
Spectator's
For women who believe that dressing is half the fun
737 Massachusetts 843-1771
---
Winter Sale
1987 Bianchi and Trek Bicycle Reduced
Bianchi Strada LX: Shimano index shifting...Sale $250.
Trek Elance 330: Reynolds 531, Suntour Accushift...Sale $325.
Bianchi Allante: All terrain bicycle, Shimano index shifting, 18 speed...Sale $265
Bianchi Maxx: All terrain bicycle, Suntour 3000 accushift, 18 speed...Sale $315
More 1987 models to choose from
Downhill Ski Rental Packages: Raichle Boots, Head Skis, Tyrolin Bindings...Sale $175.
Ice Skates...Sale $29.98
30%
Winter Coats—Woolrich(mens and womens)
Women's Skirts—Woolrich, Patagonia, Royal Robbins
Trousers—wool, cotton, or corduroy by North Face,
Royal Robbins, Patagonia, Woolrich
Sweaters—Cotton, Cashmere, Wool
Shirts—Corduroy, wool, cotton, flannel, rugby,
sweatshirts and T-Shirts
Bicycle Jerseys and Shorts
SUNFLOWER
804 Mass., Lawrence, Kansas 66044 913-843-5000
SUNFLOWER
10
Wednesdav, January 27. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
NASA finds defective shuttle seal
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Detective work led NASA engineers to a critical seal in a space shuttle main engine that was improperly welded by the manufacturer, the space agency said yesterday. Repair may require replacement of turbo pumps on all three shuttle engines.
The effect of this and other new problems on plans for the first post-Challenger liftoff still is being
assessed, said David L. Winterhalter, director of systems analysis and engineering at NASA.
The target date is mid-August, but NASA administrator James C. Fletcher has delayed setting a firm date.
While disassemble and inspecting one of the high-pressure fuel turbo pumps on a main engine last Friday, engineers found cracks in a so-called fish-mouth seal. It was
determined that the cracks were "use-related" — caused by firing the engine.
To check further, engineers made a cross-section cut in the part and found that the seal, which is fabricated from two metal pieces, had not been welded properly when it was manufactured.
Still, two engines were mounted over the weekend on the shuttle Discovery, the first of the fleet to be
flown when missions resume. The third engine was put in place last week.
"We are going to try to leave the engines as they are so we can do some preliminary checks." Winter's pumps ready to install. "The three other pumps ready to install."
he said that high pressure fuel pumps had been replaced before while the shuttles' three engines were mounted.
rest of the economy was better protected from the spillover effects of plummeting stock prices.
Tired of standing in line to leave the nest?
"We will probably never know how close we came to the disaster," he said. "But we can, and must, learn from the last crisis."
FREE TICKET DELIVERY
Bowsher said there had been increasing links in recent years among the nation's various markets, such as those that traded stocks and others that traded futures.
The Federal Reserve System did an admirable job in October of protecting the economy from the effects of the crash by managing the money supply, Bowsher said. But he said that if Congress decided to allow banks to participate more in the stock market, the Fed's role "would become significantly more complex and difficult."
PROP & WHEEL
HOBBIES
including the 508-point drop of the Dow Jones industrial average on Oct. 19.
The preliminary report by GAO, Congress' investigative arm, is the second major government study of last October's events on Wall Street, including the 508-point drop of the Dow Jones industrial index on Oct. 19.
19
Official calls for new market regulations
WASHINGTON — The government needs to evaluate how it regulates the nation's financial markets to help prevent a repeat of October's stock market crash, the chief of the General Accounting Office said yesterday.
Bryan Sorenson
749-0287
749-0287
2201 W. 25th M-F 10-6
In remarks prepared for delivery to lawmakers, Charles A. Bowsher also said that steps must be taken to insure that individual investors were treated as fairly as large institutions and that the
M-F 10-6
Sat 10-3
The Associated Press
TRAVEL
Starts Feb. 6 Register in 208 Robinson
Children's Swim
721 West Sixth St. Suite C
Lawrence, Kansas 68044
(913) 841-7800
www.lawrence.edu
$15.00 per child Robinson Pools
Permanent Hair Removal
The Electrolysis Studio
Free Consultations
15 East 7th 841-5796
Commonwealth
Bargain Matinees* & Senior Citizens $2.50
Cranada 1020 Macau Hutalla BALSAM
GOOD MORNING VIENNAIAMPO' 4.45, 7.15, 9.45
Varsity
RETURN OF THE LIVING DEAD II (R) 7:30, 9:2
Hilary
WALLSTREET (R) (4.30, 7.10, 9.30
OVERBOARD (B) (4.40, 7.30, 9.40
COUCH TRIP (PG-13) (5.00, 7.25, 9.20
BRADDOCK MIA III (R) (4.50, 7.35, 9.35
BROADCAST NEWS (R) (4.51, 7.15, 9.45
Cinema Twin 31st & 10th
842-6400
FOR KEeps (PG-13) 7:10.9:15
THREE MEN & A BABY (PG) 7:25.9:35
Boyd's Coins - Antiques
Having
Goldtone Coins
Class rings. Diamonds
231 7184 6069
KS-650449. 842-8773
RESUMES
ImageMakers PROFESSIONAL RESUMES AT STUDENT PRICES
A one page COMPUTER TYPESET LASERPRINTED resume for only
$12.50
842-0949
PO BON 3065 LAWRENCE, KS 66046
The Brother's of Delta Sigma Pi Would like to Congratulate Beth Zuvanich our chapter's Collegian of the Year
COOKIES
CAROL LEE DONUTS
842-3664
"Atlasta Good" Donut & Pastry!
The next time your organization needs a snack give us a call. We specialize in large orders.
Carol Lee Donuts OPEN 5 a.m.-6 p.m. Daily 1730 W.23rd. (Across from J.C.Penney)
TALENT AUDITIONS FOR SINGERS • DANCERS
Worlds of Fun is conducting an audition tour in search of the best in Midwestern talent to appear in our 1988 show program. If you sing (pop, rock, show tunes), or dance (jazz only), you can earn over $5,000 performing six days per week during the summer, and weekends in the spring and fall.
"All The World's A Stage" at Worlds of Fun, from our lively 50's-60's rock revue, STAX OF WAX, to the all-new musical spectacular at the Tivoli Music Hall.
Performing at Worlds of Fun can be a great part time job, or that important First Step. It's fun, professional experience and terrific exposure. More than 1,300,000 Worlds of Fun visitors are waiting to discover you!
For more information and a complete audition schedule, contact the Show Productions Department, Worlds of Fun,
4545 Words of Fun Avenue.
Kansas City, Missouri. 64161: (816) 459-9276
THE CLOSEST AUDITIONS:
- LAWRENCE, KANSAS:
Thursday, Feb. 4 at the University of Kansas
Kansas Union - Kansas Room (level 6)
3:00 P.M. (Registration begins at 2:30 P.M.)
. The Best Stage Experience in the Midwest.
- KANSAS CITY (SOUTH):
No jobs are available for dramatic actors, or instrumentalists.
Worlds of Fun
Sunday, Feb. 14 at th. Jubilee Hotel
(off Alt. 69 Highway and College Blvd.)
10100 College Blvd.
Overland Park, KS
9:00 A.M. (Registration
begins at 8:30 A.M.)
Darkroom Supply Prices Slashed!
Item Discount Store SALE PRICE SALE PRICE
D-76 Developer 2.79/gal. 2.69
Dektol Developer 2.99/gal. 2.89
Fixer 2.67/gal. 2.67
Stop Bath 2.89 2.79
Photo Flo 2.19 2.10
8x10 Polycon F 100 34.99 33.99
25 9.99 9.79
8x10 Polyfiber F 100 41.99 41.49
25 11.99 11.89
TMax 100' Rolls 22.99 22.49
Developing Tanks 6.49 6.39
Steel Reels 2.79 2.69
CameraAmerica
ASK ABOUT OUR LOWEST PRICE GUARANTEE
NFC
"EVERYTHING TO MAKE YOUR PHOTOGRAPHY PICTURE PERFECT"
Canon Yashica NEC
Fuji Kodak Nikon
Minolta Sony Tamron
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Philadelphia Steak Sandwich!
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Senator, medical society disagree over AIDS tests
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — A state senator said yesterday that Kansas should test to determine if certain people had AIDS to protect governmental units from financial liability, but a spokesman for the state medical society said such testing wouldn't accomplish anything.
"It can have significant fiscal impact on state and local governments," State Sen. Jack Steineger, D-Kansas City, said of the spread of acquired immune deficiency syndrome, a fatal disease for which no preventive vaccine, cure or treatment exists.
Steinger explained to the Senate Public Health and Welfare Committee a bill he introduced requiring mandatory testing of couples applying for marriage licenses, blood and tissue in blood, sperm and organ banks, persons held more than 72 hours in public institutions such as jails and hospitals, and those convicted of sex crimes.
His measure also would make it a Class D felony, punishable by a prison term of up to 10 years, to knowingly infect another with AIDS and would require reporting the names of those who have AIDS to the state Department of Health and Environment so it could trace sexual contacts.
Steineger said the issue of confidentiality paled in comparison to the need to protect the public from the spread of AIDS and said the cost of his proposed testing program would be "miniscule compared to two or
three lawsuits brought by people infected in a holding facility."
"We shouldn't be like Nero and fiddle all around this problem."
Although Steineger touted his bill as necessary to help curb the spread of AIDS and protect taxpayers from rising costs of health care for victims and lawsuits by people infected in public facilities, others who testified either argued against the value of mandatory testing or questioned specific requirements of the bill.
Don Hatton, a Lawrence internist who is president of the Kansas Medical Society and who served on a state AIDS Task Force last year, said the Legislature could address some topics to try to meet the AIDS epidemic but that mandatory testing was not one of them.
Sex magazine bill protested
Enforcing law with blinder racks impossible, lobbyist says
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — A bill that would require retailers to place sex magazines behind blinder racks would be impossible for retailers to enforce, an opponent of the bill told a Senate committee yesterday. Retailers don't know the contents of all the magazines and comic books they sell, said Richard Hayse, a lobbyist for Palmer News, a wholesale distributor of paper products.
The bill would apply to a gray area of material that is not obscure but does contain sexual references, he said, and retailers can't be expected to review every issue of every magazine they sell.
Current law prohibits the sale of obscene material to minors, but supporters of the new bill say the state also needs restrictions on material that is not obscene according to the legal definition, but is harmful to
minors.
The bill would ban stores from selling or displaying to those under age 18 material showing nudity, sexual conduct or sexual abuse. Stores would be in compliance with the bill if they placed sex magazines or other materials behind blinder racks.
However, Hayse said the bill's definition of what is harmful to minors also was confusing and inconsistent
And State Sen, Robert Frey, R-Liberal, said the definition of sado-masochism in the bill could apply to magazines showing boxing matches.
At yesterday's hearing, supporters showed senators comic books portraying sexual acts and nudity that some Kansas stores sell. Many of the supporters said they pushed for the bill after seeing children look at such comic books in neighborhood drug or convenience stores.
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January 30
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, January 27, 1988
Rec league
MANDATORY Managers Meeting 6:30 p.m. Jan. 28 202 Robinson
*NOTE* There is 6 team limit, the games will be played on Saturday mornings, and there is no cost
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"Help organize an international internship exchange program between K.U. and foreign nations.
Centennial Room Kansas Union”
Thursday, January 28th, 7 p.m.
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Spring & Summer 1988 Bridal Fashion Show
Marks BRIDAL FORMAI
Sunday, January 31
Visit Booths 1-5 Fashion Show 3-4
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STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
ATTENTION HEALTH OFFICERS: CANCELLATION
Tonight's meeting has been cancelled. The next one will be on February 10, 7-9 p.m. at Watkins Hospital.
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Appointment Tips
The appointment clerk is on duty 8-4:30 Mon-Fri. Here are some tips to make our computerized appointment system work for you.
*Have your schedule handy as well as your KUID#.
*Plan ahead for follow-up or routine visits.
*Make your own appointments.
*Your conversation with the
*Plan to arrive 15 minutes prior to your scheduled appointment time.
about your needs so we can schedule you for the proper clinic.
Iorry the appointment clerk as soon as you know that you can't keep your scheduled appointment.
appointment clerk is confidential, so be specific
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Main Hospital number: 864-9500
Health Education Number: 864-9570
Sexual abstinence is the only sure way to prevent pregnancy and some sexually transmitted diseases. If you decide to have sex, correct use of latex condom will help you to protect your partner and yourself. Condoms are available without a prescription from the Watkins Pharmacy (3 for .50)
international, so be specific about your needs so we can
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Park Inn INTERNATIONAL
One year ago, what was formerly the Master's Inn became the Park Inn International of Lawrence. Built as a Ramada Inn in 1972, the motel had been purchased by the J.N.M.J. Corporation, a corporation owned by the John Leipzig family. The Leipzigs brought thirteen years of experience in the motel business with them when they moved into the Lawrence area, and they put that experience to work as they began renovating the facility and assembling the staff needed to make the Park Inn a place where guests could find both comfortable accommodations and courteous service at an affordable price.
Over the past twelve months, The Park Inn of Lawrence has made great strides in that direction. Recently, however, conditions arising from the properties former reputation and other economic circumstances moved the Inn to file for protection under Chapter 11. This filing is not a sign that either the Park Inn or its managers are abandoning their goals. Instead, it is a sign that they are committing and redicating themselves to offering the Lawrence area a full service motel with a restaurant, pub, and banquet & meeting room facilities at its command.
With a staff that utilizes the culinary talents of Head Chef Nick A. Danelski and recently hired S.U. Chef Mark Rainey along with the services of Pub Manager Michael Farrell, the Park Inn's Cafe in the park and Pub in the Park are ready and waiting to cater to the needs of the patron who wants quality and courteous service at an affordable price. Backing them up are the friendly, professional personnel manning the front desk, maintenance, and house keeping departments. With over 100 rooms, a banquet facility that can accommodate 300, meeting rooms, the Cafe's weekend breakfast buffet (Chef Danelski has a Sunday brunch in the planning stages), the Pub's nightly entertainment & 'Sunday Night Jazz Jam Session', and the motels ideal location just off K-10 & the Kansas Turnpike, the Park Inn International of Lawrence is ready and waiting to serve you!
2222 West 6th
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12
Wednesday, January 27, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Revolution and violence still problems in Uganda
KAMPALA, Uganda — Many of the fighters who stormed Kampala for Yoweri Museveni two years ago were children — disciplined and honest, symbolizing ideals of the revolution he said would end a quarter-century of violence.
The Associated Press
Now they are in school, and many Ugandans say they might have taken the ideals along because the violence continues.
In 1897, at least four rebel groups challenged President Museveni's soldiers, still called the National Resistance Army, as they were during the revolution. This year began with a rebel greenade attack in Kampala, the capital, which killed a Libyan diplomat.
The boys who marched into Kampala on Jan. 26, 1986, went to study in southeastern Uganda, and Museveni
strengthened his already firm ties with Col. Moammar Gadhafi of Libya.
Relations with the pro-Western government of neighboring Kenya reached an all-time low, and the two countries came close to war.
Radical economic reforms proclaimed in May included a 77-percent currency devaluation as part of a deal with the International Monetary Fund that opened the way for $300 billion to be used to revive an economy dismantled and plundered by a generation of coups, corruption, dictators, terror and war.
Parts of the country that were relatively unscathed have been struck by war.
Poverty has reached the North and East, brought by war, drought and incessant cattle raids by marauding Karimojim tribesmen that the army
cannot control. Other parts of the country, however, had bumper crops of maize and of coffee, which earns 95 percent of Uganda's foreign exchange.
Supporters of Museveni say the revolution may be behind schedule but has not strayed. As one put it: "The struggle to capture power is still going on."
Rebellions mounted since August 1986 by soldiers who served the ousted governments of Idi Amin, Milton Obote and Lt. Gen. Basilio Okello have diverted the government from reconstruction.
Museveni said his government could do a better job economically with more "serious" people helping — a reference to the corrupt civil service, which fears his effort to create an honest government and thwarts him at every opportunity.
PERUVI
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- Advice on most legal matters
- Preparation & review of legal.
- Narratization of judicial decisions.
- Preparation & review of legal documents
- Notarization of legal documents
- Many other services available
8:30 to 5:00 Mon. thru Friday
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- Deadline For Officers Applications: Feb. 15 Interviews: Feb. 17
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A J O H N H U G H E S F I L M
Man.
Woman.
Life.
Death.
Infinity.
Tuna casserole.
One movie dares to tell it all.
One movie dares to tell it all.
KEVIN BACON ELIZABETH McGOVERN SHE'S HAVING A BABY
A New Comedy About The Labor Of Life
PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS **A JOHN HUCHHUS FILM** SHE WHAING A BABY BREAKIN' ELIZABETH MCGOWEN
Executive Producer RONALD COLBY Written and produced by JOHN HUCHHUS
FIG. 13. **PARENT STREET CARRIER** **SOCIAL STORIES AVAILABLE ONLY BY RECORD HUCHHUS**
A PARAMOUNT PICTURE
KIS
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, January 27, 1988
13
Sports
Nebraska coach pessimistic for KU game
By Elaine Sung
Kansan sports writer
Nebraska coach Danny Nee is pessimistic about playing against Kansas tonight.
I don't think we have a chance," he said. "We can play our best and we can try, but really the only thing we can do is get our team ready momentarily. Our advantage is the home court, and my big thought even that is that big."
But Kansas coach Larry Brown knows better.
"He's just saying that," Brown said, shaking his head. "If they can beat Missouri at Nebraska, then they can beat Kansas too."
scorers in the conference as well. Vick, a 6-6 senior forward, is averaging almost 12 points and six rebounds a game, and Buchanan averages more than nine points and two rebounds a game.
Kansas is recovering from last weekend's loss to Notre Dame. The Jayhawks have dropped out of the Associated Press Top 20 this week, leaving Oklahoma and Iowa State,
The Cornhuskers are coming off a 29-point victory against Nebraska-Omaha, in which they shot 84 percent during the first half. Nebraska finished the game at 75 percent, a new school record.
Game 18
KU
Kansas
Jayhawks
COACH: Larry Brown
Record: 12-5(1-1)
WOLF
HAMMER
Nebraska
Cornhuskers
COACH: Danny Nee
Record: 10-8 (1-1)
PROBABLE STARTERS
PPG
F-24 Chris Piper 6'8" 3.8
F-21 Milton Newton 6'4" 7.9
C-25 Danny Manning 6'10" 23.6
G-12 Ols Livingston 6'0" 3.6
G-14 Kevin Pritchard 6'0" 10.7
F-4 Jeff Rekewek 6'6" 6'8"
F-21 Derrick Vick 6'6" 11.6
C-35 Pete Manning 6'8" 8'2"
G-10 Henry Buchanan 6'0" 9.3
G-14 Eric Johnson 6'2" 8.5
COVERAGE: Game time - 8:08 p.m. Wed., Jan. 27 at Devaney Sports Center, Lincoln Neb. Radio coverage by 106FM. TV coverage by KSHB 41, WIBW 13.
KANSAN graphic
The Jayhawks, 12-5, re-enter the conference schedule with tonight's game in Lincoln against the Cornhuskers, 10-8.
Both teams are I-1 in the Big Eight. Both teams won against Missouri, and both lost to Iowa State.
Nebraska beat the Tigers two weeks ago when guard Henry Buchan made an 8-foot shot in the last 5 to give the Huskers an upset victory.
Buchanan, a a-foot senior, played a key role in last year's regular-season overtime victory against Kansas, 83-81.
Buchanan tossed the ball to teammate Derrick Vick with time running out in the extra period. Vick's layup was blocked by a jockey in four years over the Jawhaws.
KANSAS 21
ranked 10th and 12th respectively, to represent the Big Eight Conference.
Brown has been working the Jay-
banks this week to improve in certa-
tion.
"We've been working the free throws, but there are other things we have to have against Nebraska," Brown said. "They play a lot of different types of defense, and we have to be aware of all of them. And offensively, we have to understand that even though we have Manning, we have to use the inside game more."
Both players are among the top 25
Kansas is now at the bottom of the Big Eight in free-throw shooting, completing 255-for-394 for 647. Nebraska, however, is third in the conference with a 720 average, shooting 257-for-357 from the line.
Kansas forward Milt Newton, who moved into the starting lineup after the loss of Archie Marshall, will help lead the Javahinks tonight in avenging last season's loss to the Nebraska Cornshusk in Lincoln.
Apologies are made for chant
The Associated Press
McPHERSON, Kan. — An obscene chant from the student cheering section at a high school basketball game last week has prompted apologies from school representatives and an impassioned discussion at the McPherson School Board meeting Monday night.
At issue was an impromptu chant from the McPherson High School student cheering section during a halftime performance Friday night of the school's pompon squad. The sexually explicit chant was shouted by the orchestra and sang "Mony, Mony," to which the pompon squad was performing.
Jay Frazier, the school's athletic director, put a stop to the chant during the invitational basketball tournament Friday night, and the school's student body president and principal apologized to people attending the tournament the next night.
"It just got too emotional. They were too wrapped up in the game," Troy Anderson, a McPheson student, told the school board.
He said students in the cheering section were sorry about the chant. The fact that the chant was not repeated demonstrates that the students realized their mistake, Anderson said.
Dave Hale, who has a son on the basketball team and a daughter on the pompon squad, was among the most rattle people at the game. He worked with the other players presented a statement Monday night at the school board meeting.
"Our family will not participate in nor attend any athletic functions until a written plan is affected to handle any future disrespectful, obscene 'cheers,'" Hale said in his letter. Hale, a former defensive tackle for the Chicago Bears, said that meant his daughter, Spencer, the pompon squad and his son, Aaron, the team practices with the varsity basketball team. Aaron Hale has been sidelined with a hairline fracture of the ankle.
About 75 people attended the school board meeting Monday night. The board asked its administrative staff to prepare a plan for dealing with such problems and a status report for presentation at the next meeting.
KU hopes to extend OSU losing streak
By Keith Stroker
PROBABLE STARTERS
Kansas Jayhawks 11-6
Cincinnati Wishawks ppa
Kansan sports writer
The Oklahoma State Cowgirls, tied for second place in the Big Eight Conference with a 3-1 record, might have the clear-cut advantage over Kansas, but they are suffering from a two-game losing streak. The Jayhawks want to keep that streak going.
Coach: Marian Washington PPG
F-23 Sandy Shaw 60" 11.6
F-32 Lisa Baker 5'11" 6.2
C-44 Lynn Page 61" 6.5
G-12 Lisa Braddy 57" 9.4
G-33 Lisa Doodhertv 58" 12.7
Okla. State Cowgirls13-4
**Kia State Cowsitts 14**
Coach David PPG
F-34 Jamaie Siems 5'11" *18.7*
F-23 Clintette Jayne 5'11" *18.1*
C-24 Sheila Hughes 6'3" *7.6*
G-13 Alisa Duncan 5'7" *8.2*
G-40 Liz Brown 5'7" *6.9*
The Kansas team's team, 11-6 overall and 1-3 in the Big Eight, plays
host to the Cowgirls at 7 tonight in Allen Field House.
Oklahoma State. 13-4 overall, dropped an 83-81 decision Saturday to Oklahoma in Norman and Monday fell 85-62 to No. 2 Louisiana Tech at home. However, Kansas coach Marian Washington said the Cowgirls had several strengths to be reckoned with.
"Oklahoma State has a team that can compete with anyone in the country," Washington said. "They had all five starters return from last year's team and had one of the best recruiting years of any team in the nation."
The Cowgirls are led by the two forwards, Jamie Siess, averaging 18.7 points a game, and Clintey Jordan, averaging 18.1 points a game. Siess has hit 26 of 51 three-point baskets for 51 percent.
Oklahoma State also has freshman guard Liz Brown. She is the all-time leading scorer in Oklahoma prep history with 4,281 points, and she averaged 35 points a game in high school.
Washington said Oklahoma State had a versatile offense, one that could either run a fast break or slow the ball down and run a half-court offense.
"We have great respect for them," Washington said. "Playing away from home is not easy for any team, but they will be difficult to beat."
The Jayhawks might have junior center Deborah Richardson back for the game, said Kansas assistant coach Julia Yeater. The 6-foot-4 Richardson injured her knee in practice two weeks ago and has been undergoing therapy sessions twice a day.
Yeater said whether Richardson would play would depend on the trainer's prognosis and how Richardson performed in the shooting session prior to the game.
Washington said sophomore center Lynn Page had performed well in her replacement role for Richardson in the starting line-up but that Page, a veteran of the NCAA, would play aggressive basketball in the games, similar to the tempo in practice.
The 6-4 Page has hit 32 of 60 shots from the field for 51.4 percent, the best of the Kansas starters.
The Jahayhaws have taken freshman LaTanya Nelson off the redshirt list, something Washington said they had to do because of the injury situation the team faced. Kansas lost senior forward Jackie Martin for the season when she ruptured her Achillendon last week against Colorado.
Washington said she had planned to redshift Nelson this season so she could practice with the team and learn the team's system. She said Nelson would play at a forward or center position, coming off the bench.
Kansas leads the series with the
owgrigs 10-3, and the losses
have been in Field Hockey.
Last season, the Jayhawks defeated Oklahoma State in Stillwater, 67-61. In the game in Lawrence, the Cowgirls beat Kansas 81-68, which snapped a five-game winning streak the Jayhawks had against them.
Buffalo's Conlan named NFL Rookie of the Year
The Associated Press
SAN DIEGO — Shane Conlan of the Buffalo Bills was named the 1987 NFL Rookie of the Year yesterday by the Professional Football Writers of America.
The linebacker, who was selected eighth in the first round of the NFL draft, led the Bills in tackles with 114. He particularly prospered when he was moved inside after the Bills acquired Cornelius Bennett to play outside linebacker.
The Bills had two other players on the team, Bennett and cornerback Nate Odomes. The New Orleans Saints also had three players chosen: defensive end Shawn Knight, safety Alkis and guard Steve Trapio.
Vinny Testaverde, the first pick in the 1987 draft, was the top vote-getter at quarterback in the rookie-of-the-year balloting. He was the only Tampa Bay Buccaneer selected and
was one of nine first-round draftees who made the squad.
The other first-rounders were wide receiver Ricky Nattiel of Denver, tackles Bruce Armstrong of New England and Harris Barton of San Francisco, defensive end John Bosa of Miami, defensive tackle Jerome Brown of Philadelphia, Bennett and Conlan.
Brian Bosworth of Seattle, taken in the supplementary draft, which will cost the Seahawks a first-round pick this year, was the other inside linebacker.
Also chosen on defense were tackle Jerry Ball of Detroit, cornerback Delton Hall and safety Thomas Everett of Pittsburgh.
On offense, the other selections were tight end Robert Awalt and guard Todd Peat of St. Louis, wide receiver Frankie Neal of Green Bay and running backs Troy Stradford of Miami and Christian Okoye of Kansas City.
Arnold Palmer reluctantly considering retirement
The Associated Press
INDIAN WELLS, Calif. — It is September for The King.
In the words of the old song, "The days
dwinkle down to a precious few."
"My ambitions, my desires are as strong as they've ever been. I still want to do things," said Palmer, now 58.
Arnold Palmer is aware of it.
But the abilities have diminished with the passing decades. The flair and flavor have faded; he has been deserted by the bright magic that once seemed his alone.
"I miss being able to do some of the things I used to do. That little special thing you want sometimes just isn't there and you can't find it and that is bothersome," said the man who, more than any other, helped raise golf to its present level of public acceptance and popularity.
It bothers him more than anyone else.
A bullet link here is all they need.
A pained, embarrassed expression shades
the faces of some of his contemporaries when
asked to assess his game.
"It doesn't matter. Not at all. It doesn't matter how he's playing," said Lee Trevino.
"He's About Tamer! He's sure the king!
'He's the one the people want to see. I
attend to the tee, and they go like that.'
Trevinio and softly putted his hand
together.
"Nicklaus stands on the tee, and they go
like this." He repeated the demure applause. "Furry zzzz on the tee, and it's the same.
"It's charisma," Trevino said. "He has it.
He has it more than anyone ever had; more
it than you do."
"Arnold stands on the tee, and they go crazy. They yell and clap and stamp their
"He can play forever," Trevino said. "And I hope he does."
"I see a few ..." he said, paused and corrected himself, "a couple of more years on the seniors' tour, a couple of tournaments on the regular tour.
The reluctant thoughts of retirement now cross Palmer's mind. He sometimes speaks of his career in the past tense.
"When I quit," he resumed, "it'll be a very quiet sort of fading away. I don't believe in big retirement announcements or any of the other things to sort of just slide on and do your thing."
"I would like to say you' be able to see a dramatic finale to my career," he said, "and I will tell you how."
He has been doing his thing for 34 years, playing golf with an unmatched verve and zest, with eager joy and boundless enthusiasm and playing with the ability to communicate all those qualities to galleries that came to love him as no other player who ever
lived.
He joined the tour in 1955, the slope-shouldered son of a Latrobe, Pa., greenkeeper, a kid with a powerful unorthodox, lunging arm, played for Jimmy Demparet and Smaad Snead.
He turned a placid pastime of the favored few into a game for the masses. Shirt-tail flying, hitching the britches, quick-stepping along the fairways, hacking out of the rough, the mobile face expressing every emotion and desire, he attacked and challenged and gambled.
His emergence coincided with the advent of television coverage of golf. He was the hero demanded by golf, by the public, by television.
He became an idol, a symbol. He played with presidents and kings and became the celebrities' celebrity. But his appeal was to the masses
"He popularized the game. He gave it a shot in the arm when the game needed it," said Jack Nicklaus, his old friend and golfing foe.
"He was the bearer of good things to come; he was the initiator," said Tom Watson. "I am reaping the benefits of Arnold Palmer and the legacy he gave to golf."
The glory years were in the 1950s and '60s. "Those were the good days, the fun days," she said. "We've had a lot of laughter."
And Arnold was the King, a title bestowed by his contemporaries that remains in use.
er-ending. We'd play seven days a week and chop on each other all the time."
He won the 1958 Masters, the first of four green jacketes he was to acquire. He revitalized the British Open with victories in 1961 and 1962. He put the word "charge" in golf's lexicon with his dramatic, come-from-behind triumph in the 1960 U.S. Open at Cherry Hills.
Palmer, however, has not won on the regular tour since 1973. In recent years, his activity has been confined primarily to the Seniors' Tour, with an infrequent foray among the younger players.
It is, he said, thought-provoking.
"I think a lot about the game of golf, about what has happened to the game from the days I started playing," he said in a nostalgic conversation that, at times, carried a tone of valedictory.
"To think somebody is going to win a million dollars in a year," he said, drawing out the words in awe. "Well, you know what I went through," said Palmer, the first to win
Many of the changes have been good. Some are not so positive.
And he finds the prize money hard to believe. That, he said, is a major change.
"The quality and condition of the course have risen enormously, no comparison." Pump
$1 million in a career, the first to win $100,000 in a season. In 1958, he led golf's money-winners with $42,608.
"When I started playing the tour, the total purse for the tour for a year was $750,000," he
But he quickly established he wouldn't change now for then.
"I was very, very fortunate that I had the opportunity to come in and play the game when I did," he said. "People who think I'd rather be playing the tour now are wrong.
"I enjoyed the era I was in. I feel very fortunate I was able to come out and play golf, play the tour when I did, have the opportunity to do what I did.
"I don't think the players now realize the esteem they are held in by the galleries. And anything they do to hurt that esteem only hurts the same, the future for themselves.
"They should know galleries hold them in awe. They should treat it that way. That means something to the game of golf. I feel very strongly about that."
"People have all forgotten what the tour was like when we'd come out and drive around (he and wife Winnie hauled a house trailer) and we'd be out for three months at time and never go home.
"Sometimes I think, well, jeez, I ought to just sit down and write, take sort of an account of all that has happened.
---
14
Wednesday, January 27, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Presidential caucuses are a mystery to most
Change is constant
By Donna Stokes
By Donna Stokes
Cansan staff writer
Mike Bechtel laughed when he was asked whether he knew how Kansas' presidential caucuses worked.
"Sure, I know what a caucus is," the Prairie Village sophomore said, "It's when congressmen get together and party."
He was only joking, but political science professors and several student political activists at the University of Kansas agree that many students don't understand Kansas'
presidential nominating process.
"My guess is that most students don't understand the complete process of a presidential election," said Marvin Harver, professor of political science. "Most adults don't understand it, either."
"It is hard for even someone like me, who watches the MacNeil/Lehner report and reads three or four national newspapers a day, to make sense out of it at all times. It is difficult to keep up with all of the changes," he said
changes, he said.
Kansas caucuses will be held this spring in the Democratic and Republican parties. The Republicans will decide their presidential preferences March 5. The Democrats won't take it. Monday night.
Brenda Eisele, president of the KU
"Even people in our organization have been asking what a caucus is, how they can get involved, and whether or not they can participate in one," she said.
College Republicans, said she did not think many students understood Kansas' presidential caucuses.
The first chance Kansas students have to vote for their presidential choice will be in the caucuses. Many students who are registered to vote in another state can vote when their state has its primary.
In Kansas, both the Republican and Democratic parties have a closed caucus system, which means that only Democrats can vote for Democratic nominees. The same is true for Republicans.
has a proportional representation system, which means the allocation of national convention delegates to presidential conventions is based on the proportion of the vote each presidal candidate receives.
The Republican caucus in Kansas has no formal form for allocating delegates to candidates. The method is determined by participants.
In most states students must declare a political affiliation when they register to vote to be able to participate in a primary or caucus.
In a primary, voters who have declared a party affiliation can indicate their presidential preferences by direct vote or through the choice of delegates to the presidential nominating convention.
that presidential support is discussed in meetings, generally by party activists, and nominations are determined from those discussions.
A caucus differs from a primary in
Each state, and each party within a state, can go about the process in a different way, said Allan Cigler, associate professor of political science.
"It's a confusing process; it changes every year," he said.
Newspapers and television broadcasts will soon be filled with returns from the Iowa caucuses, the New Hampshire primary and Super Tuesday.
The Iowa caucuses, Feb. 8, are important because they are the beginning of the actual process of selecting delegates. The New Hampshire primary, Feb. 16, is important because New Hampshire is the second state to nominate presidential delegates and has the first primary election.
On Super Tuesday, March 8, 20 states will hold primaries or caucuses. Most of those states are in the south.
Americans will vote on those nominees Nov. 8.
The national convention for each party meets every four years after delegates from each state have been chosen and determines who the party's presidential nominee will be.
Students who aren't registered yet can register and declare party affiliation in the Douglas County Clerk's office.
Great Daily Specials at STRICK'S RESTAURANT only $3.50
DAILY SPECIALS
Today...Baked Ham
Thursday...Swiss Steak
Friday...Chicken Fried Steak
Saturday...Chopped Steak
with Green Pepper Onion
Monday...Fresh Pork Tenderloin
Tuesday...Fried Chicken
Wednesday...Pork Chops
with Mushroom Gravy
includes salad, mashed potatoes and gravy, vegetable, and Texas toast
Friday and Saturday Special 4-11:30 p.m.
2 Ribeye Steak Dinners...$9.95
Served with Baked Potato or French Fries, Salad and Texas Toast
Jan. 27 thru. Feb. 3 6 a.m.-11 a.m.
All you can eat sandwiches served with two eggs
OPEN Mon.-Thursday 6 a.m.-10 p.m.
Fri. and Sat. 6 a.m.-11:30 p.m.
Breakfast Served Anytime
723 North 2nd
3½ blocks north of the bridge
Duplicating Services
645 New Hampshire
OLD POST OFFICE
Just a few of our available services:
- fast, efficient, and affordable copies
- crisp sharp image reproductions
- variable reduction
- staples in a choice of two positions
- glue bind
Covers available
No parking hassles
No parking hassles Drive right up and walk right in. Never a job too large or too small.
Give us a call and we'll work with you.
Hours 8:00 to 4:00 Monday-Friday
(But can adjust hours according to your needs)
Please Call 841-1829
University of Kansas Printing Services
ATTENTION!!!
all politically oriented students.
elections committee
The student senate
will be accepting
applications for
replacement senators from
Wednesday, Jan. 27 through
Seats in the following areas are open:
5:00 p.m., Tuesday, Feb. 2
Education Graduate
Engineering Liberal Arts
Fine Arts Nunemaker
Off Campus
SUNDAY, JANUARY 31st
Lawrence Hosts the Mid-America
9:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Easy to Find - I-70 & West Lawrence Exit
Record Convention Holiday Inn "Holidome" Lawrence, Kansas
Plan to Attend Lawrence's Best Ever Record Sale!
Giant Selection of Rock - Oldies - Country - Jazz - Soundtracks - More!
CDs - Albums - 45s - Videos - Out of Print - Collectables!
Door Prizes! ★ DON'T MISS OUT ★ $1 Admission
For More Information Call Dave - (816) 756-0211
COMPUTER STORE
THE BURGE UNION WHAT A GREAT IDEA!
The KU Bookstore in THE BURGE UNION runs a complete computer store that offers discount prices to KU students, faculty,and staff.
CALL
ATHLASFORD
TRAVEL
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Tired of standing in line to leave the nest?
2721 West Sixth St. Suite C
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
(913) 841-9808
FREE TICKET DELIVERY
THE Palace Cards & Gifts
3 Days Only
Winter
Price Thaw
50% off Large
Selection of
T-Shirts, Calendars, Otagiri, off-the-wall Alarm, Avanti Stuffed Animals, Fun Feet Slippers and assorted toys, games, and gift items!
--express our deep appreciation and gratitude to all those who participated in our march on Fri. Jan. 22, especially those conscientious Americans, television and news reporters.
Mon.- Sat. 9:30 to 5:30 *Sun.-1:5 *Thursday until 8:30
843-1099 *In downtown* *8th and Mast.*
Classified Ads
ANNOUNCEMENTS
COMMUTERS: Self Serve Car Pool Exchange
Main Lobby, Kansas Union
Don't forget Pepsi daily hourly between 3 and 4 p.m. Don't drink only 3s @ Bucky's Drive-In 18th Street
Hillel
הלה
Events
Wednesday, January 27
Lunch — 11:30-1:00
Sunset Room
Level 2, Kansas Union
United Jewish Appeal
Solicitation Training
7:00 pm
Hilliel House
Thursday, January 28 Kansas Legislative Breakfast — 7:00 a.m.
NEED A RIDE/RIDER? Use the Sell Serve C台 Pool Exchange. Main Lobb. Kansas Union.
A LETTER OF APPRECIATION
We, the members of the MUSLIM STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION IN LAWRENCE
The march was organized as a protest against the uncivilized Israeli practices that have been going on for more than a month against the Palestinians in Gaza strip and the West Bank.
FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY SKILLS PROGRAM. Help for students of any foreign language. January 21, 7: 9 p.m. to 8: 00 p.m. Strong Hill. Free! *Resistance Assistance Center.* 121 Strong Hill. 864-4044
MASSAGE FOR YOUR VALENTINES! Why bother with messy chocolate or dead flowers when a message gift certificate makes your 'sweetie' feel loved and revitalized? No bother to order Lawrence Massage Therapy at 814-9626 or order Lawrence. Remember, Aphrodite loves massage.
READING FOR COMPREHENSION AND SPEED WORKSHOPS Thursdays. February 4, 11 and 16 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; materials fee $15. Requestist to be phone 2-488 at the Student Assistance Center, 121强。
ADVERTISING STUDENTS, U ARE GRATE
advertising student
back home. Hank & Pat. The Flamingo Kids
ANGER GETTING IT OUT IN THE OPEN
Facilitator:
Dennis Dailey, Professor
School of Social Welfare
THIS WORKSHOP WILL ADDRESS SOME OF THE COMMON MYTHS CONCERNING ANGER, AND DESCRIBE THE MORE TYPICAL, BUT DYSFUNCTIONAL METHODS WOMEN HAVE FOR DEALING WITH ANGER; DISCUSSION WILL FOCUS ON MORE EFFECTIVE AND FUNCTIONAL BEHAVIORS FOR EXPRESSING AND MANAGING ANGER.
Tuesday, February 2, 1988
7:00-9:00 p.m.
Pine Room, Kansas Union
M
SPONSORED BY THE EMILY TAYLOR WOMEN'S RESOURCE CENTER.
FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT SHERILL ROBINSON AT 844-3552
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, January 27, 1988
15
CICS RECORDS, POSTERS AND MORE! THE MID AMERICA RECORD CONVENTION
THE MID AMERICA RECORD CONVENTION
Sat., Jan. 31. Over 350
dealers from many countries! Don't miss out!
out at the HOLIDAYS
TUHTOS List your name with you. We refer
inquiries to you. Student Assistance Center
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of
students. Student Assistance Center, 121
Strong.
ENTERTAINMENT
Most Affordable D.J. Music and Lighting for all
Occasion 841-1405
LAWRENCE THEATRE
Drummer needed for working band, 841.5707 or
249.3823
presents
GET INTO THE GROOVE Metropolis Mobile
radio and club DJ's. Hot spots. Majority
Party
ii
Jan. 28,29,30 ... 8 pm
Jan. 31 ... 2:30 pm
Feb. 5,6 ... 8 pm
Feb. 7 ... 2:30 pm
RESERVATIONS 843-7469
J 9 M FAVORS AND FLASHMIR FOTO. THE
J 8 M COMPLIANCE. Quality party favors and last-party
parties. Call 843 8770 or 841 4349 to book your next
call.
MUSIC "MUSIC" MUSIC "MUSIC" MUSIC
Audio PAD and lights. Maximum Audio Wizardry
Audio PAD and lights.
BILLIARDS AND
VIDEO GAMES...
WE'RE NOT JUST BOWLING
THE KANSAS UNION
JAY BOWL
864-3545 LEVEL ONE
FOR RENT
Garpeted studio apartment at 945 Missouri. Bay window, dressing room. 749-0660 eyes.
Ocean 1-BR Aprt $290; elem. MARCH RENT
free to campus W/D fjclts 842-559
Coomho Boot room note $125 (10) 200 Shares
Bathroom Boot room notes (10) 200
distance to campus B42-2737 Leave Message
Completely Furnished Studios, 1-2-3 & 4 bedroom apartments. Many large locations, all energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call 850-2625, or 749-2493. Mastercraft Management
Pamela nonsloker hoster - Nice bedroom
Pamela nonsloker hoster - Nice bedroom
GNOM RIUM Surprise Place; $175.00 794-609 813
Deplex, one bedroom, within walking distance of RU. Low utilities. $265/MJ. 843-4798.
GWIN ROOM Sunrise Plate, $175 M9-749 0189
female residence, preferably quiet and non-
interruptible. Send resume to female Grad student at Spanish Crest Ap1, 2021
pool, laundry room, facilities on pool and laundry, facilities on the pool
dung pool and laundry facilities are on the grounds of the compound, which is adjacent to Elizabeth and Spanish Church Apts. at 814-6008.
Private roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom.
Near campus, $100 / 1/ utilities 749-3869
townhouse with other females. New townhouse with modern conveniences, micro, dishwasher, refrigerator, microwave, hot bus to bus route. Low rent and util. Call 843-5614. Pursued room for rent. most utilities paid, off street parking, two blocks from university, studious atmosphere, and no pets please.
Male Nassim Hall dorn contract for sale. Willing to pay security deposit plus negotiable rent.
M/F Roommate needed to share two bedroom apartment (master bedroom). Cabell paid. On bus route 8175/M, 1/2 utilities and deposit. Call Ken 749-0001 after 7 p.m.
Large one bedroom furnished apartment
Available $210 per month, plus electricity. Very
to campus in old apartment building
with extensive improvements. Call
413-3192.
MASTERCHAFT offers beautiful furnished apartments, various sizes, all great locations! Designed with the K.U. student in mind. Call 841-1212, 841-325 or 749-426.
New 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. 842-5227
Needed non smoking male roommate to share 3 bedroom apartment in Windmill Estates. $130.00
non-smoking, female wanted to room with 3
rooms for 4 hr. dupes in 4 hr. duples
1311 plus 47
utilities . 841-2457
Roommate wanted: Great Ap just seconds away from Kansas Union! 2 bedroom. $20/Mo
SHANNON PLAZA CLUB APARTMENTS on
U.K. bus route. Washerver/driver included, water,
trash paid. Dishwasher microwave, ceiling fan.
Basketball courtballs (6 or 12 month lease.
841-7726
Villa26
BRAND NEW
1 Bedroom Apartments
- Microwave
- Energy Efficient
- On KU Bus Route
- Excellent Location
- Open Daily
- Washer Dryer Hook-ups
- 2201 W. 26th/Apt. E-102
—phones—
842-5227 • 842-6454
841-6080
- Move In Today
Try cooperative living. SUNFLOWER HOUSE
180-9671 for Amy, Deborah or Tom
Sublease Farnished in Meadowbrook,
$270/Mo. Water and cable included. Call
(800) 653-4911.
Sublease. Duplex two bedroom, 1 bath, 1840.
Missouri; great location for KI student, $380/m.
$295/room; 2-story, 2-bath apartment.
Sublease. Spacename 1 Bedroom Apt KU Rue Bus
location. Sublease number location.
Water paid: palace 420 - love message
Sunflower House has private rooms, low rates and a great location. Call eavings.
Trailside Towhouse for rent. Three bedrooms.
CN151,LSU job...inventory..443-628-7300
On KU bus route. Immediate. Call 843-735.
room park. Room Apt. 5, for adult, male KU
student. $205/Mo. plus deposit. Rent paid thru
Cal collect. Call collect (312) 432-837 or
(694-413.
Wanted: Female roommate to share furnished
room. 1700 sq. ft.; no utilities; private room, 841-6194.
Rent for up to two nights per conventione. Two rooms available. $190 or
per month. No utilities. Call George at
888-2312.
FOR SALE
1979 Gibson Les Paul, 1987 Salmon x61 ski
bests. Best offer. 749-1753, ask for Bill.
10225 Dusan 325X Turbo BHR & GR two tone, paire,
cassette beautiful car must sell 841-4762
beautiful car, beautiful car must sell 841-4762
72 Crestview Home: 12' x 20'. 8k. Extra insulation throughout, new plumbing, completely reconditioned. 162-237 4522 after 5:30 p.m. or inquire 420 North St. 6, Lawrence.
An Absolutely Beautiful Array of Antiques, collectibles and neat stuff we have: hardback and 1.2 price paper booklets, full line of new comic books, a fine art gallery, the Indian, costume jewelry (giltter and good staff), the right vintage cloth for any occasion, miniatures, festea, the best selection of antique furniture in the area. Quinnica Fireshell 81 New Hampshire, Open Sal, & Sun 10-5
Applause 12 - string guitar for sale. Excellent condition! Call after 5, 793-3244
tuple II C with color monitor, 5 months old, has 'rinter cable' B850, 864-6741
Bankrupt Dinette. Brass and formica to four padded chairs. Reg $99, now $89. while they last. Mark and Quain Purchase Warehouse, NMC, NKC and 738 New Hampshire, Lawrence
New Brent Genets 14k goldmugget watch appraised $1900. Must sell. Best offer 83-425. Jeremy Canon Typestar4 E- Electronic Typwriter w/ accessories $300 value asking $310 call Joe at
Computer table. (3) *oak kitchen chairs*, dorm refrigerator, large reflector telescope, velboat, large wind tunnel rocker, large humidifier, and wedge stand. All in good condition and reasonable. $419.00
DENA PMA 760V integrated amplifier. 232.50 B.
& O Red Line 60 speakers. 193.00 Carver C30
colophony generator. 100.00 Mark 749-2851
after 5.00
Drafting tools, beds,lamps, chest of drawers,
Wool But Ice, 616 Vermont.
For Sale: 150 CH weight set and bench table. Also
3 core bars and 150 tibbals $59. Call
For Sale Denon Tuner/T/ Amp 40 watt per chan
denon. Denon treadw/ micro W controller
computer
For Sale. TAMA Concert tent, 6.8 to 12 inches by wood shells. Two heavy duty stands. 842-8022 Just receive truckload of European camelback wool coated polished cotton fabric, reg $99.99, while closed polished cotton fabric, reg $99.99, while
they last. $499.00. Open to the public 10-8 daily.
Mark and Quinn Furniture Warehouse, 101 Burling,
NKC and 738 New Hampshire. Lawrence.
篮球 tickets (8) Call 843-6264. Leave
message.
- MOTHIBALA GOOD USED FURNITURE.
10:40 a.m. Thursday -Sat 10:40 p.m. $12
K. Ellis
Rock-n-tail- Thousands of used and rare albums
Quantifi's Fla Market, 811 New Hampshire.
Snow skis, K2 710 Shalom 185 with salmon
747 bindings, 163 bags. Also Aster hockey skies fit
Aero skis. Made in USA.
YAMAHA R 300 Stereo Receiver like new $140.
845-7276.
Zenith 188 Computer, printer, monitor, 640K,
drives, mouse, desktop publisher, PC3P, Bainic
AUTOSALES
1975 Honda Accord 2.5d, Hatch, New tires, haster starters, Dependable 1.5b or best offer
1980 Buck Skylark Limited Red 55,000 miles.
1980 Make offer 842.214 Larry.
1980
1982 Chevya Cavalier CL Type 10, automatic, AC Great Buy $200 BHD 041-868 006
1843 Chevy Chevette, AM/FM Cassette, AC,
Metallic Hitec 720, 720 highway km, 4 speedrs, runs
on electric.
1988 Chevrolet Cavalier B24 $295.79, Camaro FZ-2
$12.047, Monte Carlo as $12.358, 1988 Ford
Mustang as $13.605, 1988 GMC Turbo $14.791, 1988 Mercury Cougar XR $13.65,
1988 Pontiac Fiero Coupe $14.86, Firebird $9.22,
Trans AM $12.50, FACTORY warranties
refinance financing, trades-in. You choose options
based on your credit score.
75 Toyota Celica for sale. Original owner. Still
weekends, weekdays. 2035. Topeka (1) during business
week.
BERTONE X1/9-1984 538. Excellent condition.
BERTONE X1/9-1984 541-600 weekdays,
417-424 weeks
417-424 weeks
Red Hot Bargaim? Drug dealers' cars, boats,
planes, planes or drapes. Your area. Buyers
must pay.
Found Blue and green plaid scarf between Lin
tires, battery, al, £79 OBO, cash only. @40 Blake
hall any 4 ply.
Car won it start? Mobile repair service on foreign cars. Call Aaron at 814-4629
Found mine and green pand scar between Lop-
son and Tidwell. Found mine and scar between Fo-
dun and Golden. Found Male Rewaree Male 14:48 18h
and 06:29 5h. Found Male Rewaree Male 14:48 18h
and 06:29 5h.
MGB Convertible 78, great shape, no rust,
F/M Casette, low mileage, $250 or best
Gear.
HELP WANTED
LOST-FOUND
Are you skilled with woodworking or solving mechanical problems on smaller projects?
Lest: Burgandy and black panayia scarf between
Strong: Burgandy and Saturday, September 11. Between
Strong: Burgandy and Saturday, November 5.
Artist* Artist* Artist* Artist* Looking for talented carved
carvings in the art world Call for details 813/926
www.artists.org
Bucky's Drive-In is now taking applications for part time employment. Flexible hours. Half price meals. Apply in person between 10 and 5 at Bucky's Drive-In 9th and 10th. Thank you!
not, but we have lost it. Fig. 49-35 at 2 p.m.
pba. But we have found it. Fig. 49-35 at 2 p.m.
pba. And the official officials are needed for basketball leagues forming now. Attend
the game on Monday, January 27 at 6:30 p.m. in 168 Johnson.
BABYSTATTER NEEDED - Need a reliable person to bathe overnight for $50/W. 8:26 @ 2808 need a reliable person to bathe overnight for $50/W. 8:26 @ 2808
Bass player wanted for recently relocated westward to the Rocky Mountains in a mountain movement to Rock and Roll a music. Equipment needed includes a bass guitar, drum kit, saxophone, etc.
**CPSTAL JOB'S:** $2,964 Start! Prepare Now!
Workshop (w/ 10) for guaranteed Exam
Workshop (w/ 10) for guaranteed Exam
Consultant positions for Small Business Development Center are available. Positions are paid above minimum wage, hours are flexible. Work requires the ability to graduate students needed in the areas of business engineering, law, and computer science. If interested, apply at 324 E. Summerfield Hall, FL.
Cantonian Monday Wednesday Friday 7-11 A M
Mon Tuesday Dick Flamm Daml 4838-9 51
A M Mon friday Fri
Creative person for sketching 21st Century Life (cary.ei, original work only) 814-2822. Paid
Due to new product development, three to four art students are needed that are proficient with airbrush to work on a per job basis. Will be given complete freedom to work around school buildings or weekends. If interested, contact Laurie Clark, Scotish Industries, 413-863-033, as soon as possible.
Director of Child Care Program P/T afternoons. Must have pre-school teaching experience. Must have classroom instruction skills. $60/Mo. Resume and 2 letters of recommendation. Certification: 925,ermont Lawnery, Ks. 66444, EOE
EDITORIAL & RESEARCH ASSISTANT KU Gerontology Center. Half-time, Feb.-Aug. 1988. Resumes to gerontology@ku.edu or articles for a national newsletter for professionals who assist families caring for elderly. $400/Mo. Required: knowledge of family caregiving category. Preferred: ability to work with children. Credit: preword-processing skills, ability to abstract and critique studies from behavioral research. Postdoctoral experience. Application deadline: Feb. 3, 1988. Submit letter of interest, resume and writing samples to the Gerontology Center, 316 Stroh Ave., New York, NY 10022.
E. R. Clerk, part-time position in Admissions for an emergency room clerk. Hours are 2:45 p.m. to 11:15 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays and all week long. Requires two equivalent, 6 months clinical experience and one required. Typing test needs to be completed at job service center before applying. Applications may be submitted from 1 a.m. to the Personnel Department accords at 325 Main, 749-6161 EOE
ATTENTION
GRADUATING
SENIORS
GOVERNMENT JOBS $10,940 bd/jr 2020. New
government jobs: 687-600 used - K-7588 for
current Federal list.
GOVERNMENT JOBS $10.040 $25.020 $Jr. Worn
GOVERNMENT JOB $10.040 $25.020 $Jr. Worn
current Federal List.
697 8000 697 8000 1.9758
FEMALE VOCALIST wanted for established dance band. 794-3649
Evening line person, part time. $3.50 / Hr. Apply in person at Border Bindio, 1820 W. 6th H.
ON-CAMPUS INTERVIEWS sign ups for sales, management, and other types of positions open to students in ANY MAJOR, as well as positions for COMPUTER
well as positions for COMPUTER SCIENCE and CHEMISTRY majors,
are now in progress at the University Placement Center.
Companies will be arriving starting February 1. Don't miss out
Sign up now at the
University Placement Center Level One, Burge Union.
Boston's leading nanny placement agency invites you to spend a challenging, rewarding, and proffitable year with carefully screened professional families. Complete support network awaits your arrn
Call 1-800-262-8771
or write American Au Par
P.O. Box 9.
New Tampa, Florida
New Market, Mass.
Boston, Massachusetts
GRADUATE RESEARCH ASSISTANT Housing Research Program. Center for Applied Behavioralmanipulation data development/maintenings, computerized database of man-ingdings, conduct statistical data analysis; assist in development, implement training; conduct quantitative assistance with addi-tion to collection activities; prepare written reports.
NEW YORK! live in baby-sitters needed for
metropolitan live-in New York, beginning in
January/February. Airfare paid. plus room.
Room rental. 250 S. 14th Street,
Craineau St., 2003 65-0707, 5 Laurel Lane,
Claire Saunders.
TERMS OF APPONTMENT: 50% time position
with experience. SEND WORKSHOP
satisfactory performance. Salary commuteable
with experience. TO APPLY: Send letter of ap-
plication to HR, 1234 Fifth Avenue, Lawrence,
KS 60075, publication date:
Nainshi Hall Dining Common is now accepting
Nainshi Hall Dining Common to fill out an application at Nainshi Hall's
fill out application.
ability. Preferences: Background in housing design and/or programs and services for people with disabilities; prior experience in social science or environmental research design
and graphic research reports. QUALIFICATIONS: Undergraduate degree in field related to social science or environmental design research, ability to work flexible hours; prior experience in
Part time workers - 1/2 time. Production shift 4 a.m. to 8 a.m. Monday - Friday. Starting pay is $4.25. Call Personnel Dept. Packer Plastics. 842-3000. EOE.
Qualified individuals earn up to $340 /Fr. Fr/Spophers and $470 /mj Sr/Ur. Requirements: Full time student, physically fit, willing to join the Military Program, Military Science Building, 86-3311
RESORT HOTELS, Cruiseline Airlines & accepting applications for summer jobs, accepting applications for information & application; write National Recreation Park. P.O. Box 60714 Hilton Colonnade Recreation. P.
Personnel Secretary: qualified applicants possess good communication, typing (60 wpm), speaking and using English with people. Word processing and personnel experience helpful, but not required. Walt train in this department.
fourth are up per week. If you believe you hit its finish, call us at 914-627-5000 or the onsite operation, please call us at 796-619-8141. Lawrence Memorial Hospital, 323 Main EOE.
Postal Job! $0.064* Start! Prepare Now!
Clerks-Carriers! Call for Guaranteed Exam Workshop. (918)944-4444 Ext 133.
Rewarding Summer for sophomore and older college students in Colorado mountains working with backpacking, horseback riding crafts, wildlife, mountain biking, a program include program interests and goals.
Western Lake Poughkeepsie, N.J. -- first summer youth camp, seek college age students to work as counselors. Employment is from June 15-30 at Westchester Technical and interview call Jeff at 1-800-331-5006 Ext. 310
The Adams Alumna Center is now hiring a.m. and p.m. dishwashers fulltime and part time positions in our application experience. Applications are available at receptionists between 8 and 10am. No phone calls. We are located at 718-536-9204.
Warm caring caremen **start** as children ages **again**
for 2 years per volunteer for a minimum of 2 yrs per
volunteer from 7:30 and 3:30 M-F. Day care volunteers
from 12:50-3:50. For more information call 842-369-3120.
FREE, BEAUTIFUL Long-Haired Cat (minimal weight) in the snow & wather & snugles inside when cold. Neutered./ Mouser. Call 749-2585 & evens it. (304) Topeka (Topela) during work hours. Ack for Judy W.
MISCELLANEOUS
DOWNTOWN BARBERSHOP 824 MASS. $5 HAIRCUTS
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by Headquarters.
We're here because we care.
841-2345 1419 Mass.
We are alarms.
discounts on
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No Appointment Necessary!
Mon. thru Fri. 8-5:30
Sat. 8-12
Nexus
843-8000
PERSONAL
Amyx
Cheri I LOVE YOU L.B.S.
**Attention Colony Woods Tenants! We are in**
**high electric bills over a x mas break. Please**
**contact Holly or Janell at KI or 841-5641. The meeting**
**we have interested you we have interested**
**more we can accommodate you**
Chice Chip Casanova-Congratulations on your
winning season on the family! "wr
+ new冠, Culinary,
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Hey Everybody! Becca is 20! Call her and wish a Happy Birthday (8641-7181). It has arrived, Becca! This belated Birthday is courtesy of your roomie. Enjoy!
Tim, Hey are we covered? Happy birthday to the sweetest girl I know. Jules Monster.
Kirk- Theta Chi- Wanna dance again sometime?
Call me, Jennifer.
Tri-Delt Dinitates - Though I always mugged up the opening. I'm very proud of all us. 'Congratulations!'
BUS. PERSONAL
Don't get mad, give even! `Send a bouquet of dead flowers to that 'special' friend. For birthdays or anniversaries, send them a text but it comes with a personal message. Pick-up or delivery. reasonably please` Call SWEET MONSTER.
$60 Value when presented toward new patient ser-
cialization. Dr. Johnson, Chiropractural
Spinal Exemple. Dr. Johnson, Chiropractural
letting into shape for spring? Start taking care
of your shoes and socks. Call Meibie 749-1639
or Men and Women, Call Meibie 749-1639
HARPER
LAWYER
Amyx Barber Shop 8421/2 Mass.
4 Barbers
for Your Convenience
Reg. Haircuts 45.50
Welcome Students
For Your Convenience
DONALD G. STROLE
Attorney at Law
* DWI's law of OW and other alcohol related offices
* Personal Injury Medical Malpractice
* Product Liability
* Other legal matters related to students
Interested in a summer job with the Federal
Department of Agriculture? Call M46-3824
M.Placement Center for details. Call 466-3824
MARY KAY cosmetics can give you complimentary facial shows at your dorm activities, sororties etc. also individually. Call 843-1277 for info and ask for Andie.
Want to win a cruise? Have a complementary facial with friends. Call Michele 749-1658.
WEBB'S PARTY SUPPLY (formerly Green's) 810 West 23rd Weekly Beer Specials
You Determine Your Income. You set your own hours, work at your own pace, and in turn determine your own income. It's all a matter of how hard you are willing to work. To request a payment or for the fastest growing marketing organizations in the country call 841-803-8-5.
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-6821. Confidential help/?pregnancy
Coors Lt 24 pk. $9.77
Miller Lite 24 pk. $9.77
Miller Draft 6 pk. $2.78
Bud 12 pk. $5.56
Coors 24pk. $9.77
Coors Gold 24 pk. $9.77
Busch 12 pk. $4.49
Old Style 12 pk. $3.69
Old Style longneck 24 pk. $7.89
Weidemann 12 pk. $3.19
Jan. 27 - Feb. 2
SENIUAL LINGERIE & $WIMWEAR. Get your full color catalog today. Send $5. includes postage and handling to: SATIN 'N' LACE, P.O. BOX 15701-281, LENEXA. KS 66215
Boat House Row cotton and ragiw
sweater - a 100 year tradition
of quality and design.
Shop 739 ARCOTHEA
You Determine Your Income. You set your own income and determine how much you must mine your own income. It’s all a matter of how hard you’re willing to work. To request a per cent payment, send an email to marketing organizations in the country call
Available Only at THE ETC SHOP
South Patch Island deluxe condominiums - the new Fl. Lauderdale for Spring Break. Call 1-800-HI-PADRE or your travel agent for information.
732 Massachusetts
SPRING BREAK
SOUTH PAPE ISLAND 128
NORTH PADRE / MUSTANG ISLAND 156
DAYTON BEACH 199
NEW YORK 199
GALEVAN BEACH 128
FORT WALTON BEACH 126
ORlando / DINNER WINE 132
MIAMI BEACH 133
MILHURT BEACH 131
DON'T DELAY
YOUR FIRST NATIONAL ARCHITECTURES
1-800-321-5911
Visit with a recruiter from Merck, Sharp and Dohme on Monday Feb. 1.
INTERESTED IN LEARNING ABOUT A PHARMACEUTICAL SALES CAREER?
Open to Freshmen, Sophomores, and Juniors with science majors.
Sign up now
Sign up now at the University Placement Center
Level One, Burge Union
SERVICES OFFERED
thick soaked, Confry, $45/Pr., Patrick 842-9890
HELP: Fripped by red tape? Needing a movie or game time! just don't know where to INFORMATION center at 863-3406. 2brs a day
AUTO REPAIR/ BODY WORK Foreign &
Domestic Bumper repair repair 814-3700,
814-3701
Become a Valentine always remembered, with a "BUDDIE HOUR PROTATTE" or Grace at an art museum.
UMC'S COPIES 4¢
25th & Iowa • Holiday Plaza • 749-5192
RRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7494.
HAIR CUTS $2 off with KU ID for the months of January and February. Ask for experienced hairstylist, Ann Reane at Standing Ovation, 14 E Ace. 749-0771
Handmade Moccasins, custom sized Elkhide kits,
thick solid, Comp. $45/Fr., Patrick 842-8099.
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.)
PRIVATE OFFICE ObJ Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park . . . (013) 409-6278
Professional married couple would like to house
her husband and have a private room.
842-5923 evening or 842-1211 ext. 258 day
for booking.
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence 841-5716
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing.
Judy. 842-7945 or Lisa. 841-1915.
QUALITY TUTORING. Statistics, Economics,
Mathematics. All levels. Call Dennis
Dickens 415-628-3700.
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided 841-2316.
THE FAR SIDE
TYPING
1. Reliable Typing Service Term papers.
2. Reliable Typing Service type, iHDM Electronic Powerphone 842-3240
The college of Liberal Arts and Sciences offers tutoring in math, english, business, and economics courses at a reasonable charge. The college's Services application, as at SESB Building. 864-3971.
transform your parcels into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct papers.
or 843-2671 evenings and weekends
or 843-2671 typing service. Fast, professional word processing software. 843-744-704
1 plus Typing: Letters, resumes, thesis, law typ-
ess, law reports; 842-7549; 842-7548 or 843-2071 evening and weekends.
For professional typing/word processing, call
ThermoBond 800. Spring special $120, page double,
space pica, pcax.
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS
MOMMY'S TYPNING, one day service available
842 3378 before 9 p.m. please.
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Domain paper, papers, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mail lists. Letter quality
printing, spelled corrected. 842-2747
Quality typing. Includes excellent spelling, grammatical correctness, and service pick-up delivery available. 884-0974
FAST, ACCURATE, DEPENDABLE
Letter quantification, rate, spell check
NO POSITIVE SERVICES
TYPHING PLUS assistance with composition, paper and printing, inks, dissertations, papers, letters, applications.
Typing at a reasonable rate. Call Holly at 843-011.
Typing at a reasonable rate CALL 843-0111
Female roommate needed to share huge room in
the building. 1U/2U lifts. Short walk to campus. 749-5120
large roommate wanted to house furnished
roommate to sit on the floor off street parking, large deck, $172.50
811-0194
811-0195
Male roommate must to share Alamond Condo.
$225/Mo plus utilities. Washers, dryer, fireplace,
tennis, swim, private bath/bedroom. Call
842-106. References and deposit required.
Male/Female roommate needles for 3-bedroom
apartment. $140/month 1/3 eche. On bus route.
Bachelor's degree required.
Flutist looking for celtic or folk group to play.
Call. Earnings: 943-1163 or 748-0721, Debbie Hirling! Government Jobs your area. $15,000
688.000. Call 838-8385 ext 4055.
Needed female non-smoking roommate at Pinecrest. Own room. $165 plus utilities. 842-2568
Non-student basketball tickets for Duke game
842-1775
Roommates needed for pleasant four bedroom home with two baths and laundry at 911 Mt. Rushmore.
Roemmant wanted. Spacions new 2 br *air
room* with balcony. 842 utilities. On bascourt 842 utilities. Call 943-3185
WANTED: Adventurous traveling Bodyboarder (Or Surfer) for Spring Break trip to Kuala with Bodyboarder (Bodysurfer). Free accommodations. Phone 843-8134, or Pat for Pat and a message.
Wanted K-State student B-Ball tickets. Call Jeff 842-307-306
Wanted non-student basketball tickets. 824-6733.
Wanted: Part-time kitchen utility help. Flexible hours. Call Frank at Lawrence Country Club, 845-286-196
Wanted. Third male roommate to share 2-bedroom apartment. Call 749-4912 (7:10 p.m.) on phone. Share spacious clean warm 3-bedroom houseware and work space. Prefer graduate student or working person. Walk 2 blocks to KU. Central heat and air conditioning, 2 bedrooms. $175/m plus 1/2 of reasonable utilities. 842-8351
W T C.S. Shelter for battered woman is beginning weekday training sessions starting January 30th. Strong sensitivity people who are interested in beating bullying, women and children's programs, Call 841-687-8911.
Bv GARY LARSON
127 ©1988 Universal Press Syndicate
"Nope, I can't do it either. ... Dusty!
Can you make an 'O' with your lips?"
16
Wednesday, January 27, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
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10
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday January 28,1988
Vol. 98, No. 84 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Inquiry by FBI disputed Group claims rights violated
WASHINGTON — A New York-based legal group charged yesterday that the FBI violated the civil rights of hundreds of people in conducting a six-year investigation into organizations opposed to U.S. policies in Central America.
The Associated Press
The FBI acknowledged that it conducted an investigation into the Committee in Support of the People of El Salvador, or CISPES, but maintained that it was looking into "alleged criminal activity rather than the motives and beliefs of those being investigated."
"We want the FBI to catch spies, terrorists and crooks and put them in jail, not keep political groups under surveillance, even if they disagree with the president." Edwards said.
In an interview yesterday, Justice Department spokesman Pat Korten said that the Center for Constitutional Rights, which has had the FBI documents for nearly two years, is not a reason to believe "they are attempting to influence the Contra aid vote in the U.S. Congress."
Rep. Don Edwards, D-Calif., chairman of the House subcommittee on health and constitu-
tion reform, FRCR.
The Center for Constitutional Rights, founded in 1966 to provide "legal support to progressive movements," got 1,320 pages from FBI files through the Freedom of Information Act. Many of the pages contained blacked-out sentences or paragraphs. The center said the documents represented only about a third of the government's files.
Margaret Ratner, an attorney with the center who has studied the documents, said the FBI began its investigation in 1981 to determine whether any members of CISPES, a group working to end U.S. intervention in Central America, were foreign agents.
The FB1's field offices found no evidence to back up that claim, she said, so the focus of the investigation was turned into a "foreign matter" for her agency "even though no basis for such existed."
The inquiry was authorized by an executive order signed by President Reagan in December 1981 that allowed the bureau and the CIA to watch people even if they are not suspected of breaking the law or acting on behalf of a foreign power, Ratner said.
Secure Cab's return is possible
By Jeff Suggs
After some delay this semester, Secure Cab could resume service by Feb. 1.
Kansan staff writer
Student Senate Transportation Board voted unanimously last night to tentatively grant Corporate Coach of Lawrence, 912 Iowa St., rights for the Secure Cab service. The board voted 8-0 to take the van-operated service over bids from Yellow Cab Co. and Lawrence Bus Co.
If the state Division of Purchases approves the transaction quickly, students may be able to pay for it.
Secure Cab would operate differently than
Charles Bryan, coordinator of KU on Wheels, said a van would run at hour intervals. The van would make fixed stops at bars and on campus, and would spend the rest of the time dropping students off. On Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays, the service would run an additional van, which would allow it to pick up passengers every half hour.
before. Instead of passangers calling for a ride, the ride would come at fixed times throughout the night.
Bryan said the hours of service had not been decided.
Bryan said that in the past, a passenger's
chance to catch Secure Cab often was undependable. He said the van, which would hold 12 people, would solve that problem.
"They're going to be able to count on this. It'll be where it is supposed to be," Bryan said.
The cost of the van service would be approximately $10,500 this semester. The estimated costs of operating the service under Yellow Cab or adding a bus to the service were $12,600 and $9,315, respectively.
Yellow Cab previously operated secure Cab, but Student Senate dropped sponsorship of the service this semester when the cab company announced fares would go up from
$2.50 and $1.25 for full and partial rides to $4
for both. Yellow Cab made a lower bid
Monday. $3.50 for a full ride and $2 for a
partial ride.
Partial rides were when a group of students called the cab, and some were dropped off on the way to the final destination.
"I think they dropped down because they felt the pressure." Bryan said. "I think the board made a good decision tonight. We can't keep the costs escalating."
Jason Krakow, student body president, said the move to re-establish Secure Cab service was cost efficient.
"It's what the student body needs." Kra-
kow said.
A MASSIVE FIGHT FOR RIGHTS IN A CROWD OF WILDLIFE
Monkev business
In the play "Monkey Monkey," the monkey King, played by Darrin Person, second from left, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, is excited about his chance to go to school to learn how to live forever. Left to right are Chris Cole, Glen Ellyn, Ill., senior; Person; Sheila Aberderhall, Wichita sophomore; and
Lawrence Peters, Denver, Colo., sophomore. The KU Theatre for Young People will present the play by Charles Jones at 2:30 p.m. Saturday in Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall. Tickets are $2.50. All seats are reserved.
City marks lanes at Colony Woods
By Kevin Dilmore
Kansan staff writer
For the residents of Colony Woods Apartments, 1301 W. 24th St., parking has never been easy. Crowded lots last semester forced many students to park anywhere they could fit a car, including fire lanes.
They won't have that luxury this semester.
Since Jan. 1, cars parked in newlymarked fire lanes have been ticketed and towed to enforce a city ordinance.
Management at the apartment complex, the fire department and the police department have the authority to tow any offenders.
Lonnie Faler, owner of Jayhawk Tow and Storage, 501 Maple St., said that 20 illegally-parked cars had been towed from the complex since Jan. 1.
Gerald Burkhart, manager of the complex, said yesterday that about 635 people, most of whom were KU students, lived in the apartments. Ed Collister, attorney for the complex, said figures were not available for the number of cars owned by residents.
Burkhard estimated last semester that 800 vehicles were registered at the complex. Now, 786 parking spaces are available, he said.
He said the towing woes went into effect Dec. 31 to comply with a city law.
The Lawrence Fire Department has clearly marked the fire lanes with No Parking signs and with yellow painted curbs.
Richard Barr, Lawrence fire marshal, said the fire lanes were created to give emergency vehicles access to the 15 buildings in Colony Woods.
Lawrence fire codes stipulate that fire lanes must be in place for all buildings, and that they must be at least 20 feet wide.
'If any parked cars reduce the
width of that lane, you have a violation." Barr said.
Barr said that none of the cars parked in fire lanes last semester were towed because the fire lanes were unmarked.
"We can not enforce an unmarked lane," he said, "and we will not tow or ticket any car parked in one."
"Our understanding was that adequate parking would be provided by Colony Woods." McSwain said. "But when problems started, it appeared we would have to remedy them in this manner."
Jim McSwain, Lawrence fire chief,
said that if no other parking problems
were evident in Lawrence park-
ers' fire lanes could remain
unmarked.
Barr said he had received complaints from Lawrence residents about parking violations at Colony Woods and conducted an investigation last fall.
Jane Guenther, Lawrence senior and resident of Colony Woods, agreed. "People never should have been allowed to get away with parkland anyway," she said. "The fire lanes give people more room to drive."
"After we reviewed the reports, we installed the signs where parking reduced the lanes to less than 20 feet."
Barr said the towing zone did not take away any of the 786 parking spaces provided by the complex.
The 370 unit complex has been plagued with parking problems since it opened last summer. At that time, 598 spaces were available for residents, 23 more than by city regulations. Still, the lot overflowed with cars.
"What the signs did was not allow people to park where they shouldn't have in the first place." he said.
See PARK, p. 5, col. 1
Remember the Shuttle Challenger tragedy still a haunting memory
By Brenda Flory
Kansan staff writer
Two years ago today, Christa McAuliffe, a schoolteacher from Concord, N.H., took the challenge of exploring a new world. Her quest ended in tragedy.
On Jan. 28, 1986, NASA officials watched helplessly as the space shuttle Challenger exploded, leaving only one smoke, only 74 seconds after launch.
That image of destruction remains vivid in the minds of many students and faculty at the University of Kansas. They remember, and criticize.
"It was an incredible loss for the families of the crew, the country and the space program," he said. "We (the finalists) were so excited to be part of such a wonderful opportunity that we pulled together like one big family. Christa's death made all of us realize how much everybody in this country was tied to the space program."
"That was a tragic moment for all of us," said Wendell Mohling, a Kansas finalist in the NASA Teacher in Space Program. Mohling, a Shawnee Northwest high school biology teacher, is now a doctoral student at KU.
Jan Roskam, professor of aerospace engineering, said the accident was a classic example of a failure to communicate.
To them, the disaster highlighted the agony of failure in what had once seemed the most exhilarating of its aspirations; the conquest of space.
"It's a case where there were too damn many layers of management." he said. "Management didn't properly communicate with each other down the line. If they had, they would have realized that the launch shouldn't have occurred."
After the accident, President Reagan created a special committee, the Rogers Commission, to study what had caused the accident. The commission determined that weak channels of communication had been one cause of the failure that resulted in the shuttle explosion.
The commission found that those who made the decision to launch were unaware that engineers had previously advised against launching if temperatures went below 53 degrees Fahrenheit. It suggested that if the decision-makers had known that, the Challenger wouldn't have flown on that cold Florida morning.
Now, two years later, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration
another shuttle in August. But at least two KU professors don't agree with the decisions NASA has made since the accident. They said that bureaucracy had overwhelmed good sense and that decisions were being taken out of the hands of engineers.
"I don't think they are heading in the right direction," said Mel Dubnick, associate professor of public administration. "They may have strengthened their reporting lines, but this is enhancing the wrong accountability system."
Dubnick said that NASA had added a holine for whistle-blowers, and had put astronauts in administrative positions, but that those were actions that addressed the symptom, not the problem.
Dubnick, who has written on NASA
Shuttle launch date moved; officials blast NASA delays
The Associated Press
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — NASA set Aug. 4 as the new launch date for the next space shuttle flight yesterday as workers here prepare to attribute to the crash Challenger astronauts who died years ago.
Meanwhile, two principal figures of the Apollo moon-landing program criticized what one called a "frankly unnecessary delay" in returning the shuttle to space and what the other said was a "fear of action, a gridlock to progress" in the U.S. space program.
The spacecraft fleet was grounded for more than 31 months as a result of the Challenger accident. \
"If we see space flight as a necessary element in our formula for national survival, then a $2\frac{1}{2}$-year hiatus (in space flight) is totally unacceptable." Kraft said
Christopher C. Kraft, former director of the Johnson Space Center and for two decades a leader in the U.S. space program, said last night that the long delay in resuming space shuttle flights was "totally unacceptable" if the United States was to remain a major technological power.
Meanwhile, Gen. Samuel C. Phillips, who organized the Apollo management system, blamed a lack of leadership from the White House, Congress and NASA for malaise in the U.S. space effort.
management problems in the Public Administration Review, said political and bureaucratic factors were becoming more important in NASA than the standard advice of engineers.
NASA, Dubnick said, is a unique public organization that depends heavily on good technical and scientific information. Because of this, he said, its administrators need to communicate accountability system where engineers can easily communicate among themselves.
"There is no lateral communication, only hierarchical," he said. "It's so easy for communication to get misused and distorted in this kind of system. Back in the day, the final say whether they would launch or not."
Roskam said he agreed that the layers of NASA management needed to be thinned. He said he was opposed to Roskam's decision to put the program on hold.
"There is no way they can make the shuttle as safe as a commercial airplane," Roskam said. "It would cost the country much money."
Roskam said he thought NASA should have reinforced the boosters after the accident and then resumed launching.
He said Congress could be held partially responsible for the Challenger accident because it had not worked at making long-term financial commitments with NASA.
"I firmly believe that budget constraints lowers safety factors," he said. "For example, many people in the engineering community believe that they need more than solid rocket boosters. But the solid rocket boosters cost less."
Joe Engle, a former astronaut and
See SHUTTLE, p. 6, col. 1
2
Thursdav. Januarv 28. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Heather Forecast
From the KU Weather Service
LAWRENCE
Spring-Like
HIGH: 58°
LOW: 33°
Sunny and much warmer this afternoon with a high in the upper 50's. Clear and mild overnight with a low in the lower 30's.
KEY
REGIONAL
North Platte
58/29
Sunny
Oranaha
54/28
Sunny
Goodland
63/34
Sunny
Heya
65/33
Sunny
Salina
64/32
Sunny
Topeka
59/32
Sunny
Kansas City
56/32
Sunny
Columbia
50/27
Sunny
St Louis
145/25
Sunny
Dodge City
66/34
Sunny
Wichita
61/33
Sunny
Charlotte
61/33
Sunny
Springfield
57/34
Sunny
Tulsa
65/36
Sunny
Forecast by, Kevin Darmotel
Temperatures are today's high and tonight's low.
5-DAY
FRI
Sunny
63/35
HIGH
LOW
SAT
Partly cloudy
61/37
SUN
Cloudy
50/30
MON
Rain
37/19
TUE
Sunny
30/13
On Campus
- "AIDS and HIV infection: Impact on Public Health Care and Research," a lecture by Charles Haines, Shawne graduate student, is scheduled for 12:30 p.m. today at 6031 Worhall Hall.
- ■ The KU office of study abroad is sponsoring a meeting for students interested in studying abroad next week at 3:00 p.m. today in 3140 Wescott Hall.
- The department of history and Soviet and East European Area Studies is sponsoring a lecture titled "Western Philosophy of History, Perestroika, and Soviet Thought" with Andrus Pork, professor of philosophy at Tartu State University in Estonia in the Soviet Union and head of the department of social and political studies of the Academy of Sciences of the Estonian SSR. The lecture is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. today in the Pine Room of the Kansas
Union.
As part of the Michener Lecture series, Hayo H. W. Velthuis, Rijksuniversiteit Utrecht, of Utrecht, the Netherlands, will present 'Kin Selection and the Evolution of the Social Bees (Apidae)' at 4 p.m. today in 1005 Haworth Hall.
The Center for East Asian Studies presents a lecture by Olos Eriksson, graduate of Tokyo Imperial University and the University of Stockholm, at 4 p.m. today in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union.
The KU women's studies program is sponsoring a program titled "Maternity and Parental Leave" at 7 p.m. today in the Lawrence Public Library auditorium.
A Campus Crusade for Christ meeting is scheduled for 7 p.m. today in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
Kansan staff writer
By Brenda Finnell
Group can help start businesses ACE advises,finds contacts
A 14-year-old in Potomac, Md., made more than $100,000 in 1987 with a lawn mowing, painting and consulting business.
A 23-year-old in Washington, D.C. made $1.2 million last year in his computer company.
Both are successful members of the Association of Collegiate Entrepreneurs.
we're serious about business, and we are producing serious businesses," said Doug Mellinger, national director of ACE.
In 1987, ACE's top 100 members, all
all over the world, sold more than
$2.5 billion. Mellenga's son, John
ACE, which has its headquarters at Wichita State University's Center for Entrepreneurship, helps young people who want to start their own businesses, providing business contacts and professional advice.
The association was founded in 1983 and has 8,000 members in 56 countries. It also has 200 college coaches and about six in Kansas, Mellinger said.
The KU chapter will meet at 7 p.m. today in the Pioneer Room of the Burge Union, Cardell said students from all University schools were
The University of Kansas chapter began in 1983 and now has about 13 members, said Bill Cardell, Overland Park junior and chair presi-
Cardell said the KU chapter had a difficult time recruiting members because it got no money from Student Senate last year. The chapter is applying for Senate funds this year.
Mellinger said ACE's mission was to be a network for young entrepreneurs worldwide, providing both professional and social guidance.
Kevin Wickliff from Legal Services for Students will speak at the meeting about legal aspects of entrepreneurship.
Professional aid includes linking students to people in the business community. This contact helps students when they want to set up business ventures or when they need advice about things such as loans, Mellinger said.
Kristin Grace, Overland Park sophomore and ACE member, said the guidance would help her.
"At this point in our lives, we don't know how to get in contact with people we need to," she said.
Grace said she hoped to own a gift shop or restaurant someday.
Social contacts also are important to ACE. Mellinger said that young people often were frustrated when beginning a business, but that ACE could help them meet people who had experienced similar problems.
Young people can greatly influence the business community, he said.
"They are playing a very active role in the whole economy of the country."
Many people today want to own their own businesses, Mellinger said. The recent stock market crash increased interest in that area.
Mellinger said corporations couldn't always provide employees with secure jobs. People in corporate jobs, unlike those who are their own bosses, face uncertainty about lay-offs or getting fired.
"People are saying, 'I want to be able to take control of my own life.' " he said.
Cardell said being an ACE member had been encouraging.
"It's inspirational to know if someone else can do it, so can you," he said.
The KU ACE chapter will try to recruit more members this semester. Cardell said he knew of many students who planned to start their own businesses when they graduated.
"I can't think of a better organization to help them out," he said.
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تطابق المعلومات (مثال 2) رمز سمع مجلد باستخدام المتغيرات المستخدمة، رمز بسط مسموح باستخدام المتغيرات
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, January 28, 1988
Campus/Area
3
Regents push next part of Margin plan
By loel Zeff
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA - Stanley Kopik, Board of Regents executive director, told legislators yesterday that the second part of the Margin of Excellence plan, the mission-related program enhancements, was as important as faculty salaries and should not be overlooked.
Koplik spoke to the House Approprials for the first time this season.
The mission-related enhancements total about $6 million and would be used for the individual mission of each Regents school. For instance, KU's Margin of Excellence mission
enhancement would replace some graduate teaching assistants with regular tenure professors, Koplik said.
Judith Ramaley, KU executive vice chancellor, said that KU had a dual mission, to be a comprehensive graduate and research university while maintaining a strong undergraduate program.
Gov. Mike Hayden's annual budget request did not include mission enhancements, except for $1.7 million for program enhancements at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
Koplik and the Regents, however,
are not backing down. "We're not
removing mission-related enhancements from our request. It was logical 30 days ago, it's logical now," Koplik said.
State Rep. Wanda Fuller, R-Wichita, said she was disappointed that Hayden didn't recommend money for her trip to Alaska where he do you go from here," she said.
See related story p. 11.
But State Rep. Jack Shriver, D-Akansas City, said he had a problem with the mission enhancements.
"Those things should be funded within the university," he said. "They have the authority to set their own priorities."
Kopik also emphasized faculty salaries during the meeting.
He said that in order to become competitive with the best universities in the country, the principal priority was to become more competitive in attracting faculty.
"The Margin of Excellence plan is driven by desire to, frankly, get our institutions back into the competitive game," Koplik said. "We need to remove ourselves from the spectator status and get into the game."
In the Margin of Excellence, the Regents have proposed that every unclassified category of the budget.
including teachers and instructors receive a five percent salary increase.
In addition, the Regents have proposed an additional increase to bring everyone to 100 percent parity with peer schools. The salary increases, however, are up to the individual institutions, said Ray Hauke, director of planning and budget for the Regents.
Kopilik said that the next step for the Regents would be to press further with the individuals of the committee appropriations Committee next week.
A. M.
Stanley Koplik
Poetry sessions give unrecognized talent chance for spotlight
Bv Iulie Adam
Kansan staff writer
(28)
While many KU students were sitting around the television watching basketball last night, about 30 people were sitting around a small, dimly lit room listening to poetry.
Jon Bell, organizer of the poetry reading session and a graduate teaching assistant in English, said he wanted to organize the reading session because he thought that many people in Lawrence possessed talents for poetry though most of their work was going unnoticed. He said he wanted to give people a chance to display their work.
Lawrence and KU poets gathered at the Sunflower House, 1406 Tennessee St., to read and discuss poems, short stories and music.
Doug Heller, Lawrence resident, plays guitar at a poetry-reading session and music jam. About 30 people gathered last night at the Sunflower House, 1406 Tennessee St., to exchange poems and stories.
Bell said he organized the reading session to bring poetry outside of the classroom so it would not be viewed as a form of art only for intellectuals. He said he wanted to teach them that he were not enrolled in classes at the University of Kansas and those who work nine-to-five jobs.
Bell said he was pleased with the attendance and the quality of the poems. Long and short English poems were read, but French, Chinese and Arabic poems were also recited.
He said he was glad the poems from different cultures were read so that people could concentrate on them, the poems of the poems, not only the words.
He said, "In good poetry, the words rub up against you like a lover."
Brad Rischer, Lawrence resident, said he had been going to poetry readings in Topeka. When he heard about last night's meeting, he brought his poetry.
Rischer said he had been writing poetry since he was 9 years old, and he decided to come to the reading to meet other poets and read his own poetry.
"It's always good to know your own kind." he said.
But not only poets showed up to
participate. Musicians also expressed their talents. Two men played guitars and sang, and one man played the piano while singing "Danny Boy."
John Gardner, Lincoln, Neb,
graduate student, read a five-
minute excerpt from a short story
about Beaver Cleaver getting
caught by his dad in the bathroom
with a Playboy magazine.
Order limit raised to speed deliveries
By Elaine Woodford
Kansan staff writer
University departments can make purchases of more than $500 more quickly under a new law that went into effect Dec. 1.
The KU purchasing office now can award purchases of up to $10,000. The old limit was $2,000.
KU was the first Regents school to receive the higher buying authority. According to the Regents budget department, the University of Kansas Medical Center and Wichita State University also have received permission to increase their purchasing limits to $10,000.
The purchasing office handles department requests for goods and equipment that total more than $500. Formerly, any request larger than $2,000 had to be approved by the state Division of Purchasing in Topeka.
Gene Puckett, KU director of purchasing, said the higher limit would decrease the average wait for equipment from 53 days to 19 days.
"It also means we have a lot more work to do," he said.
Keith Nitcher, University director of business affairs, said that departments would have to be careful not to overload the KU purchasing office, or delays eventually would develop there, too.
Jack Rose, director of lab chemistry, said that although the department hadn't made any large purchases yet, he thought the new limit would help the department.
"It will make the process significant anly faster," he said.
Nitcher said the higher purchasing limit would not necessarily mean more purchases, but would help to speed much-needed supplies and equipment to the departments.
"Purchasing is a function of how much money departments have in their budgets," he said. "They have been under budget constraints, and when money does become available, they usually have an immediate need for the equipment or supplies."
A. H. SCHNEIDER
Stansifer says aid may threaten peace
Ruth Jacobson/KANSAN
Charles Stansifer
KU Latin American Studies director says Guatemala Accord peace plan has promise
By Christine Martin Kansan staff writer
- Charles Stansifer
The threat of outside aid to the Nicaraguan contras may hurt the Central American peace plan, the director of the KU Center of Latin American Studies said yesterday.
Director Charles Stansifer was the chairman of the Commission on Compliance with the Central American Peace Accord. The 17-member committee was approved by a unanimous review of compliance with the treaty in Central America on Jan. 15-22.
"I believe that the Guatemala Accord peace plan is a rare moment in history," Stansifer told about 50 people at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. "Central America has often dreamed of restoring union and the record is full of failures."
I believe that the Guatemala Accord peace plan is a rare moment in history. Central America has often dreamed of restoring union and the record is full of failures.'
The presidents of Guatemala, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, El Salvador and Honduras signed the treaty on Aug. 7 in Esquipules, Guatemala. Costa Rican president Oscar Arias' peace initiatives led to the signing of the
director of the KU Center of Latin American Studies
"I believe that the Guatemala Accord peace plan is a rare moment in history," Stansifer told about 50 people at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. "Central America has often dreamed of restoring union and the record is full of failures."
treaty, which also is called the Guatemala Accord.
Stansifer reported the commission's findings in a speech titled, "The Guatemala Accord in Crisis." The commission compiled a 32-page report to distribute to the media and Congress, Stansifer said.
He said he wanted every member of Congress to have a copy of the report before the vote she submitted Feb. 3 on giving aid to the contras.
Stansifer said that El Salvador president Jose Duarte called the accord a second declaration of independence.
He said that the peace accord failed to persuade outside governments to cease all assistance to Central America.
"They believe they have seized the initiative." Stansfer said. "They want to solve the problem themselves without outside interference.
"It is an unusual status of United
Stansfer said the commission first met with scholars, diplomats and government officials for three days in San Jose, Costa Rica.
States-Central America relations. Before the treaty, Central America reacted to U.S. policy. In this case the U.S. is reacting to Central American policy."
At the same time, the presidents of the five countries also met in San Jose. This is the third time the presidents have met in compliance with the accord.
The commission broke into small groups that went to the five different countries to get personal evaluations of the peace process, Stansifer said.
He said that although the five countries signed the accord, "None of them have complied completely."
He said the accord called for a time for talks on compliance, which was Jan. 15-22. The accord also called for
The accord exhorted the governments to negotiate for a cease-fire. The presidents also agreed to give amnesty to political prisoners, to take responsibility for refugees and to set up a committee for international verification.
setting up national reconciliation commissions in each country, steps for democratization and the freedom of elections, and freedom of the press.
Stansifer said that Nicaragua had taken steps to comply with the accord by freeing 98 political prisoners and allowing a radio station and the opposition paper, La Prensa, to operate again.
All five countries have set up national reconciliation commissions, which were designed to represent the governments, churches, opposition groups and distinguished citizens.
Stanssifer said that even though the countries were moving toward compliance, there were signs of backtracking as well.
The level of violence in Central America has increased since the signing of the accord, he said, especially in Honduras.
"If it is a step forward, it must be considered a very small step." Stansifer said.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Opinion
Iowans have enviable power in picking next president
It's a big responsibility being Iowa. Not only does it have to bring home the bacon and raise a bunch of corn for a nation, but it also has to pick the next leader of the free world. Or at least decide who won't be.
About 200,000 Iowaans are expected to take a few hours Feb. 8 to do just that in the Iowa Caucuses. It's the first test of the presidential campaign, and the winner often goes on to great things. Jimmy Carter will long remember it. And after a big second-place finish in 1984, Gary Hart also owes Iowa. Probably money.
Because of its kingmaking abilities, candidates both credible and incredible move there to romance the voters. A Time magazine poll showed that 23 percent of Iowa's Republicans had met a candidate in person, compared to only 5 percent for non-Iowa Republicans. Twenty-three percent of Iowa Democrats also had met candidates, compared to 7 percent nationally.
If Kansas had been in that Time magazine poll, only 1 percent of Kansas Democrats probably could say they have even met a candidate. Because of native son Bob Dole's candidacy, the Republicans probably would report in at, oh, 3 percent.
It is an unfortunate reflection upon the fact that losers in Iowa, like rejected lovers, often refuse to take a chance on other states, such as Kansas. As a result, those states can only choose from a small band of "survivors." And the list is whitted to a point that some states can only affirm earlier results.
results. Not to say Iowa has failed, but it would be nice if everyone could have a say, or a ballot, before good candidates are eliminated because they couldn't cut it in one of 50 states. Perhaps a national primary, or several regional ones, should be considered.
But until then, it is Iowa's job to make the best choice. Good luck.
Todd Cohen for the editorial board
KU needs new lecture series
The University of Kansas should be embarrassed.
The University of Kansas should be embarrassed. Embarrassed that all the big names speak in the Landon Conference.
Lecture Series at KU
Embarrassments that KU does not have a large organized
institution that attaches important people to campus.
Embarrassed that if KU did have a good lecture series, there would be no place for these people to speak.
The Landon Lecture Series on Public Issues at K-State has grown into a series of increasing importance in its 21 years. It is financed by 450 patrons who donate $100 a year. That is $45,000 a year that the series has to attract the many important public officials, journalists and economists to the K-State campus.
campus.
KU would benefit from a similar setup. The three main lecture series at the University are restricted in the types of speakers they can recruit and in their financing. Money comes through the KU Endowment Association specifically earmarked for the Vickers, Spencer or Roberts lecture series.
A lecture series with contributing patrons supplying financing each year would be a beginning to drawing these big-name speakers to campus with greater continuity.
lody Dickson for the editorial board
Then KU could shed the embarrassment of being in the shadow of K-State's popular and enduring lecture series.
Other Voices
OSU faces add-drop controversy
no matter how many reasons are given to explain the new policy, the fact remains that one week still is not enough time for students to decide whether they should stay enrolled in a course. Yes, the previous policy of being able to drop up to the sixth week of school without transcript entry was too much. But one week is not enough time — even if the university had publicized the new deadlines.
It would be more sensible to extend the date of the drop deadlines by at least one week. An extra week would allow students to have a better idea of the work required in a course.
Students should have two weeks to decide whether they want to stay in a class.
The Daily O'Collegian Oklahoma State University
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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 mailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom, 111 Stuart-Finn Hall. Letters, guest columns 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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MAREY Chicago Tribune
Iowa
Feb 8th:
The Caucuses!
Iowa
Feb 9th
Iowa
Feb 8th:
The Caucuses!
Iowa
Feb 9th
Bush, Rather fight to be real men
The outcome of the George Bush-Dan Rather slugfest on the "CBS Evening News" Monday night will be debated long after the sports pundits have tried of counting the bruises Larry Holmes suffered at the hands of heavyweight champion Mike Tyson.
mike 1580:
Tyson left no doubt about the winner in his bout by knocking out the aging former champion in four rounds. Bush scored a unanimous decision that was announced in the public opinion polls the next morning.
The two battles are worth mentioning together because they were both aimed at the same audience: Real Men. During a television campaign that has been more a battle of images than of issues, Bush has had to contend with the "wimp" issue — an image of him as a limp-wristed sidekick to the gun-toting cowboy, Rogald Reagan.
Rightly or wrongly, people saw him as playing the role of Festus (or, Chester, to those who remember the original "Gunsmoke" program on radio and television), the semi-competent nerd who could park Marshal Dillon's horse but never touch the real man's six shooter.
Is it cynical to suggest that the vice president seized the opportunity to change that image during his live interview with a vampire who earned his spars ambush interviewing people on the CBS program?
Ted
Frederickson
Guest Columnist
If you believe the vice president's contention
BENNY M. HARRIS
that he reacted strongly to Rather's questions because he thought he would NOT be asked about his role in the year's top story, his administration's sale of weapons to the Ayatollah, please turn to the comics.
Question: If those of you who are still reading accept that Bush knew the questions were coming, then why did the vice president react so strongly — even hurling a personal insult at Rather about the time he walked off his newscast and left the screen blank?
Answer: For the same reason that Miller Brewing Company commercials regularly feature brawny jocks yelling at each other about Lite Beer Miller feared that its low calorie beer might have an image problem as a wimp beer to be avoided by "Real Men." Thus, we see big guys holding Lite beers in their hammy fists, screaming across barrooms.
TASTES GREAT! LESS FILLING!
LIKE FILLING!
When Bush screamed TASTES GREAT, Rather could not stop himself from responding, LESS FILLING.
The Rush-Rather debate was conducted at the
If viewers perceived that Bush was a real man capable of winning a shootout with Rafter, they learned something about Rafter as well. During this era of television campaigning dominated by images, Rather has become a TV personality himself and is unable or unwilling to keep himself out of the story.
same level as the commercial.
The content of Rather's questions was appropriate, but it was inappropriate and ineffective of him to join a personal screaming match, even if it was at Bush's invitation.
A journalist put in that situation should remember that an interview with someone who doesn't want to answer questions is like a tennis match. You want the ball back in the other guy's court so that he has to respond.
Rather should have lobbied the ball back to Bush by listening patiently to the vice president's response, then calmly and politely restating the question that went unanswered — the precise role that Bush played in the sale of U.S. arms to Iran.
Instead, Rather reacted like John McEnroe and ended up playing a key role in Bush's best campaign commercial thus far.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Brown has good ideas
I have regarded with interest the developments concerning Larry Brown's claim that the University of Kansas maintains a system in which many students have an inherent disadvantage. The negative reactions to Coach Brown's statement have dismayed me.
The authors of the several letters and editorials printed in the Kansan have interpreted Brown's statement too narrowly. From a logical standpoint, their refutations were, in fact, invalid. In a classic example of ad hominem argumentation, these individuals assumed that because Brown is a basketball coach, his claims should apply only toward athletes. The problems Brown identified go far beyond the concerns of the athlete, however. They involve a large sector of society, notably, the underprivileged poor and minorities.
Ted Frederickson is an associate professor of journalism
Brown is more than a coach — he is an educator in his own right. Furthermore, his unique position has allowed him to come into contact with students that the majority of the faculty and student body has not. Many of these students do not come from a "normal background," if "normal" is to be considered representative of the opportunities most KU students were present with prior to admission, or in dealing with these students should be recognized and respected. That Brown should champion their concerns is to be commended, not criticized.
Further examination of what Brown said
The point has been made that KU is a place of "higher learning," and therefore is justified in its requirements. An important exception should be made, however. The University of Kansas is a public institution, funded by public tax dollars. Its mission, then, should to provide "higher learning" to any of the public, regardless of background.
shows he had basis for his arguments. The core requirements for a BGS degree alone mandate math and communication skills considered "above basic" for many high schools. Adding insult to injury, KU offers little remedial assistance in comparison with the skills required. Curriculum requirements are nearly impossible to meet for a student (or not). All of this seems to characterize the University of Kansas as an elitist institution.
Should the Kansas Legislature adopt new admission guidelines, the University would become more elite. Such strict guidelines would serve as effective barriers for many who desire a college education. Considering the necessity of a college degree for economic advancement in today's society, it would seem that these barriers would also serve to prevent many individuals from climbing out of their lower socio-economic situations. The purpose of such guidelines would be assistance in this process. The University's current guidelines, and certainly the Board of Regents proposed guidelines, seem to make matters worse.
The opposite has proven to be the case. The University's curriculum requirements clearly favor individuals whose socio-economic background has provided them with the preparation necessary to succeed at KU. Conversely, individuals without this background are disfavored, and consequently, disallowed.
I am proud of the University and of its
academic tradition. However, changes are needed to see that the same opportunities are available to all. This would not make the University a lesser institution, rather, it would elevate its status in terms of importance to the state of Kansas and the nation. The mark of a good university is not the caliber of the students it attracts, but the caliber of the students it graduates.
Thomas L. Muller Minneapolis, Kan., junior
Focus on the real issues
As I picked up the Jan. 25 edition of the Kansan, two headlines leaped out at me: "Contra Plane Shot Down" and "Dole's Error?" Since the latter was shaded and enclosed in a box, I foolishly assumed that it must be more important. I was wrong. It was about a misprint in Sen. Dole's autobiography. Why, that shows such gross incompetence he should be forced out of the presidential race in shame. I can't wait to see what evils next week's headlines will tell. "Paul Simon seen joywalking in 1967." "Alexander Haig takes 12 items through 10 item express lane" or "Aides say Jackson cheats at Monopoly." When will this "manufactured" news stop?
There is no doubt that the integrity of the next president is something the American public must know about. But ever since Gary Hart proved he had the maturity of a 16-year-old, every trivial event of a candidate's life has been the subject of intense scrutiny. Enough already! The election is still 10 months away. I hope someday when I read an article about Dole or any other candidate, it explains his views on an issue. After all, it would be nice to know if anyone has any ideas on how to run the country for the next four years.
Louis H. Lietzen Leavenworth junior
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, January 28, 1988
5
Park
Continued from p.1
Randall Davis, owner of Colony Woods, tried to relieve some of the congestion by expanding lots on the east and south sides of the complex in September. But he was criticized by Lawrence City Commissioners, who said he added the parking without filing a revised site plan before the construction.
David Gunter, a city planner, said that the complex filed a site plan requesting additional parking in two areas.
"In the central drive of the complex, there are a couple of sizeable green areas" he said, "and they
wanted to convert that to parking."
want to convert that 18 parking. Guntert说 the plan also proposed to take three foot strips, the extreme south side of the complex and change an area currently used for parallel parking into 90-degree parking.
"The added paving would have created more parking in the area and still have the required aisle width," he said.
The commission approved new parking at Colony Woods with some provisions in October, one of them calling for marked fire lanes.
It did not approve a plan to add parking in the center of the complex. Guntert said the reason for the denial was based on drainage considerations.
Linda Finger, a city planner, said that nothing new had been done since then. "I think the complex does not want to follow through because of conditions placed on the plan by the City Commission." she said.
Gunter said that on some occasions, a site plan is approved and owners decide not to act on it.
Collier said he saw the situation differently. "The city may say they approved the request with conditions," he said, "but we say they denied the request.
"Think of it as if Colony Woods said they would like to build two parking spaces, and the city said they would approve it if the complex built only one," Collister said.
and a Colony Woods resident, said the threat of the towing zone made it even harder to park now. "A lot of people just parked wherever they could," he said. "It makes it a lot more difficult to find a space."
Ed Morrison, Manhattan junior
Collister said he was unaware of what would happen next. "I don't know if the owners plan to do anything right now; I'm not privy to plans," he said. "But I think the owners will do whatever they can to improve the situation."
Guenther said there was one good thing about parking at Colony Woods. "At least the spaces are wide. At least they are compared to the ones in the yellow zones on campus," she said.
Hall residents want say on set-up
Oliver Hall, like McCollum, Ellsworth and Hashinger residence halls, houses both men and women. In the other co-ed halls, men and women share floors but live in separate wings. In Oliver Hall, men and women live on separate floors. The different set-up in Oliver Hall exists to give students more choices in living arrangements, said Ken Stoner, director of student housing.
Oliver Hall government again is planning to poll residents about the hall's coef status, Mark Briggs, vice president of Oliver, said Tuesday.
University students living in Oliver Hall may yet get a chance to tell others how they want to live.
A poll would give Oliver Hall residents an opportunity to tell officials whether they preferred to continue the present arrangement or to have
The poll of Oliver residents that was proposed last semester was not conducted as planned. Instead, the Oliver Hall government gave priority to its budget and to other, more pressing problems, Briggs said.
men and women living on the same floors.
By David Sodamann Kansan staff writer
Briggs was in charge of last semester's proposed survey. He said the hall government put the poll on hold because there was not enough interest, time or manpower to get the job done at term's end.
"I fully intend to make sure they'll have their say," Briggs said of his constituents.
Briggs said he intended to have a new poll completed within the next month.
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6
Thursday, January 28, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Peace Corps recruiting on campus
By Dayana Yochim Kansan staff writer
Aggressive recruitment of older people and minorities is part of a revised Peace Corps strategy, according to a representative of the group who was on campus this week.
Marshaline Letcher, the representative, said that about 12 percent of Peace Corps volunteers were over 50 years old.
"The people in the countries we have heard have that America is very diverse," Letcher said. "They want diversity in the people that represent us."
Letcher said older people were ideal candidates for Peace Corps work because they had 20-25 years of work experience.
But older volunteers sought for experience, officials say
There are currently 5,600 Peace Corps volunteers in 62 third world
countries.
Dana Hallman, public affairs manager for the Peace Corps, said from her Kansas City, Kan., office that older people were highly regarded overseas, and that the people in the program still were active.
"These people opt to participate in the program because they feel their lives have been fulfilled after they retire," Hallman said. "In the Peace Corps, they can put their skills to work where they are badly needed and wanted.
"We really try and put them in a position that doesn't require a lot of strenuous work," Hallman said.
"But a lot of these people want to experience a different type of lifestyle."
The Peace Corps recruits older volunteers, whom it defines as over 50 years old, through lectures and mass mailings. Hallman said.
Although the type of volunteer has been shifting toward older U.S. residents, the Peace Corps still actively recruits on college campuses.
Rob McRae, a Peace Corps recruiter, said that advertising on campuses was the best way to reach a number of eligible participants.
McRae and Letcher were recruiting at the Kansas Union yesterday and Tuesday.
Letcher said the Peace Corps came to the University of Kansas twice a year to recruit because KU was the top contributor of volunteers in Kansas. There are 16 KU graduates now serving as Peace Corps volunteers.
The government allotted the Peace Corps $146 million for fiscal year 1987.
Letcher said that about 25 students got applications in the two days they were recruiting at KU. She said that that was more than last fall.
Looking for ON CAMPUS?
Shuttle
Please see page 2
Continued from p.1
a 1956 KU graduate, said he believed it was important to eliminate the uncertainties and risks involved in shuttle flights. But, he said, it also is necessary to make technological advancements.
"There's always going to be a risk in research and development projects like the space program, but I
Story Idea?
think it would be wrong to create an environment that doesn't allow one to progress," Engle said from his home in Houston.
For now, NASA has decided to conduct a third test of the trouble-some rocket boosters before attempt number 1. NASA officials expect to take place
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Living with AIDS
Barbara Swartz, a NASA public information specialist, said the space administration had made several changes since the accident.
For students who care about people, this program will help you understand what it is like to cope with AIDS. Several persons with AIDS and their loved ones will share their stories. Virginia Allen, coordinator of the Good Samaritan Project, will introduce the speakers.
Woodruff Aud.
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1015 W. 23rd, Lawrence, KS
841-5110
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, January 28. 1988
Jacque Janssen, arts/features editor
Living
7
Living life in the fast-food lanes
BEEF KING
Kline
By Michael Carolan
Kansan staff writer
You've got a 12:30 class, but, for once, it's above 40 degrees outside, and the sun is shining. Who needs class? Instead, you decide to go for a drive. Your stomach starts to grow, and suddenly, 23rd Street, like a pool in a hot and dusty desert, appears before you.
What's it going to be today? McDonald's? You are there two days ago. Burger King? You had a Whopper with cheese and no tomato there yesterday. Taco Bell? You're sick of Nacho Bell Grandes. Border Bandido? Rax? Taco Grande? Nah. Kurtviek Fried Chicken?
After sorting through the array of colorful, eye-catching billboards that you have driven by at least 10 times a day, you spot Wendy's, inviting you, a bon-appetit hamburger combo, to once again taste the fast-food menu down so well. Usually juicy, sometimes overcooked, sometimes a little cold, yet always somehow the same.
Fast food. It's anywhere and everywhere. It's convenient, good-tasting and fast. It's for the college student who is late for work. It's for the student who is cramming for finals. It's for the student who hates residence-hall food. And it's for the student who opens the refrigerator and says, "There's nothing good to eat in there."
What about when you're out late, have had a few beers
and feel as if you are starving. At least Burger King know that they are hungry. They are open until 3 Friday and Saturday.
How about when you're out shopping, have been standing all day and have a few blocks to go. Some fast-food place has your meal already waiting for you. Even Massachusetts街 boasts a Taco John's.
Lawrence has more than 36 fast-food restaurants, so where do you go?
How about hamburgers? How about fish? How about chicken? They're all fast, convenient and filling. Burger King or Dairy Queen? Is it the Whaler with cheese, the extra mayonnaise or the Bacon Double Cheese burger?
Bob Tapp, Overland Park senior, frequents Burger King for him. He's always in a rush to get work on him.
"Yeah, you can find me munching down at the King," he said. "It's quick, cheap and tastes good."
For some, though, Burger King has a different meaning.
“It's after-party-drunk food, you know, at two in the morning,” says Shari Wilkens, Liberal junior. “Have you seen the lines there at 2 a.m.?”
For the more refined beef palate, there Wendy's, Rax
regular flavors, of course, there's always the salad bar.
the pasta bar, or the Mexican bar. But you can fix those things at home if you have the time.
Fast food for Chris McElhinney, Kansas City, Mo.
sophomore means Arby's
"I eat there about two times a week when I don't like what they're fixing at the house," he said. "Usually, I eat their super roast beef sandwich."
Hardee's, Sonic and Bucky's Drive In also are waiting for you. You can be the Double Chuckie with the No 2 or Bucky's 'Koooook' "Double Chuckie"
Then there's the world famous billions-and-billions-served McDonald's. The greens you want are already in their chef's salad. The greens you want on your burger are already on their McDLT. Big Mac maybe? Quarter Pounder? Of course you have to have your fries and large Coke.
Then there's Mexican food. Taco Bell, Border Bandido,
Taco John's, or Granate? Taco Bell Granale or Super Burrito? With lettuce, tomatoes, cheese, onions and
Would you prefer hot or mild sauce? With dried beans, beef toastad or Potato Oles? Students flock to get a flavor of the South.
BEEF KING
Kiwi
Julie Vaskov, Albuquerque, N.M., junior, loves the Combination Burrito at Taco Bell.
"It's not your ordinary fast food. It's different," she said. "It's convenient, fast and good."
Ann Kohl, dietitian at Watkins Hospital, said. "Fast food has many more calories than you need for any one meal. It is high in saturated fats and high in cholesterol."
She said that fast food tended to be low in fiber but high in starches and had two to three times the amount of carbohydrate.
"Americans love meat and potatoes." Kohl said. "We have an overemphasis on two food groups and an underemphasis on the other two."
But what about Big Macs at McDonald's?
"It's hard to get all your nutritional needs through fast food." Kohl said. "Vitamin A and C, which you find in fruits and vegetables, and calcium, which is in milk, are not a part of the average fast-food diet."
Praising the pete Zaaaaa
Marie Cross, associate professor of human development, who teaches a course in health education, said a person could eat fast food if he did it in moderation and with a knowledge of what he was eating.
"If you're tired and just got home from work, sometimes fast food is better because time is a commodity and fast food takes care of that," she said.
By Michael Carolan
Kansan staff writer
The television is on, and your stomach is empty. But there is no food to go in it. It's late, and one wants to go out to bring back some food to go with "Late Night with David Letterman."
You are hungry, though, and you hear distant rumblings from other stomachs in the room. None of the fast food places are open late, and no one really wants to get off the couch. So you call out for a delivery of pizza.
KING
Pizza must be one of the most widely eaten foods in town. Pizza offers an escape from the fast-food hustle and to taste something other than those familiar processed burgers. With mushrooms, mozzarella, buttery crust or anchovies, pizza offers vegetables, cheese, meat and bread, all in one snug and sometimes ooing piece. Nutritious as it may be, there is a price.
"You SEE, I WAS JUST SITTING THERE EATING MY THIRD PIZZA THIS WEEK - AND PoOF!
"It really has nutritional value for students because the four food groups are represented, but they are paying a price for it," says Ann Kohl, dietitian at Watkins Hospital. "It's high in calories and high in fat."
and students are on business.
"When students aren't here, we're not here, at
Pizza is nutritional, but it is eaten so often that it is practically taken for granted.
"It's very competitive," says a manager at Pyramid Pizza, 507 W. 14th St. "You can't open the paper without (seeing) one or two coupons inside."
There's no shortage of pizza joints, though. More than 10 pizzerias compete to roll out pies to meet the students' fancy.
least most of the time," he says. "They make up a major part of the business."
a major part of the business.
So where do students go to get pizza?
So where do students go to get pizza?
If you're eating out or having it delivered and if it's at night or during the day, pizza is right at hand.
Checkers and Pizza Shuttle deliver late at night.
Pizza advertisements bombard the pizza lover with the messages, "we deliver during lunch," "we deliver free," "we deliver free and fast" or "we deliver anywhere in Lawrence."
And pizza coupons dance all over the newspapers, tantalizing people with offers like, "two for the price of one," "one dollar off," "free soft drinks," "two toppings for the price of
one," or "we pile it on." There are pizza wars in law, and students are taught in the com-
Mazzio's, Pizza Shoppe, Pizza Hut, Domino's,
Valentino's and Godfather's offer delelectable pizazs. All have distinct flavors at arvring prices.
And most places, if you're eating out, have salad bars that have every vegetable topped on your pizza and then some.
"Pizza is instant gratification for when I don't want to study but have to," says Michelle Paradis, St. Louis senior. "I definitely have delivered what I must to lazy to go get it myself or
For the bargain pizza lover, there are latenight deliveries.
For not-so-late-nighters, a pizza joint is a good place to get a quick bite of lunch.
"It's cheap, greasy, stick-to-the-bottom-of-the-box pizza," said Patty Jenners, Glenwood, Iowa, senior. "Pizza is good toward the end of the week. You can eat out of food and haven't got to the store yet."
"I'll go to Pizza Hut and get the Personal Supreme," says Allison Schrock, Lawrence junior. "When I'm in a hurry, it's convenient."
Counting Calories
Arby's
Regular Roast Beef 338
Beef and Swiss 488
Swiss King 675
Roast Beef Deluxe 488
Burger King
Double Beef Whopper 863
Onion Rings 263
Whaler w/ cheese 638
Whopper w/ cheese 750
Hardees
Big Roast Beef 488
Chicken Filet 525
Fish Sandwich 525
Ham and Cheese 375
McDonald's
Big Mac 563
Filet-O-Fish 450
French Fries 225
Quarter Pounder w/ cheese 525
Rax
Big Rax 563
B.B.C. 638
Chicken Sandwich 563
Turkey Bacon Club 488
Taco Bell
Bean Burrito 338
Burrito Supreme 450
Taco Supreme 225
Taco Bell Grande 413
Wendy's
Single 450
Chili 225
French Fries 338
Frosty 375
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Thursday, January 28, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
NationWorld
VIOLENCE IN COLOMBIA: Army units rolled into Colombia yesterday to help police enforce President Virgilio Barco's emergency measures against drug traffickers, leftist guerrillas and right-wing death squads.
CONGRESSMAN WON'T TESTIFY:Rep. Henry B. Gonzalez, D-Texas, chairman of the House Banking Subcommittee on Housing and Community Development, threatened yesterday to subpoena Housing Secretary Samuel R. Pierce Jr. if he continues to refuse the panel's request to testify before it.
TOXIC WASTE DILEMMA: The Environmental Protection Agency, buffered by budget concerns and a continued public outcry, has shelved plans to allow experimental incineration of toxic waste at sea. EPA officials backed away from what, until recently, they had held out as a promising solution to the nation's toxic-waste dilemma.
TROOP INVOLVEMENT PROTESTED: Democratic presidential candidate Gov. Michael S. Dukakis said yesterday that his state would go to court in an effort to head off federal orders sending Massachusetts National Guard troops *Honduras and Panama.*
CONTROLLERS MEET: Leaders of an amtraffic controllers union, formed after President Reagan broke a 1981 walkout, pledged at their first meeting yesterday to deal with grievances legally, and discounted the possibility that the new union would ever strike.
AGGRESSIVE AIDS EDUCATION: Surgeon General C. Everett Koop said yesterday, during the first global AIDS summit, that the U.S. AIDS education program, though generally not as explicit as those of less-conservative European countries, has nonetheless been aggressive. Also yesterday, U.S. Assistant Secretary for Health Dr. Robert E. Windom told the summit's 650 delegates that the United States would mail a brochure on the deadly virus to every U.S. household by mid-1988.
POST-WAR AFGHAIANSTAN: Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard A. Shevardnadze said yesterday night that the Kremlin would have no say in who governs post-war Afghanistan, and that any members of the current Afghan leadership are welcome to move to the Soviet Union.
SOVIETS MATCH AID: The Soviet Union is giving Ethiopia 250,000 tons of wheat to help feed millions of drought victims, matching U.S. pledges for the African nation, it was reported yesterday.
LEFTISTS, CONTRAS TO MEET: Nicaragua's leftist Sandinista government and the U.S.-supported Contra rebels sit down together for the first time today to discuss terms of a cease-fire on which they are poles apart and unlikely to agree.
IRAQ ATTACKS TANKERS: Iraqi warplanes attacked a Cypriot tanker loaded with Iranian oil early yesterday, then returned nine hours later to raid another ship off the Iranian coast, shipping executives said.
WAR CRIMES DEBATED: A shaken John Demjanjik grabbed a courtroom microphone yesterday and angrily hissed "You are a liar, liar, liar!" in Hebrew at Eliyah Rosenberg, a Holocaust survivor who accused the retired autoworker from Ohio of Nazi war crimes. Defense lawyers called Rosenberg back to the stand because of a 1945 statement in which Rosenberg claimed to have seen the notorious death camp guard, known as "Ivan the Terrible," clubbed to death.
ECONOMY EXPANDS: The economy expanded at an unexpectedly brisk 4.2 percent annual rate from October through December despite the steepest decline in consumer spending in more than seven years, the government reported yesterday.
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Note: Former Peace Corps volunteers will be on hand to answer questions following the 25 minute film. And it's free!
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The Movie
10
A man pouring water over a small lake. Three children sit nearby.
A
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Worlds of Fun is conducting an audition tour in search of the best in Midwestern talent to appear in our 1988 show program. If you sing (pop, rock, show tunes), or dance (jazz only), you can earn over $5,000 performing six days per week during the summer, and weekends in the spring and fall.
"All The World's A Stage" at Worlds of Fun, from our lively 50's-60's rock revue, STAX OF WAX, to the all-new musical spectacular at the Tivoli Music Hall.
Performing at Worlds of Fun can be a great part time job, or that important First Step. It's fun, professional experience and terrific exposure. More than 1,300,000 Worlds of Fun visitors are waiting to discover you!
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No jobs are available for drammatic actors, or instructionalists.
THE CLOSEST AUDITIONS:
• LAWRENCE, KANSAS:
Thursday, Feb. 4 at the University of Kansas
Kansas Union—Kansas Room (level 6)
3:00 P.M. (Registration begins at 2:30 P.M.
• KANSAS CITY (SOUTH):
Sunday, Feb. 14 at the Doubletree Hotel
(off Att 69 Highway and College Blvd.)
10100 College Blvd.
Overland Park, KS
9:00 A.M. (Registration
begins at 8:30 A.M.)
6
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, January 28, 1988
Sports
9
Nebraska stuns Jayhawks by taking free-throw war
By Elaine Sung
Kansan sports writer
LINCOLN, Neb. - It was Kansas' recurring nightmare - a game that came down to a free-throw shooting contest.
For Nebraska, it was a fair tale at its best, with an unlikely hero in forward Beau Reid. Reid, a 6-foot-7 freshman, launched a 16-foot jump shot with 1 second left in the game to beat the Jayhawks 70-68.
Kansas drops to 12-6 overall and 1-2 in the Big Eight. When Nebraska is 10, Kansas takes the lead.
Reid, who was fouled twice within 20 seconds in the closing minutes, came through with the shot after Nebraska grabbed the loose ball.
It felt good," Reid said. "I con-
tended and saw nothing but the rim.
"I knew it was going in as soon as I laughed, a little shaky getting there, we said
The closing minutes featured fouls, turnovers and free-throw shooting.
"It's a killer, we get control and we can't make any free throws," said Kansas coach Larry Brown. "We were scared to death. You can't win when you play that way. We are not that good. We are not a very good basketball team. Good basketball teams don't let this happen.
Nebraska had a lower free-throw percentage than Kansas in the game at just over 70 percent, while the Hawks shot 75 percent from the line.
"We don't have leadership or anyone to step forward."
But in the second half, the Cornhuskers shot nearly 78 percent from the line while the Jayhawks shot only 71 percent.
Just as in the Notre Dame game, Kansas took control in the first half. At halftime, the Jayhawks were ahead 40-28. The Jayhawks maintained the lead early in the second half, and they extended it to 16 points than 12 minutes left after a baseline shot by forward Chris Piner.
But forward Pete Manning, who had foul trouble in the first half, came through for the Huskers with the key baskets in the second half.
His two free throws with 9:40 left cut the Jawhays' lead to 10 points. Pete Manning's next possession with 6:50 left cut that lead down to eight.
Kansas' lead dwindled even further when it failed to connect on free throws, even though it had numerous chances at the line.
Kansas guard Otis Livingston missed the front end of a one-and-one with 2 1/2 minutes remaining, and had another save a free throw, 15 seconds later.
Pete Manning cut the lead down to four with a lavin off a fast break
Newton made both his free throws after a foul by Reid, but a Henry T. Buchanan three-point shot, his third shot, cut the Kansas lead down to three.
But Buchanan fouled Livingston, and while Nebraska called a time-out, the crowd started chanting "Otis, Otis."
With less than a minute left,
Buchanan launched a 16-foot jump.
She landed on the landing pad.
Livingston withstood the pressure and made the first free throw, but failed to connect on the second shot, and the rebound went to Buchanan.
"I tried not to think about it," Livingston said after the game, shaking his head. "I don't know what happened."
With 24 seconds left, Danny Manning, who finished the night with 21 points and five rebounds, fouled forward Derrick Vick. Vick had an excellent shooting night, scoring 16 points, grabbing six rebounds and shooting 6-for-9 from the line.
Kansas (68)
Nebraska 70 Kansas 68
Manning 39 M FG FT F 1 A A F 21
Manning 39 5-13 11-3 F 1 A 4 T 19
Piper 21 7-4 6-3 F 1 A 2 10
Piper 29 3-3 4-5 F 4 2 10
Pritchard 29 4-6 1-5 F 2 3 9
Livingston 29 1-2 1-3 F 1 2 1
Hains 19 5-2 0-1 F 3 2 4
Hains 3 0-0 1-0 F 2 4
Normore 4 0-1 0-2 F 1 0 1
Barry 4 1-1 0-2 F 1 0 1
Barry 4 1-1 0-2 F 1 0 1
Gueldern 16 1-4 2-2 F 2 2 4
Totals 16 2-4 22-4 27 13 23
Percentages: FG: 524, FT: 750. Threepoint goals: 0-3 (Pitchard 2) .Blocked Shots: 5 (Manning 3). Turnovers: 16 (Livingston 5). Technicals: None.
| | M | FG | FT | A | R | F | T |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Rekewegw | 8 | 6-9 | 3-5 | 4 | 1 | 5 | 15 |
| Vick | 23 | 5-8 | 2-6 | 4 | 0 | 3 | 14 |
| Buchanan | 35 | 5-7 | 2-6 | 4 | 1 | 3 | 21 |
| Buchanan | 33 | 7-11 | 4-2 | 1 | 4 | 1 | 21 |
| Johnson | 32 | 1-8 | 3-4 | 3 | 6 | 4 | 1 |
| Johnson | 15 | 0-1 | 3-4 | 3 | 6 | 4 | 1 |
| Scales | 15 | 0-1 | 0-1 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 1 |
| Reid | 16 | 1-2 | 0-0 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 1 |
| PoorLeistog | 16 | 0-2 | 0-0 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 1 |
| | 40 | 24-43 | 18-26 | 21 | 13 | 25 | 70 |
Percentages: FG. 558, FT. 704. Three-point goals: 3-4 (Buchanan 3-4). Blocked Shots: 2 (Vick 2). Turnovers: 17 (Rekewg 5). Technicals: None.
Hall: Kansas 40-28.
Δ: 14.015
KANSAS 25 15 KANSAS Kusky
Kevin Pritchard. Kansas guard, and Henry Buchanan. Nebraska guard, scramble for a loose ball.
Last-second shot turns invisible freshman into Nebraska hero
Sports Editor
By Anne Luscombe
LINCOLN, Neb. — It had been toasted as a Manning double feature — Danny for Kansas, Pete for Nebraska — but in the last two months of the game, it was the Beau Reid show.
The 6-foot-7 freshman forward, all but invisible for the first 39:58, put in the winning basket to give Nebraska a 70-68 victory, a score hauntingly familiar to another Big Eight Conference team this year.
The Cornhuskers upset Missouri by the same score Jan. 16 here at the Bob Devaney
For Kansas. Reid's last-second jumper
was a climax to a nightmare. For Reid, it was a dream come true.
"I used to be one of those people who dreamed about shooting that last-second shot all the time on the playground, and now I got it," Reid said.
"It felt good. I just concentrated on the rim and I knew it was going in when I shot it, but it was a little shaky going in. I was trying to get the ball to E.J. (Eric Johnson) because we didn't think his man could stop him. I didn't think he had any control and knocked it free. I thought it was going out of bounds. I knew time was running out, so I took two drills and shot."
A frustrated Larry Brown stood helpless on
the sideline as Reid's shot flew toward the hoop.
"Yeah, I expected it to go in." Brown said. "We had a chance to go after a loose ball and we didn't do it. We knew what they liked to run at the end. We defended it well but couldn't get the loose ball. If you can't get there, then the ball is on the floor, that's the game."
Nebraska's last play was designed to go to the open man, and the Huskers were hoping it would be sharpshooting guard Henry Buchanan. The 27-year-old senior had brought Nebraska to within two points after sinking his third three-pointer and following up with a jump shot less than a minute later. Buchanan was open, but Reid made the play.
Buchanan didn't know the final score when the fans rushed to the floor, nor was he aware of the connection to the Missouri game.
"Ah I know is that we won. He said.
Nebraska coach Danny Nee was elated but shocked that his team had pulled off another unset.
"We are just really happy to get two at home against two great teams." Nee said. "We can be a factor at home. We know we are a limited basketball team. We know our strengths and our weaknesses, we just played above ourselves. This is a good confidence builder for Bean Reid."
Reid was put back in the game with 3:46
left when senior forward Jeff Re蜂ew fouled out, leaving with 13 points. Re had no fouls and no points, so See was using him to take pressure off senior forward Derrick Vick.
"Coach Nee decided with two minutes left to start fouling again." Reid said. "He picked two men to foul, and one was mine. He wanted me to foul because Derrick already had three fouls. I've been slowly rebuilding my confidence, and coach told me when I was going back in for Jeff to shoot if the ball was coming my way."
It did and he did, and Reid became the Cornhuskers' hero for the night and the Jayhawks' villain.
Jayhawks' victory a dream come true for center
Kansan sports writer
By Keith Stroker
The dream that junior center Deborah Richardson had came true.
With seven seconds left in regulation in last night's Kansas-Oklahoma State women's basketball game, theodore hit a baseline shot to tie the game. The Olyshaws went on to defeat the Cowgirls, 72-70 in overtime.
The victory left Kansas at 12-6 overall and 2-3 in the Big Eight Conference. Oklahoma State lost its third game in a row, falling to 13-5 overall and 3-2 in the conference.
Oklahoma State's Jamie Siess just missed a half-court shot at the end of regulation that would have won the game for the Cowgirls.
Richardson, playing in her first game since injuring her knee two weeks ago, said she had a dream the day she played in the Jayhawks would win in overtime.
"It was a weird feeling," Richardson said. "The score was a little different, and it was Sandy Shaw that tied the game with a three-pointer, but it happened almost like I dreamed of exciting and a big wi for the team.
Richardson said the plan was to go to senior forward Shaw for a three-point shot, but when she got the ball, Richardson said, she relaxed, took the shot and made the basket. It felt great, she said.
Richardson said she might have strained her knee again, but that it wasn't that bad. She played with a lot of pain, but said it would not keep her out of any games.
Kansas coach Marian Washington said the Jayhawks were prepared for a challenge.
“Our defensive pressure was the best I've seen all season.” Washington said. “We emphasized putting our team on one hand, and we put the team did what we had to do to win.”
Oklahoma State freshman poim guard Liz Brown, the Oklahoma prelayer of-the-year last year, displaying skill-handling skills. Washington said
Senior guard Cheryl Jackson started her first game for the Jayhawks, mainly because of her quickness. Washington said.
"Cheryl was the person we were looking for to slow her down," Washington said. "Brown is a tree guard. We just tried to wear bet down."
"This game was the one we were
The Cowgirls played a 2-1-2 zone defense in the first half, while Kansas played a pressing man-to-man defense.
Jackson said she was a little nervous about starting, but that once the nurse had arrived, he
looking for," Jackson said. "This win really boosts our confidence. We feel we can still win the conference. I think we are starting to play the way we were capable of all along."
The Jayhawks came out in the second half and extended their seven-point halftime lead to 13 at 9:26. Washington put in her two big centers at that point, Richardson and sophomore Lynn Page.
Oklahoma State scored 13 unanswered points to tie the score at 39. Washington said the team did not play badly in that stretch, but that the Cowgirls were just too quick for the people she had in the game.
The Cowgirls were led by Siess with 17 points. Alisa Duncan added 16.
The Jayhawks' next game is 7 p.m.
the team's home game. If they
play the Kansas State Wildcats
Sharp 4 0-0.2, Strongher 2 0-0.5, Bauer 4 4-12
Sharp 4 0-0.2, Strongher 2 0-0.5, Bauer 4 4-12
Page 3.006, Richardson 3.284, Amod 1.002
Page 3.006, Richardson 3.284, Amod 1.002
55
Udornam 6/13, 8/14, 9/13, 11/23, 7/22, 7/17, 17, Hughes 6-0 14-2,
Duncan 7/6-0, 18, Brown 2-0, 4rown 1-0, Fisher 1-2, James
1-0, 2-0, Cox 0-0, 0, 0, Heper 1-0, 2-0,
Totals 27 12, 21 12
Kansas 72,
Oklahoma State 70
Halftime Kansas 31-24. Total foilokонаma State 12,
Kansas 20. Foulked out Kansas 13. Baker three.
State 14. Rebounded Oklahoma State 45 (Jordan 12),
Brown (7), Kansas 21 (Bradley 1). Technical None.
Deborah Richardson, Kansas center, looks to pass to a teammate. Richardson had eight points and seven rebounds in last night's game. Kansas defeated Oklahoma State 72-70 in overtime.
Bo-maha?
The Associated Press
OMAHA, Neb. — Bo Jackson might begin the 1988 baseball with the American Association Omaha Royals, Kansas City manager John Wathan said yesterday.
Jackson is not guaranteed a spot on Kansas City's 24-man roster this spring, Wathan said.
"Bo knows he is going to have to make our club," said Wathan, who managed Omaha for most of the 1987 season before moving up to Kansas City when Billy Gardner was fired.
Jackson, the 1985 Heisman Trophy winner from Auburn, spent his entire rookie season with Kansas City in 1987. He hit 22 home runs but slumped in the second half of the season. After the baseball season, Jackson played six games for the NFL's Los Angeles Raiders.
Wathan said Jackson would be challenged for the starting left field job by Gary Thurman, who hit .283 and stole 57 bases for Omaha last season.
Kansas City veterans Thad Bosley and Jim Eisenreich also will contend for the starting spot, Wathan said.
"Gary Thurman played very well for me in Omaha last year. Bo Jackson played very well the first half in Kansas City. He made all the plays, he dove, he threw runnels out, he hit the ball well. He had a tremendous first half." Watha said.
Cyclones blown away
The Associated Press
Grant scored 20 of his points in the first half when the Sooners used two big runs to open leads of 18 and 17 points. He then scored six of Oklahoma's first eight after intermission as the Sooners broke out to a 61-40 lead, then cruised from there.
NORMAN, Okla. — Harvey Grant scored 30 points and grabbed 12 rebounds last night as 10k-ranked Oklahoma sprinted to a 109-86 Big Eight victory over No. 12 Iowa State.
Oklahoma, leading the nation with an average of 107.7 points per
The Big Eight's top scorer, Jeff Graver of Iowa State, was slowed by a bad big toe and finished with just six points, 19 below his average, in 23 minutes. The Cyclones also played without starting guard Gary Thompson, who was ill with the flu.
Brown, facultv discuss KU curriculum
IOWA state trailed only 14-11 at the 15:35 mark of the first half, then failed to score in the next four minutes while Oklahoma scored 14 straight. Grant scored six in a row at one point.
game, ran its record to 17-2 overall and 3-1 in the conference. Iowa State dropped to 16-4 and 2-2.
The Associated Press
Coach Larry Brown, who complained about the curriculum at the University of Kansas after one of his players was declared ineligible for the spring semester, discussed his experiences with faculty members Tuesday.
Brown declined comment about the closed meeting, saying he would answer questions at his regular weekly news conference today. But the head of the faculty panel that met with him called it a rewarding sharing of information. Another member said it provided greater insight into the needs of all students, not just athletes.
Faculty Executive Committee.
That prompted Brown to remark that while KU had made a real effort to tutor students and monitor their progress, it wasn't enough.
The controversy began when start-ing center Marvin Branch, a junior college transfer in his first year at Kansas, was declared academically ineligible after the fall semester.
Brown discussed his concerns in greater detail Tuesday with the
"What I'm saying is I don't think we've hit the problem," he said. "We don't have a curriculum set up for our students who don't have a normal background, a curriculum that gives us to be successful. We don't have that."
She said the faculty members made clear to Brown "that it isn't faculty versus the athletic board, or athletes, but that we all want our students to be successful. We want what's best for them."
"A lot of allegations had been made. They'd not been made directly to the faculty, but about the faculty, and I think it was very rewarding to have the information shared, and I hope it was useful to him, too," said Evelyn Swartz, FacEx chairwoman.
Mel Dubnick, associate professor of public administration, said Brown and the committee discussed some specific concerns about individual basketball players and used their expertise in a general problem that existed at KU.
"We finally see it's not a narrow issue of Larry Brown mouthing off about the faculty," Dubnick said, but "we're trying to be is being squeezed out of this place."
---
Another committee member, Ron Francisco, associate professor of political science, said that growing student enrollment in recent years had prompted KU's professional schools to raise admission requirements.
10
Thursday, January 28, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Former high school basketball star McCool has found a home on KU swimming team
By Tom Stinson
Kansan sports writer
Glancing through the Kansas swimming media guide, one might notice Pat McCool's outstanding high school credentials.
Dale Fulkerson/KANSAN
What's a high school basketball star doing on a college swim team?
The Huntsville, Ala., sophomore was All-City during his junior and senior year and second team All-State his senior year. He was also named to the Alabama Sports Festival and region teams in basketball
"I was plagued with injuries my senior year, causing my basketball scholarship opportunities to fall through," the 6-foot-5 McCool said.
"So my brother Chris, who swam here last year, called and said, 'Come to Kansas and give swimming a try.' I bought the idea right away."
Chris McCool was a four-year letterman for the Jayhawks and was a member of the Bronx Jets.
Coach Gary Kempf said Kansas was interested in McCool but did not recruit him because of his lack of swimming background.
"We wanted him because of his athletic ability," Kemp said. "If you have a really good athlete with some swimming ability, they'll probably develop into a fine swimmer over their career."
Along with his basketball honors, McCool was a letterman in baseball and swam sparingly in a recreational summer league.
Athletes run in McCool's family. His brothers Mike and Brian were college athletes along with Chris. Mike was a swimmer at Columbia and Brian was a baseball player at Vanderbilt.
Before McCool's senior year, he
was asked to be on the swim team but
Pat McCool
declined because he wanted to con- centrate on basketball.
However, after dislocating both ankles, having knee surgery and breaking his nose, all within a year, his final season of basketball didn't end up as he had planned.
"When I broke my nose, I had to switch to the outside," said McCool, whose strong point was his inside game. "My averages went down and the college coaches started paying less attention to me."
McCool was being recruited by Alabama, Miami of Florida and Auburn before the streak of injuries occurred. McCool said he was averaging about 18 points and 10 rebounds a game his senior year.
So, following the advice of his brother, McCool decided to come to Kansas and began taking swimming seriously for the first time.
"After my first workout, my brother practically had to carry me back to the lockerroom." McCool said. "My first year was a time of transition. It took a great deal of time getting into swimming shape. I became really frustrated because I wanted to contribute to the team but I just wasn't ready yet."
Last year McCool's best time in the 100-yard breast stroke was 58.76. This year he has improved to 57.2 in that event.
With his recent success in the pool, McCool doesn't have to fight frustration any longer. He is one of the Jayhawks top breaststokers and is looking forward to competing in the Big Eight Championships in March.
"At the Alabama meet I started to do well." McCool said.
Among his goals this season,
McCool hopes to qualify for the finals
in both the 100-yard and 200-yard
breaststroke at the conference
championships and he also wants to
qualify for the NCAA Championships
in April.
Starting a new sport on the collegiate level isn't everyone's idea of fun, but McCool wouldn't have it any other way.
"I don't regret not playing basketball. This is a lot better than I thought. The people in this program are like brothers, and that's the kind of program I wanted to come into. No matter what sport it was."
A
UP IN SPACE
We remember the Challenger disaster today. Even the journey of an astronaut has an end.
What lives on?
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737 New Hampshire
Lawrence Kansas
Tonight— New Music Night with YARD APES & LOS GUYS
Saturday January 30— THE NEPTUNES Spend the night after the KState game with the hottest thing since Jerry Lee Lewis
Get your advanced tickets for ITALS SON SEALS
Every Tuesday—
$1.50 RUM DRINKS
&
JAMAICAN BEER
GAUDAL CANAL DIARY
ATTENTION!!!
all politically oriented students. The student senate elections committee will be accepting applications for replacement senators from Wednesday, Jan.27 through 00 p.m., Tuesday, Feb. Seats in the following areas are open:
Education Engineering Fine Arts Off C
Graduate Liberal Arts Nnemaker
Off Campus
DAYTONA PRIME
★ ★ ★ featuring the famous INTERNATIONAL INN ★ ★ ★
All Oceanview Rooms with Balconies For Years the Spring Break Favorite Always the Best Location on the Beach
Without Transportation $155
Quad Occupancy
Full Package
With Transportation
Quad Occupancy
Arrangements by Eun-
The largest in college to-
for over 9 yer
THE BEST OF EVEn
To Sign Up
Or For More Info
Call Bill or
Dave at 841-3856
With Transportation $235
Quad Occupancy
Arrangements by ECHO TRAVEL INC. The largest in college tours to Florida for over 9 years.
*Round trip motor coach transportation via Florida Highway coaches to Danaville Beach. Florida Unique others, we use the newest style buses available
- Five night accommodations at the well known Fort Myers Beach hotel, located in 130 South Atlantic Avenue in Daytona Beach. Total ownership over the past few years has included a private pool, beachfront property located in the central strip area. The hotel has all executive rooms, color TV, air conditioning post gate tilt, light and one of the best pools on the island.
THE BEST OF EVERYTHING TO INSURE YOU THE BEST SPRING BREAK!
- Pool deck parties and activities every single day from the famous Ecchi Bella Pip contest *
* Optical excursions available to Disney World Expo Hawaiian party guests *
* An interactive dinner with friends or family if you please you would go away *
* The service of full time travel representatives to three parties and take good care of you *
* All taxes and fees
Guaranteed
You know where you will be
staying on this trip
(with other trips?)
YOUR TRIP INCLUDES:
Best Location in Daytona
Don't let a poor location ruin your trip - (the Daytona strip is 23 miles long!)
Shouting Distance from Everything the top bar, restaurants, expos and free concessions (not a taxi ride away like other trips)
Top of the Line Luxury Coaches For the most centrally party tip to Florida.
★
Pool Deck Parties
Every Day
the notest, biggest parties in Daytona Beach
ou might find a cheap trip
but why risk your
Spring Break cash on a
camera imitation!
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, January 28, 1988
11
Rule eases penalty for missing work
Kansan staff writer
By Michael Carolan
Under a new state policy, University of Kansas employees will face a lighter penalty for work missed when the chancellor declares an inclement-weather emergency.
Richard Mann, University director of information resources, said Monday that administrators next week should be given policies and policies pertaining to bad weather.
The old policy allowed University employees to arrive an hour late for work during bad weather, said David Din, director of personnel services.
If employees missed more than one hour, under the old policy they had to make up the time by shortening paid vacations, using compensation time, using leave without pay, or working extra hours within 30 days of the weather emergency.
Employee who could not get to work because of bad weather had to make up the full eight-hour day, Lewin said.
The new policy, which was made retroactive to last May, allows the chancellor or vice chancellor to declare how late the employees may arrive to work.
Employees who do not make it to work in that period of time will have
their pay deducted only for the number of hours employees are expected to work that day.
For example, if an emergency is declared and employees may arrive an hour late, employees who don't know the company only have seven hours' pay deducted.
Because the plan is retroactive, Lewin said, employees who missed work in December during inclement weather will have to make up fewer hours.
"It's a little fairer to the employee who can't make it in because of the weather. Lewin said. "It gives the security unit authority to grant more than one hour."
Another change in the weather policy shortens the period during which employees must make up lost time. The old policy allowed employees a 30-day make-up period. The new policy states that employees must make up the lost time by the end of the work week.
For instance, if an employee missed three hours of work on Thursday, he would have to make up the three hours by Friday so that the state wouldn't have to pay for overtime.
Legislative Roundup
Under the new policy, employees still will be required to phone in when they cannot make it to work at all, Lewin said.
DUI: Before they debate a bill making it a felony to injure a person while driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs, members of the Senate Judiciary Committee said yesterday they wanted to know how many more people it could place in the state's crowded prison system.
AIDS: Rather than ordering widespread testing for AIDS, Kansas should provide free, voluntary tests and mandate pre-test counseling for people who might have contracted the disease, a Topela physician told a legislative committee yesterday.
LOTTERY: Gov. Mike Hayden signed a bill yesterday that formally ratifies Kansas' participation in a multi-state lottery. Hayden's action came only hours after the House passed the bill, 70-49. The state will take unusual steps to see that the bill takes effect today because the multi-state lottery starts Feb. 3. Other participant are: Iowa, Missouri, Oregon, Rhode Island, West Virginia and the District of Columbia. TV and radio advertising for the lottery would begin running tonight, the Kansas Lottery Commission announced yesterday.
DAYCARE: A veteran House Republican and a freshman House Democrat said yesterday they would introduce a package of legislation designed to help the state improve services for children of working mothers.
Classified Ads
CONTRAS: Spokesmen said yesterday the Neighbor to Neighbor Action Fund would air advertisements on Topeka television stations today that are designed to generate public opposition to giving more U.S. military aid to the contra rebels of Nicaragua.
CPS RECORDS, POSTERS and MORE! THE MID AFRICA RECORD CONVENTION & CENTER SOLAR DEALS 90 dealers from many states. Great prizes! Don't miss out! 10-5 at the HOLIDOME.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
NEED A RIDE/RIDER* Use the Self Serve Car Pool Exchange, Main Lobby, Kansas Union.
COMMUTERS. Self Serve Car Pool Exchange.
Main Lobby, Kansas Union
TUTORS. List your name with us. We refer
inquiries to you. Student Assistance Cente
r.
MASSAGE FOR YOUR VALENTINES! Why bother with messy chocolate or dead flowers when a message gift certificate makes your 'sweette' feel loved and revitalized? No bother a call. Call Lawrence Massage Therapy at 212-345-7000, years. Remember, Aphtelite loves massage.
READING FOR COMPREHENSION AND SPEECH WORKSHOP Thursdays, February 4, 11:30 AM Materials fee $15. Register and pay by fee on 2:48 at the Student Assistant Center, 121强
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 121
ENTERTAINMENT
AT YOUR REQUEST is Lawrence's Best and
most popular Music and Lighting for any
Occasion. 841-1465
Drummer needed for working band, 841-5707 o' 494-3072
GET INTO THE GROOVE Metropolis Mobile Sound. Superior sound and lighting. Professional club and radio DJ. Hot's. Maximum Party Thrust. 841-7063
FLOVARS AND FLASHBACK FOTO. The
price is $874.879 or $614.819 to book your next
MUSIC *********** MUSIC *********** MUSIC
Red House Audio - Mobile Party music, 8 track
studio, P.A. and lights. Maximum Audio Wizard,
Call Brad 794-1275.
FOR RENT
Carpeted studio apartment at 945 Missouri.
window, dressing room. 749-1066 eve.
FREE help to campan W/D fellows 842-5398
FREE help to cookware 842-5398
Kitchen. Room makeover Utilities making
Kitchen. Room makeover Utilities making
Completely Furnished Studio, 1:2:3 & a bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy-efficient, designed with you in mind. Call 841-1212, 841-1235, or 749-2415. Mastercraft Management
Duplex, one bedroom, within walking distance of KU. Low utilities. $265/MS. 843-6798.
Efficienca Apt. for rent 172 / mo., utilizes incl. $5.
Call: 849-1464 Call: 5 p.m.
Call: 749-1464 Call: 5 p.m.
Female nonsmoker needed Nice 2 bedroom,
townehouse on bus can be park. YOUR
phone is (917) 648-0080.
Female roommate, preferably quiet and no smoker, needed to share 2 bedroom apt. with female Grad. student at Spanish Crest Apt. 2021 W27th on bus route 153/m plus utilities. Swimming pool and laundry facilities are on the second floor of the suite. For Elizabeta or Spanish Crest Apts. at 841-6688
Female roommate wanted to share nice 2 bedroom apartment 1177 & 1/2 utility 841-2370.
Female roommate needed for laurieus 3 bdrm. Dingham Place. Don't miss out! Call 841-8429
Female roommate wants to share 1/2 story townhouse with other females. New townhouse is 400' x 200'. Acid A, 1/2 baths plus. Located close to campus next to bus route. Low rent and call 843-5041
For Rent. 3 bedroom racher - dining room, lau-
dry room, garage, patio. Walk to University,
across street from Hillcrest. No pets. - references
Available now. 843-3263
Large one bedroom furnished apartment available, $120 per month, plus electricity. Very close to campus in old apartment building having extensive improvements. Call 841-3192.
MASTERSHAPT offers beautifully furnished master suite with en-suite bathroom. Designed with the K.U. student in mind, Call 403-781-9620.
MJF Roammate needed to share two bedroom
room with 16 children, 2 units and retention.
Call Ken 748-5000 or Alex 748-5001.
Male Naimish Hall dorm contract for sale. Will
hold Naimish deposit押金 negotiate rent
641 562-986
Needed non-smoking male roommate to share 3
female rooms on property. Adult Estates: $130.00
*fu utilies.* Buitrago City: 841-1424.
Female roommate wanted to share 1/2 story townhouse with other females. New townhouse with modern conveniences, micro, dishwasher, laundry room. Come next to bus route. Low rent and mail. B434-5014
dominate needed to share space 4 bedroom house w/suna. Move in immediately and pay no rent. Call 841-762-9543 April and May 841-762-9543 or 844-5143 Eric Female 18+ 841-762-9543 female 18+ 841-762-9543 1/2 rental
Wanted: female roommate to share furnish
Apt. 1127, bldg. 9 noires. Utilities: bdq, 841-6194
1 new 1 and 2 bedroom apartments, 842-5227
new 2 and 3 bedroom townhouses, 842-5227
BRAND NEW COMPLEX
Quit, non-smoking, female wanted to room with 3
computer upper class in 4 hr. duplex. $313 plus 1/4
dollar per night.
FOR SALE
Sunflower House has private rooms, low rates and a great location. Call evenings
NAISMITH PLACE
- Furnished or Unfurnished
73 Cressi Homeline 12' 12" x 20' 2 BRF Extra manifold 16' 16" x 24
1962 Dalmian 232X Turbo Blk & Kick two tone, pwr windows, bks. steering, AM/FM stereo /w cassette, beautiful car must sell 841-4762, 816-231-0276
- Fully equipped Kitchen
- Satellite TV
in absolutely Awesome Array of Antiques, collectibles and neat stuff we have; hardback and price paperbacks, slipcovers, Penthouse, Penthouse, etc. loads of antique, indian, and costume jewelry (gitter and oodstuff), the right vintage clothes for any occa- tion, the best fine art miniatures, fine art and the best selection
Open the doors to
- Large Jacuzzi
- Fully equipped Kitchen
an apartment with:
Subbase: Subbase 1 Bedroom Apt KU Rua Route
Facility, Convenience location,
Water paid, 84-682-921
Phone: 84-682-921
Sublease. Duplex two bedrooms, 1 bath, 1804 Missouri; great location for KI student, $300/mo.
- Private balcony or porches
- Laundry Facilities
T cooperative living. SUNFLOWER HOUSE.
749-0671, for Ann, Deb, or Tom.
Trialbridge Towhouse for rent. Three bedrooms.
On KU bus route. Immediate. Call 843-7333.
good stuff', the right vintage clothes for any
antique, toys fine art, glass doll, house oursi-
cle furniture, high quality antiques of
antique furniture in the area. Quanta Flea
Market, 11 New Hampshire, Open Sat & Su-
day.
NAISMITH PLACE OUSDAHL & 25th Ct.
1979 Gibson Les Paul, 1975 Salmon six 61 ski
bower. Best offer. 749-1775, ask for Bill
To go on condition and reasonable. 841-606-5000.
DENOM PMA 70V integrated amplifier, 325.00.
Line Lite group speakers, $310.00. Carver C9
bold bolted power放大器, 100.00. Mark 749-kilib
after 5.00.
For Sale 2 bedroom Mobile home. $450 call air conditioner . $500 call [14823]
- Satellite TV
- Private helpline no nosha
Apple II C with color monitor, 5 months old, has
Prpter Apple; $850, 864-4741.
- Laundry Facilities .. and much more!
Vacant room, Park Apt. 8 for, stag made MKU
Friday. Park B apt. 10 for, stag made
January Call. collect (31) 482-8937 or (31)
482-8938
Computer table; (3) oak kitchen chairs, dermata
plates, towel rack; (4) tripod, old English wingback rocker, large wooden chair, foldable desk.
For Sale: TAMA Concert toms, 6.8,10.12 inches
wood yyle wood shells. Two heavy duty stands. 843-6926
KU basketball stand. Call 843-6492 Leave
message.
For Sale .. 150 CB weight and set bench table. Also
set of and set of 15 dumbells $50. Call
863-1057 for details
For Sale: Denon Tuner; Amp 40 watt per channel; Denon turntable w/ Microprocessor control.
Snow ski's K27 150 Salamars 150 cm with salamon
Snow ski's K27 160 Salamars 160 cm with salamon
9 Days £498 369-390, Maxim £749 349-
8 Days £498 369-390, Maxim £749 349-
Brand New Genels 14k goldgutted watch appraisal $1900. Must sell. Best offer 84-7325. Jeremy Canon Typestra6-6 Electronic Typewriter w/ ac-64320 value asking 130 call Joe at 84-3620
Naismith Place Apts.
25th Court & Ousdahl
841-1915
- MOTHIBALA GOOD USED FURNITURE
wooded 10.40 p.m. Thursday 5.15 p.m. 512
Floors 10.40 p.m. Wednesday 5.15 p.m. 512
Rock-n-Roll-Thousands of used and rare albums a. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m every Saturday and Sunday from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m.
YAMAHA R-300 Stereo Receiver like new $140
842-7376
Zenith 188 Computer, monitor, 64K 2,
74-7097, desktop publisher, PCaint, Bain.
74-7097
1973 WBug. Reconditioned engine. Less than 90 km. brand new engine on back. Very
AUTOSALES
1975 Chevy Malibu 110 B, A/C; Cassette, AM-FM,
New Transmission, $450 KOB | Call Luke 8418
1979 Honda Accord, 5pd, Hatch, New tires,
starter,Dependible, $1.25 or best offer
1980 Buck Skyklar Limited. Red 55,000 miles, Older. Make offer 842-2416 Larry.
1982 Chevy Cavalier CL Type 10, automatic, AC Great Buy $8,000.00 OPIA M1
1984 Chevrolet Chevette AM/FM Cassette, AC,
great size, 4-speed, 4-mile speeds,
great $196, 843-5000
www.chevrolet.com
188 Chevrolet Cavalier Z24 $99.97, Camaro Free-Z
$12.14.97, Carlo Ascar $12.38.98, Ford MK II
$16.59.98, BMW i8 Turbo $14.79.98, Mercury Cougge XR19.85.
188 Pontiac Fiero Coupe $46.48, Firebird $82.82,
188 Toyota Corolla FACTORY warrants
rebates (financing trade-in). You choose option
colors you want $83-84.99
Good customer service. Original owner. Still good to work or best to work for. Takes up business hours ask for July 14th during business hours ask for July 14th
BERTONE X19/ 9-184 .336. Excellent condition.
Fully loaded with options. 641 640 weeks.
weekdays.
Dataun B1920 175, 86k Ml. 4p, arm runs beautiful, battery, ally. $70 FOBO cash only. 40 Blake
Car won't start? Mobile service on foreign cars. Call Aaron at 841-4692
MGB Convertible 78, great shape, no rust,
no wear, low mileage, $250 or best. GREAT
Red Hot Bargains! Drug dealers' cars, boats,
planes, planes or durpa. Your area. Buyers
to arrive by phone.
LOST-FOUND
Bass player wanted for recently relocated west-coast band. Reliability, congeniality and a commitment to Rock and Roll a must. Equipment plus; but we have burg. fig. 79-23. 2 p.m. e.
**Artist** *Artist* **Artist** Looking for in talented catwalk artists. Respond to three challenging calls. Call for details. Mark 913/865-2100.
HELP WANTED
Consultant positions for Small Business Development Center are available. Positions are paid above minimum wage, hours are flexible. Work is required to complete graduate students needed in the areas of business, engineering, law, and computer science. If in need, apply at 423 E. Summerfield Hall, 847-7571.
Found in Blue and green plaid scarf between Li-
phon and the beach. Found in Golden Retriever Male on 3-48 138 and 139. Found in Golden Retriever Male on 3-48 138 and 139.
Lost: A Selo leather band watch. If found please call Lisa at 749-5174
Director of Child Care Program, F/T afernoons,
courses in child development and office management skills. $860/room. Send resume and 2 letters to Director, 925 W. Hancock Blvd., Carnegie, CA 925. Vernell Lawrence, Lawncrest, Ka. 66444, EOE
CPOSTAL JOB1: $2,064 Start! Prepare Now!
[Job Number] [City] [State] [Carrier] all for guaranteed Exam
Knowledge
GOVENMER JOBS $10.440-$25.320 yr. New
Federal List 8797 0600 use 10798 for
current Federal List.
Due to new product development, three to four art students will be required to brush up on work on a per job basis. Will be given complete freedom to work around school equipment and materials; contact Laurie Clark, Scotch Industries, 843-9639.
E. R. Clerk, part-time position in Admissions for an emergency room clerk. Hours are 2:45 p.m.-11:15 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays and all day week. Must be equivalent to 6 months clinical experience required. Typing test needs to be completed at job service center before applying. Applications must be submitted from 1 a.p.m. at the Personnel Department, Lafayette Memorial Hospital, 325 Main, 7481-6618.
Custodian Monday Wednesday Friday 21:1 A.M.
48 per hour call. Dick Claxtam 843-383-1938
50 percent discount
The Adams Alumni Center in now hiring a.m. and p.m. diskshuffle timehours and part of the library's 24-hour data experience. Applications are available at reception desks between 6 and 5". No phone calls. Please use the email link provided.
GRADUATE RESEARCH ASSISTANT. Housing Research Program. Center for Applied Behavior Analysis. Responsibilities include develop/maintain computerized databases of research findings and development and implementation of research surveys and questionnaires; assist with addition of new research topics to the database and graphic research reports. QUALIFICATIONS: Undergraduate degree in field related to social science or environmental design research, a master's degree in program and services for people with disabilities or use of personal computers; acceptable writing ability. Preferences: Background in housing programs
NEW YORK! Live in babysitters needed for young families throughout affluent suburbs of metropolitan New York, beginning in January/February. Airfare paid, plus room, meals and other benefits. Contact Claire Sussman, (230) 658-1234, S 1 Laurel Lane, Darie, CT, 06820.
Naismith Hall Dining Commons is now accepting applications for part-time employment. If interested, fill out an application at Naismith Hall's front desk
Monday thru Friday - 1 to 5 p.m. BabySitter/
Oldest one, 18 yrs old. Oldest one, 40
one block South of Campsite.
Personnel Secretary: qualified applicants must possess good communication, typing (60 wpm), and reading ability with people. Word processing and personnel experience helpful, but not required. Will train in Word Server. Salary range 61.0-84 per hour in Word Server. Will accept a description of the description and would like to join our busy Personnel operation, please call us in today at 749-6161. Lawrence Memorial Hospital, 325 Main EOE
Wanted maintenance person to do cleaning for two restaurants. Must be available 7 a.m. to 11 a.m. M-F. Pervious experience desired. Starting August 2014. Massachusetts absa Bullock Biff's Smokehouse.
Qualified individuals earn up to $340/mr Fr./Sophs and $470/mr Jr./Sr years. Requirements: Full time student, physically fit, willing to join the University program, Military Science Building, 844-3311
FEMALE VOCALIST wanted for established dance band. 749-360
**Repeat**
Carriers-Carrers! Call for Guaranteed Exam Workshop. 619-944-8447 Ext 153
Evening line person, part time, $3.50 .Hr. Apply
in person at Border Distance. W 16th
W 18th
RESORT HOTELS, Cruiseline, Airlines & Amusement Parks NOW accepting applications for Rental Resorts. For information & application, write NATIONAL Collegiate Recreation. P.O. Box 8047 Hilton
Rewarding Summer for sophomore and older college students. Backpacking, horseback riding, crafts wildlife, many outdoor programs. Write now in the Online Journal. Sainton Western Campes, Florissant, CO 80186
Summer Jobs! **2**外 of Minnesota's finest summer youth camps, seek college age students to participate in Employment is from June 15 August 21. Job applications and interview call for 1-800-331-506 Ex. 319
Warm caring people, who like children ages 3-5 are need of Head Start as volunteers for a day care program. At weekends from 7:30 and 3:30 to M-F Day volunteer needs from 12:05-3:05. For more information visit www.warmcaring.org.
You Determine Your Income. You set your own hours, work at your own pace, and in turn determine your own income. It's all a matter of how hard you are willing to work. To request a per session view with one of the fastest growing marketing organizations in the country call 841-809-653.
MISCELLANEOUS
FREE. BEAUTIFUL Long-Haired Cat (minimal shedding) to good home. Likes to be outside in sunny weather. Call 749-2588 or Neutered. Mouser. Call 749-2588 or weeks 322-0342 (works during work hours).
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by Headquarters.
We're here because we care.
841-2345 1419 Mass.
We're always open.
Total tape review course for all four parts of CPA
each part. To pass the exam, students must
once pass CPA exam on first visit - call after
arriving.
PERSONAL
**Attention Colony Woods Tennants** We are interested in having a tenants meeting conference held at 10am on Friday (Wednesday) contact Holly or Janell at KI or 841-5641. The meeting will be 1/28 at 12:38. We more have the interest to meet with you.
Hey Everybody! Becca is 20' Gall and wish her
Hoy Everyday! Becca is 20' Gall and wish her
Hoy Everyday! This belated birthday is courtesy of
her.
Cheri I LOVE YOU L.B.S.
★★★★★★★
Paget,
Whether it be
9 or 10 months,
they have all been
the Best with you!
Happy Anniversary!
P.S. Thanks for all you have
done for me.
Love Alwavs.
Huck. F/6/1, M.P., Masse.'s, Wee兰.'s, What was your reaction to, No way No! No Till, *Bridge Pistachios*, "punt dogs," *manyAIL*; Pistachios, "punt dogs," *manyAIL*; "Will you be the father of my kids?" Grateful Dead, Dire Straits, opera to Talking Head. We will always
Kirk- Theta Chi - Wanna dance again sometime?
Call me, Jennifer.
★★★★★★★★★
Two easy maidens seeking vivacious well-
loved women. 114-827-3650, Lauren & Laurie
98-100-827-3650, BELIOVENT MODELS
88-100-827-3650
when presented to toward new patient ser-
ience. He also taught the Exam. Dr. Johnson, Chiropractor.
ACE
BUS. PERSONAL
Discover recovery thru shared experience and mutual support. Send resume to Lawrence Memorial, Mondays 7: 8-30, Lawrence Memorial Hospital, 325 Main. For confidential information/contact person, Write P.O Box 3482
since 1980 EUROPEAN SUMTANNING
Available Only at
$8/person Hot Tub Rental 9 Tans
$10/month for
Wet Room Facilities $20
Association of Collegiate Entrepreneurs
Information meeting regarding
Tan. Health. & Beauty
Bo
The
Etc.
Shop
information meeting reg
activities for spring. New
members are welcome.
Date: January 23, 1988
THE ETC SHOP
Boat House Row cotton and ragswool
The Etc.
Shop
satisfaction of quality and design
732 Massachusett
don't get mad, eat even!」 Send a bouquet of
flowers, flowers, flowers,
holidays, holidays, or signifying the end. Each bouquet comes with a personal message. Pick-up or
UVENGE at 682-7538. Call SWEET
UVENGE at 682-7538.
Date: January 23,1988
Time: 7 p.m.
Place: Pioneer Room Level 3, Burge Union
Subject: Legal aspects of entrepreneurship
SPRING BREAK
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND **128**
NORTH PADRE/MUSTANG ISLAND **156**
DIVISION ISLAND **199**
STREAMBOARD **187**
GAVELTON ISLAND **124**
FORT WALTON BAY **126**
ONLANDO/DINERY BEACH **132**
MIAMI BEACH **131**
HILTON HEAD ISLAND **131**
DON'T DELAY
TOLL FREE PRIOR SLEEP, INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS
1-800-321-5911
Call fast! *Win: Best roomsites, Best Apert*
842 1968
Orchard, Corner chairs for fall
Getting into shape for spring! Start taking care of your body with a program for Men and Women, Call Mehelle, 216-4899.
Interested in a summer job with the Federal Government? Visit Samuel Adams at the University Placement Center for details. Call 841-3624 for an appointment.
MARY KAY CAMYS can give you complimentary facial displays at your dorm activities, sororities, etc. Also individually. Call 843-1277 for info and ask for Andie.
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-8421. Confidential help/free pregnancy information
SENSUAL LINGERIE & SMWREM. Get your full color catalog today. Send $5 (includes postage and handling) to SATIN 'N' LACE, P.O. BOX 15790-1280, LENEXA, KS 66215
Want to cruise? Have a complementary facial with friends. Call Michele 749-1659.
SERVICESOFFERED
AUTO REPAIR/ BODY WORK Foreign &
Damnificent Bumper bumper repair 841-5700
Become a Valentine always remembered, with a **HOLIDOR PORTRAT** or Mirage or Grace at HOLIDOR.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
UMC'S COPIES 4¢
25th & Iowa • Holiday Plaza • 749-5192
HAR CUTS $2 off with KU ID for the months of January and February. Ask for experienced hair stylist, Ann Reaney at Standing Ovation, 14 E Ace, 749-0771
Handmade Moccones, custom sized Elkhide tides,
thick soiled,充料, $45/Prf., Patrick 82-809
HELP! Frustrated by red tape? Needing a
movie or game time? Don't just know where to
HELP! Frustrated by red tape? Needing a movie or game time? Just don't know where to turn? Call the UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER at 864-3506, 24hrs a day.
Job resumes that get results. Satisfaction
auaranteed. Call 794-464
THE FAR SIDE
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES : Ektachrome processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W services. PASSPORT $6.00. Art & Design Building. Room 206. 864-4767.
KU Photographic Services: Elechatrona processing with 24 hrs. Complete B/W services.
Passport $6.00. Art and Design building, rm 206.
844-7677
PRIVATE OFFICE 0b-Gyn and
Barber Services.
Overland Park...913-401-6878
tor a professor on a sabbatical, beginning June
1st, 842-6923 evening or 842-1217 ext. 28 day
0345.
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrente, M41-5716.
Lawrence Confliction and abortion services in Lawrence 841-5716
QUALITY TUTORING. Statistics, Economics,
and Mathematics All levels. Cailen Dennis
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your
students to complete Transportation provided.
www.sunflower.edu
TUTORING $6.50 /hr MATH STATISTICS and
PHYSICAL ARCHITECTURE M.S.
M.S. IN SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY $8.90 /hr
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing. Judy. 842-7945 or Lisa. 841-1915.
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in term paper, theses, mice, IBM correcting Selective ROMs.
The college of Liberal Arts and Sciences offers tutoring in math, english, business, and science, with reasonable charge through Supportive Educational Services, apply at SES BUILD. 849-3717.
1. Reliable Typing Service. Term papers.
2. Inumes, LaTeX, etc. professionally types. IMS.
3. Fully functional.
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS
service availance 843-378 for p. pls.
843-378 before 9 p.m.
1-der Woman Word processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurate spelled words with letter-quality, or letter-quality type. 843-2635, day or evening.
1-der Woman professional word processing with letter-quality, or letter-quality type.
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term papers, maps, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mail listing. Letter quality printing, spelled corrected. 842-2747.
For professional typing/word processing, call
professional h4-4060. Spring special $120/page double
space.
FAST, ACCURATE, DEPENDABLE Letter
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES 843-5621 spell check
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES 843-5621 spell check
Quality typing. Includes excellent spelling, grammatical punctuation, editing. Fast reliable service.
Typing at a reasonable rate Call Holly at 843-011.
Typing at a reasonable rate. CALL 843-0111
the WORDOCTORS. Why pay for two?
Typing at a reasonable rate. CALL 843-0111
TYPHING FLUSS assistance with composition and preparation of digital dissertations, papers, letters, applications and publications.
THE WHITHOCTORS. Why pay for tying when
they can't. The White House, the
Ravian, the desserts, dissertation, commercial
WANTED
Penalties roommate wanted to share furnished
property. Tenants must use off-street parking, large deck, $72.50
off-affordable utilities.
Female roommate need for lauriers 2-Dhr.
Bidghead Place. Don't miss out. Call
843-8429
Flutist looking for坐科 or folk团 to play with. Call editions. 843-1163 or 749-8471. Debbie Hirst! *Government Jobs your area.* $15,000 - $82,000. Call (602) 803-9157 ext 4051.
Male/Female roommate needs 1 for 3-bedroom
room; middle / all three / 1/2 on bus route.
very nice. b41-555
Non-student basketball tickets for Duke game
842-1775
Roommate wanted. Spacious two 2 br apartment, private room. W&D. Available immediately.
On busurve. $182 low utilities. Call 842-3185, 749-5753 or 841-1969.
Roommates needed for pleasant four bedroom home with two baths and laundry at 914 Mile.
WANT A LARGER TV? WILL TRADE Zenith color 19' table model for 3' color portable of
WANTED: Adventureous traveling Bodybodier (or Surfer) for Spring Break trip to Kaunai with Bodybodier bodybodier? Free accommodations Phone 843-8143 for surf or Pat or leave a visit. Phone 843-8143
Wanted K Student state B-Ball tickets. Call Jeff 842-3807.
Wanted non-student basketball tickets .. 426-6783
Wanted: Part-time kitchen utility help. Flexible hours. Call Frank at Lawrence Country Club, 434-2866.
Wanted. Third male roommate to share.
2-bedroom apartment. Call 749-812-7 (1/10 p.m.)
wanted to share spacious, clean, warm
3-bedroom apartment. Call 749-812-7 (1/10 p.m.)
Prefer grad student or working person. Walk 2 blocks to KU. Central heat and air conditioning.
Prefer grad student. $175/m plus 1/2 reasonable
matches. 842-835.
Want to trade a KSU ticket for an OU ticket. Call 749-5066
W. T.C.S. Shetler for battered woman is beginning weekend training sessions starting January 30th. Strive sensitive people who are interested in being involved in women's and children's programs. Call 844-781-6295.
By GARY LARSON
© 1982 Uniwearag Press Syndicate
"Oh my gosh, Linda! ... I think your Barbie's contemplating suicide!
12
Thursday, January 28, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
THE NCR $300,000 STAKEHOLDER ESSAY COMPETITION FOR STUDENTS
THE MISSION
THE CHALLENGE
THE RULES
NCR
TO CREATE VALUE
At NCR, we've found that in order to create value, we must first satisfy the legitimate expectations of every person with a stake in our company. We call these people our stakeholders, and we attempt to satisfy their expectations by promoting partnerships in which everyone is a winner.
- We believe in building mutually beneficial and enduring relationships with all of our stakeholders,based on conducting business activities with integrity and respect.
- We take customer satisfaction personally: we are committed to providing superior value in our products and services on a continuing basis.
- We respect the individuality of each employee and foster an environment in which employees' creativity and productivity are encouraged, recognized, valued and rewarded.
- We think of our suppliers as partners who share our goal of achieving the highest quality standards and the most consistent level of service.
- We are committed to being caring and supportive corporate citizens within the worldwide communities in which we operate.
- We are dedicated to creating value for our shareholders and financial communities by performing in a manner that will enhance the return on their investments.
TO WIN
We're so committed to our mission that we're encouraging the next generation of leaders to re-examine America's business values. We're doing this by holding the NCR Stakeholder Essay Competition which all full-time undergraduate and graduate college or university students may enter. Entries should explore the topic: "Creating Value for All Stakeholders in Corporations and/or Not-for-Profit Organizations."
The student chosen as the first place winner will be awarded $50,000 cash. Plus, the entrant's school will receive $100,000 in NCR data processing equipment. The second place winner will receive $15,000 cash and the entrant's school will receive $35,000 in equipment. One hundred $1,000 awards of merit will be given to chosen participants. In addition selected award-winning entrants will be invited to attend the first NCR International Symposium on Stakeholders to be held June 9 & 10, 1988, in Dayton, Ohio.
1) The NCR Stakeholder Essay Competition is open to any full-time undergraduate or graduate student attending an accredited college or university in the United States or its territories.
2) Entries must be original, unpublished work on the topic: "Creating Value for All Stakeholders in Corporations and/or Not-for-Profit Organizations." Essays must not exceed 3,000 words. Areas of discussion may include, but are not limited to: Ethics, Corporate Governance, Strategic Management, Social Responsibility, or Managing Change as these topics relate to managing for stakeholders.
3) Entries must be typed, double-spaced on $8\frac{1}{2}$ x 11" bond paper, one side only. A separate cover sheet should list the entrant's name, school, home address and title of the essay. Subsequent pages should be numbered sequentially and include the essay title in the upper right margin. Winners will be required to produce proof of current full-time college or university enrollment.
4) All entries must be postmarked by March 31, 1988, and received by April 15, 1988 to be eligible for consideration. Submit entries to: NCR Stakeholder Essay Competition, NCR Corporation, Stakeholder Relations Division, Dayton, Ohio 45479. NCR is not responsible for, and will not consider, late, lost or misdirected entries.
5) In the event any prize winner is a minor, the cash award will be made to his/her parent or guardian.
6) Awards to individuals will be reported as income on IRS Form 1099. All taxes are the responsibility of the recipients.
7) Award winners will be required to sign publicity releases and affidavits of eligibility and compliance with all rules governing the competition. Failure to return executed affidavits and releases within 15 days of receipt will cause the award to be null and void.
8) All entries become the property of NCR and will not be returned.
9) By participating in the competition entrants agree to these rules and the decisions of the judges which shall be final in all respects, and further agree to the use of their names, likenesses and entries for NCR advertising and publicity purposes without any further compensation.
State and territorial judges will consist of panels that include NCR stakeholders. Final selections will be made from state and territory winners by a national panel of judges.
If clarification is necessary, call (513) 445-1667,
8am-5pm EST.
Award winners will be notified on or about May 16, 1988. To obtain a list of finalists, send a self-addressed, stamped envelope to:
NCR Stakeholder Essay Competition
NCR Corporation
Stakeholder Relations Division
1700 South Patterson Boulevard
Dayton, Ohio 45479
NCR's Mission: Create Value for Our Stakeholders
Friday January 29,1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 85 (USPS 650-640)
Koop suggests test for AIDS at one college
The Associated Press
LONDON — U.S. Surgeon General C. Everett Koop said yesterday that he wanted to screen every student of a major U.S. university this spring to help determine the incidence of AIDS among young adults.
Koop also proposed similar mass AIDS screening at a few high schools in the United States but said the government had made no decision on either proposal.
■See related story p. 6
He disclosed the plan Wednesday at a world meeting on AIDS in London and gave details in an inter-credit yesterday with the Associated Press.
The three-day conference, attended by health ministers from 114 countries and senior public-health officials from 34 others, adopted a declaration backing the World Health Organization's global strategy on AIDS control and prevention.
Proclaiming 1988 the "Year of Communication and Cooperation About AIDS," the 650 summit delegates said they would try to slow the spread of AIDS but offered no major new strategies.
Koop's plan for anonymous screening of students could prove controversial. Civil libertarians have argued
The surgeon general said health officials had yet to choose a university but it would likely be one in a large city with a student body of around 25,000. Plans call for the screening to take place some time this spring, and the university will be part of a one-day open-air campus "galerie on AIDS prevention."
that anonymous screening is an invasion of privacy and that screening of a limited population could be the forerunner of mandatory nationwide testing.
"That would give you a pretty good idea of the prevalence (of AIDS) in the age group in an urban setting," he added.
The incidence of acquired immune deficiency syndrome is highest among 20 to 24-year-olds, with male homosexuals and drug abusers among those most at risk.
AIDS is caused by a virus that damages the body's immune system, leaving victims susceptible to infections and cancer. It is spread most often through sexual contact, needles or syringes shared by drug abusers, infected blood or blood products, and from pregnant women to their offspring.
Koop said the screening would probably be conducted by the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta or the American Medical Association.
Tenants protest rate shock Colony Woods wiring led to high bills
Bv Ric Brack
Kansan staff writer
The owner of Colony Woods apartments yesterday said outside security lights were wired into tenants' fuse boxes, causing some to pay her utility bills.
Owner Randall Davis said most of the students affected were informed orally and were being reimbursed for the cost of electricity.
But Alan Cardozo, Prairie Village sophmore, he said he discovered lage Sunday that his fuse box runs a Coke machine and 11 light bulbs adjacent to one building. He said he was never told he was paying for electricity nor had he been reimbursed
About 130 tenants gathered last night in the apartment complex's poolhouse to talk about the utility bills and other grievances.
He was responding to a recent rash of complaints from tenants who received high utility bills for December.
Davis said Colony Woods would reimburse students who had security lights tapped onto their utility hook-ups.
"I don't know if all the students have been contacted. I know we've tried to navy them back." he said.
Several student tenants questioned their electricity bills after they returned from Christmas break and found the bills were higher than the previous month, even though they weren't living in their apartments. One student said his utility bill was $65. In December it was $100.
Davis said at least nine tenant had been reimbursed $6 a mont for the security lights.
Davis said, however, "I don't think that's true."
Davis said the electrician who wired Cardozo's building might have accidentally hooked up the lights and the machine to the wrong fuse box.
Cardozo said he talked to an attorney earlier this week and discussed the problems with apartment manager Gerald Burkhart yesterday.
"He said 'it's not possible. I'll check tomorrow.' Cardozo said.
Some tenants said that after they received December electricity bills, they asked Kansas Power and Light Co. to reorder the meters.
David Mark, a KPL representative at last night's meeting, said the increase in the bills could be attributed to an 83-percent decrease in outside temperature from November to December.
Mark said he had checked the records on several tenants and found no bills over $150.
Cynthia Benner, Weston, Mo., junior, said she discovered that when she turned off all the fuses in her apartment, the meter continued to run.
JESSICA BOWEN
Holly Slaughter, Leawood sophomore and tenant organizer for Colony Woods apartments, is serving as liaison between tenants and management.
FBI watch list of protesters included two KU men
Two men affiliated with the University of Kansas were among hundreds of people under FBI surveillance for their opposition to the Reagan administration's policies in Central America during the early 1980s, documents released Wednesday show.
Bv Ieff Moberg
Kansan staff writer
See related stories p. 14
A New York lawyers' group, the Center for Constitutional Rights, obtained the documents from the FBI under the Freedom of Information Act. The documents reveal that undercover agents, informers and the monitoring of peace protests throughout the country were part of the FBI's operations beginning in 1981.
Bernice Crane, a spokesman for the center, said that two men connected with the University appeared on the FBI's list. She would not say whether the men were students or University employees. She said they were both U.S. citizens.
FBI officials refused to comment.
The FBI investigation began when the bureau turned its eyes on the Committee in Solidarity With The People of El Salvador, known as CISPES but then widened its view to include all kinds of political and religious groups. The FBI suspected that CISPES had ties with leftist guerrillas in El Salvador. Those suspicions were never proved, and no arrests were made.
Byron Genus, GENA
Chancellor, GA. Budig was out of town yesterday and could not be reached for comment. Executive Vice Chancellor, Judith Ramaley did
that are pursuing a lawful act or course even if it's a group differing in opinion with government." Ambler said.
not want to comment.
David Ambler, vice cancellor of student affairs, said yesterday that he was not aware that FBI agents were conducting surveillance operations on campus. If they were, he said, they certainly would not notify anyone within the administration of their activities.
to spy on anyone exercising his rights.
"I suspect if anyone would have known, I would have known," Ambler said. He said that he could not understand why the FBI would want
"I cannot for the life of me understand why they would want to take surveillance of student organizations
Meese will review charges of FBI harassment
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Attorney General Edwin Meese III yesterday said that he would reveal allegations of harassment in the FBI's investigations of opponents of the administration's Central American policy.
Presidential spokesman Marlin Fitzwater, meanwhile, said that the White House had asked for information on the FBI's domestic surveillance campaign and that "we won't have any comment until we see what it's all about."
The Center for Constitutional Rights, a New York-based lawyers' group, announced Wednesday that it had received more than 1,300 pages of government documents showing the FBI had investigated hundreds of organizations and individuals on U.S. policy in Central America.
Among the groups named in FBI documents released by the center were the Southern Christian Leadership Conference in Atlanta, the Maryknoll Sisters in Chicago and the
United Steelworkers union.
Meesse said he had asked for a report on the surveillance from the FBI and would discuss the matter with FBI Director William Sessions. "Then I will determine what action is necessary." he said.
William Webster, who was head of the FBI when the investigation took place, could not be reached for comment. Sharon Foster, a spokesman for the CIA, which Webster now directs, said all calls should be directed to the FBI. "It's an FBI
The attorney general said he had received reports in the past from the FBI on its conduct of the surveillance of opponents of the Central American policy "and this will be an update to see what, if anything, of the allegations are true."
Meese said that once the facts are determined, "that will indicate to what extent follow-up action will be
Deluge of books swamps Watson
See MEESE, p. 5, col. 1
Bv David Sodamann
Kansan staff writer
Stacks of returned books are piling up in Watson Library, and the librarians there aren't sure how long it will be before they get the books back on the shelf.
In November, as the fall semester began to wind down, books came back to the library in record numbers.
“Tons and tons and tons of books started coming in,” said Kendall Simmons, head of the library's circulation department. “There were tens of thousands of books to be shelved and nobody to shelve them.”
Simmons said that from the second week of November through December, 45,000 books were returned to the library. An additional 35,000 books were found lying around in the library.
Normally, it takes 48 hours to process a returned book and put it back in its proper spot. Now, the turn-around time is about a month. When you want them to be checked in on computer, put on carts, sorted and shelved.
It's Cynthia Shively's task to put the returned books back where they belong.
See LIBRARY, p. 5, col. 1
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA
DAVID M. SCHNEIDER
LITERATURE
CENTER
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100.
THE BOOKS
Behind the walls of the return book drop. Theresa Shively, Lawrence graduate student, sorts a small portion of the many books waiting to be reshelved.
Council gives OK to add-drop plan
Bv Kevin Dilmore
Kansan staff writer
After more than an hour of debate the University Council passed a compromise proposal that would cut the time students could drop classes to three weeks but would increase the add period to three weeks and two days.
Several student senators and faculty members criticized the add-drop system during the meeting. They said the system was faulty, partially because students were advised poorly.
"I think the problems we are trying to solve are not solved by moving the add-drop time," said Jason Krakow, student body president. "I think the heart of the issue is the advising system.
"Five weeks is too long, but two weeks is a radical change," he said. This amendment will help to recognize other problems within the system.
Last week, the University Senate Executive Committee asked University Council to reduce the add-drop period to two weeks. Courses dropped after that period would be marked with a "W."
Student senators yesterday asked the University Council to amend SenEx's proposal and extend its add-drop plan by a week. They said they had 4,000 student signatures supporting the amendment.
The recommended proposal now must be approved by the University Senate later this spring and signed by theancellor before it can take effect.
Before the vote, Krakow addressed some faculty concerns with extending the proposed add-drop time, including the problems students who add late have catching up with classwork.
"We agree with the faculty that it is important to begin serious work as soon as possible," he said. "But we feel it is the students' responsibility to catch up. If they are not living up to it, that is their own fault."
Krakow said he feared that other problems within the University only would be covered up by making the add-drop period two weeks.
Evelyn Swartz, SenEx president, said she thought revisions in the advising system were a critical need because lessen current add-drop problems.
"We have several traditions at
akis, " and one of them is an
advising problem.
"Now we say it is a problem; next August, we will say it is a problem; when I reach my golden years, we will say it is a problem."
Robert Voigt, associate professor of mechanical engineering, said, "Everyone in this room is disappointed when a class is closed at the beginning of the semester and there are empty seats at the end."
Arthur Skidmore, associate professor of philosophy, said he would like to see an add-drop policy similar to the library hold system enacted.
Skidmore said he did not like the fact that a student who was not enrolled in a class could sit through several class sessions and, while waiting to add it, could lose an open classroom slot to someone who happened to be at the enrollment center at the right time.
2
Fridav. Januarv 29.1988 / University Daily Kansan
Weather Forecast LAWRENCE
Weather Forecast
From the KU Weather Service
LAWRENCE
Mostly Sunny,
Warm and Breezy
HIGH: 60°
LOW: 37°
A mostly sunny but breezy day with a high up to 60. More clouds will be moving in Friday night as the low falls to 37.
KEY
Rain T-Storms Snow Flurries Ice
REGIONAL
North Pattie
60/25
Mostly cloudy
Omaha
57/30
Mostly sunny
Goodland
58/30
Cloudy
Haya
60/32
Partly cloudy
Salina
60/35
Partly cloudy
Topeka
61/37
Mostly sunny
Columbia
81/39
Sunny
St Louis
83/41
Sunny
Dodge City
64/35
Cloudy
Wichita
63/35
Partly cloudy
Chanute
68/38
Mostly cloudy
Springfield
59/42
Cloudy
Forecast by William Hibbert
Temperatures are today's high and tonight's low.
5-DAY
SAT
Mostly cloudy
52 / 36
HIGH
LOW
SUN
Showers
45 / 30
MON
Flurries
34 / 27
TUE
Mostly cloudy
28 / 18
WED
Sunny
25 / 14
On Campus
Dennis Prater of the Legal Aio Society will present an informative program on wills at 1 p.m. today in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. He will speak about what should be included in a will, give information on probating and allow time for questions.
A philosophy lecture by Andrus Pork, a professor from the Soviet
Union, is scheduled at 3:30 p.m. today in the International Room of the Kansas Union.
Ray Arvin of Air Midwest is scheduled to speak about air safety at 3:30 p.m. today in 3139 Wescos Hall.
The movie “Dim Sum” will be shown at 7:30 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
Student Discounts / Free Ticket Delivery
CALL 841-9801 2721 West Sixth St. Suite C
Sculptor sees art in ice
Most art students Jon Richards knows exhibit their work in museums. He jokes that his work has been left out in the cold.
By Stacy Foster
Kansan staff writer
Richards, a snow sculptor, insists that colder is better. Working three days in a minus 10-degree chill, he takes off the foot chunk of snow into a work of art.
Richards, an arts and sculpting student at Haskell Indian Junior College, has been sculpting snow for a year.
"I wanted to keep myself updated on my sculpting," he said.
Richards became interested in snow sculpting last January when his uncle asked him to join him in a snow sculpting contest in Rockford, Ill. They won first place with "Buffalo Dreamer," a sculpture that depicted an Indian wearing a buffalo-horned headdress.
Richards said that his uncle, Larry Wetherholt, was one of the top professional wildlife artists in the country.
"My uncle Larry designs the sculpture and makes a clay model." Richard.
He said that it was important to design a clay model before working on the prototype.
Jon Richards snow sculptor
You have to be really careful and know what to cut. You have to be sure not to cut off too much.'
A.
"You have to be really careful and know what to cut." Richards said. "You have to be sure not to cut off too much."
KAYLAVA VINCENT
TRAVEL
Shovels, scrapers and tomahawks are used to mold the snow into art, he
Richards just finished competing in the U.S. snow sculpting contest in Milwaukee.
He, his uncle and a cousin spent almost four days in sub-zero weather chipping and carving a block of snow to create the "Buffalo Conjure." He succeeded and qualified for the international competition in Quebec, Canada.
WinterFun, a non-profit organization in Milwaukee, sponsored the U.S. competition. Gordon Taylor, vice president of WinterFun, said his organization put together winter carnivals and activities such as the snow
sculpting contests to promote winter activities in Milwaukee.
"The Wetherholt team has done very well," Taylor said. "They haven't been competing very long, but qualifying for the competition in Quebec shows just how good they can be.
"The competition in Quebec is the largest running snow sculpting competition. It's been held for about 18 years."
Richards he liked helked sculpting
bricheas because he was fun and because
he likeked apportionment.
"You get all psyched up to win.
Giving first place, 'that's all I think about.'
Richards doesn't mind the cold weather. During the U.S. competition recently, he wore thermal snow suits and rarely got cold, except for his jacket.
"If your hands get cold, we stick them in a bucket of cold water because when it's very cold out, the her feels like body tempature." he said.
Sculptures are judged on creativity, size, quality and teamwork. Richards said. Creativity is the most important part.
The blocks of snow are formed from snow gathered from highways and airport runways.
Shankel fair after suffering heart attack
Del Shankel, KU professor of microbiology and biochemistry, was listed in fair condition yesterday evening in the intensive care unit of the University of Kansas Medical Center after suffering a heart attack Wednesday morning.
By a Kansan reporter
Shankel, who served as acting executive vice chancellor in the spring of 1987, experienced a heart attack caused by a blood clot in his coronary arteries, a spokesman for the Med Center said.
A new clot-dissolving drug, TPA, was administered to Shankel at Lawrence Memorial Hospital and on the way to the Med Center, the spokesman said. Tests at the Med Center reveal that the drug has dissolved the clot sufficiently to unblock the artery and to allow blood to flow again, the spokesman said.
Bramila helped finance a new public library in Junction City, the Geary County historical museum and the new Kansas State University basketball arena. Angell is a member of the Federal Reserve Board and was a state representative from 1961 to 1967.
Daughters dinner tonight at Topeka's downtown Ramada Inn.
Local Briefs
Further tests are being administered to determine whether the blockage was taken care of soon enough to allow the heart muscle to recover on its own.
KANSAS DAY CELEBRATION: A speech by Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole will highlight a three-day celebration of Kansas's 127th birthday, which is today. Dole will address a banquet Saturday in the Topeka Expocentre.
Shankel served as acting chancellor at KU for 14 months before Gene A. Budig was selected to fill the position in August 1981.
Gov. Mike Hayden will present the Kansan of-the-year awards to Fred Bramlage of Junction City and Wayne Angell of Ottawa at the annual Native Sons and
A Greenhouse Larger Than a Football Field $ ^{1} /_{2} $ OFF
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Time: 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.
Place: KU Bookstore - Kansas Union
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The University of Kansas Theatre for Young People Presents
MONKEY
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved for Reservations, call 913-864-3982
MONKEY
2:30 p.m. Saturday, January 30, 1988
Crafton-Prayer Theatre
By Charles Jones Adapted from the 16th c. novel, Monkey, by Wu Ch'Eng-En
Admission $2.50 regardless of age
V
♠
"It's what's underneath that counts"
Eldridge Temptations
701 Massachusetts
I LOST IT ALL
Jan. 29, 1988
AT THE
ALPHA CHI CASINO
A X Ω
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan / Friday, January 29, 1988
3
Early risers get up and get fit
A
Joanie Tajchman, Shawnee Mission junior, takes a swim in the early morning light at Robinson Gymnasium. Taichman was using the gym as part of the Sunrise Fitness Program.
By Donna Stokes
Kansan staff writer
At 6 a.m., most students have not even smacked the snooze button for the first time, but more than 50 KU students and faculty members were up and at 'em Wednesday morning for the first day of the Sunrise Fitness Program at Robinson Center.
The program runs Monday through Friday every week. It includes aerobics in Robinson gyms from 6:15 a.m. to 7:15 a.m., weight training in the Robinson weight room from 6 a.m. to 8 a.m., swimming in Robinson pools from 6 a.m. to 8 a.m. and jogging in Anschutz Sports Pavilion from 6:30 a.m. to 7:30 a.m.
Rick Cameron, a special events coordinator at Robinson, is in charge of the program. He said KU had officiated over 200 games for at least four years.
Cameron said, "You'd be surprised how many people come early to exercise. It can be snowing, and people will be standing outside the door, waiting to get in, at 6 a.m."
The program is available to Lawrence residents, but Cameron said he hoped it would be used mostly by students and staff.
"Some of the staff like to play racquetball during these hours. It is a benefit for them, too," he said.
Marion Bickford, professor of geology, said playing handball was a great way to wake up in the morning.
“He’s only saying that because he won the first game,” said Bickford's opponent, Edward Manda, a Lawrence dentist.
"Handball is great," Bickford said. "You hit the ball with your hands, so it helps get out all of those aggressions and frustrations from students, or deans or whoowell, just knock the hell out of the ball."
Wednesday morning, more than 20 people were in the weight room.
Mary Gray, Prentiss, Miss,
graduate student, was riding an exercise bike. She said she liked the program because the weight room was less crowded in the morning.
"It really helps me get on up in the morning."Grav said.
Many KU crew team members also worked out in the weight room. "There are probably about 18 of us today," said Libby Elliott, Lawrence graduate student.
"It is hard to get up sometimes," she said. "You really have to make a concerted effort to get out of bed."
Aerobics classes in the gyms are available to students, staff and the community for a $20 fee.
Claire Henderson, Lawrence junior and assistant aerobics instructor, said that many of the participants were working people or mothers who wanted to exercise before their children woke up.
"For a college student who likes to sleep until noon, it will be a challenge to get up early three
days a week, but it will also be good discipline for me," Henderson said.
Nancy Bracciano, Lawrence resident, said she had been participating in aerobics for quite a few years. "It's great for circulating for the day," she said.
"I put six of my children through KU." she said. "Now I'm getting
JoAnne Lorenz, Lawrence resident, said she was trying to build strength through weight lifting and swimming. "There is a lot more space and freedom to swim this stuff," she says. "I'm going to try not to give up on it."
my enjoyment out of it."
Registration for the program is in 208 Robinson during regular
office hours. An all-activity pass for Lawrence residents, including aerobics, weight training and swimming, is $4.5. Each individual program costs $20. Jogging is free.
The program will continue until May 13, excluding spring break.
For students and faculty, everything except aerobics is free with a KUID.
Strict tax laws affect students
By James Buckman
Kansan staff writer
A tax law written in 1986 might prove to be expensive for students paying taxes on 1987 income.
That double exemption was eliminated with the new law.
Before 1987, parents could list students as dependents and claim an exemption for that student. The student, if he made enough to file a tax return, also could claim an exemption for himself.
Greg Shipe, manager of the tax firm H&R Block, Inc., 1601 W. 23rd St., said that for 1987 tax returns, only parents would be able to claim student loans. But the student also be able to subtract the money from his taxable income.
"We are getting some calls from students who didn't know about it," Shine said, "and they are shocked."
The exemption allowed some students to remain below the lowest tax bracket. That privilege no longer is available and it was in 1987 before they would be taxed.
For example, if a student listed as a dependent made $3,300 in 1986, he would not have had to pay taxes. He could have subtracted the exemption, $1,000 in 1986, which would have put him below the lowest tax bracket.
But if the same student made the same amount of money in 1987, he would to pay taxes on the full amount.
Shipe said that the parent was required to claim the exemption if it applied. Students are not able to claim the exemption if the Internal Revenue Service determines that the parents are entitled to it.
As a protective measure, the IRS will be able to use social security numbers to match both the parents' and the dependents' claims to ensure that both parties aren't claiming the exemption, he said.
Shipe didn't think that the new law would affect many students. He did say, however, that it might cause problems for some.
The new law won't affect students listed as independents. A student can be considered an independent if his parents provide less than one-half of his financial support.
"One student I talked to didn't have to file last year," he said. "This year, he will end up owing from about $160 on the same amount of money."
He said that figure was based on an income of about $4,000.
"I don't think I'm going to get hit that bad," he said. "It looks like it will be a matter of $50 or $60 dollars, which isn't going to be a problem. It will affect me, but not to the extent that it's going to stop me from doing whatever I need to do."
Ken Sutton, Overland Park senior,
looked over his taxes and said he
didn't think the new law would have a
big effect on him.
USAF cuts ROTC
Tight budget downs K-State program
By Dayana Yochim
Kansan staff writer
KU will have the only Air Force ROTC program in the state when the U.S. Air Force completes a cutback in college programs, including one at Kansas State University.
The Air Force has announced that it will close 30 Air Force ROTC college units and consolidate an additional seven into nearby schools because of budget cuts.
A K-State Air Force ROTC official said yesterday that the closing came as a surprise but that the cancellation was a positive change.
"On the national level, this is a healthy move," said Maj. Richard Brown, a professor of aerospace studies at K-State. "By cutting back on inefficiency, we are able to remain remaining operations a chance to be more efficient."
Brown said that he found out about the cancellation Tuesday.
The changes will be phased in over 18 months to allow juniors and seniors in the program to complete their studies.
Capt. Joe Goldblatt, KU assistant professor of aerospace, said that there was a possibility that some K-12 students in ROTC students may transfer to KU.
"If those students want to become commissioned officers, we will see transfers from K-State to here," he said.
Goldblatt said that entry into the ROTC program was unlimited at the freshman and sophomore level but that it was more selective at the junior and senior level.
"There are a lot more uniformed men on campus than 10 years ago," Goldblatt said. "We have been much more selective within the last two years. There are many more academically qualified individuals."
There are 101 students in the K.
State Air Force ROTC program.
"Everyone is surprised because the decision came without a lot of fanfare and warning." Brown said. "The students enrolled in the program have two months to decide whether they will stay in the ROTC and transfer to a different unit or leave the program altogether."
Brown said that the K-State administration was supportive of the students in the program and that they would try to help them financially.
The Air Force spent $128 million in fiscal year 1987 on its ROTC program. Approximately $14 million of that was for the 37 units being closed or consolidated.
Legislation may aid maternity, parental leave, speakers say
By Rebecca J. Cisek
Kansan staff writer
Current provisions for maternity and parental leave are not adequate, but legislation on the federal and state levels could improve them, a law professor and state senator said last night.
Maternity and parental leave was the subject of the 1988 February Sisters Memorialary Forum sponsored by the KU women's studies department. About 50 people attended the forum in the auditorium of the Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont
State Sen. Wint Winter, R-Lawrence, said he was drafting a bill on maternal and health leave but the bill probably would not come before legislators this session. No legislation that deals with the state policy on maternal and family leave has been introduced in
The February Sisters was a group of KU women who took over the East Asian studies building 16 years ago, demanding more programs and rights for women on campus.
one of the four panelists, gave the status of a U.S. House of Representatives bill that is expected to be voted on this session.
The bill would affect businesses of 50 or more employees who have been with the business for at least one year and who work 20 or more hours a week. It would allow up to 10 weeks of unpaid leave in a two-year period to care for newly born or adopted children or for children and parents with serious illnesses. The bill also would give employees up to 15 weeks of unpaid leave in a one-year period for a personal disability.
Elinor Schroeder, KU professor of law and
The act provides for the continuation of the employee's health insurance and insures that the employee can return to the same job or an equivalent one.
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics' predictions, women will make up 60 percent of the work force by the year 2000. Schroeder said.
Peggy Billings, president of the Lawrence chapter of the National Organization for Women, said one of the problems with the house bill is that 95 percent of the employers in the nation have fewer than 50 employees
According to the national NOW office, the majority of employers currently offer no family leave.
Panelist Linda Wimberly Freking told her story of being denied restatement in her job and unemployment compensation as a result of the maternity leave she took.
and 62 percent of employees work for these employers.
"The employer said that if I wanted a career, I should never have had a family," she said.
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Friday, January 29, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Congress must take the lead to bring peace to Nicaragua
Peace. A simple word, yet so elusive in practice that millions of people in many countries around the world use it as a greeting.
Wishful thinking. Peace.
Mankind never has had many problems starting conflicts, nor has he had many problems in continuing them. The greater problem always has been his feeble attempts to stop fighting and live together. It doesn't take digging into a history book or much looking through a newspaper to see just how feeble these attempts have been.
Today, the U.S. people, through the Congress, are in a difficult position because of President Reagan's request for $36 million in aid to the Nicaraguan rebels. If the contra-aid package passes through Congress, it appears that the United States is against the peace plan initiated by Costa Rican President Oscar Arias Sanchez. But if Congress votes against the aid proposal, the U.S. takes the role of once again stirring up a small war, and when it becomes tiring, walking out. It would seem that either choice is unacceptable.
Opinion
Not every problem can be solved with a gun unless you simply kill everyone who disagrees with you. On the other hand, while diplomacy may not always work, people are seldom killed by sheaves of paperwork. Humanitarian aid for the contras is understandable, but at this time lethal military assistance should be stopped.
The Congress has to recognize that some countries must be forced to the negotiation table at gunpoint. But more importantly, Congress, in view of the events of the past week, must recognize that the negotiation table is now in front of it.
It is idealistic to proclaim that the U.S. is supporting the contra "freedom fighters" in order to bring about democratic reform in Nicaragua. But at the same time a blind eye is turned toward dictatorships in this hemisphere, and many regimes around the globe are placated as they repress their citizens. Let's face it, Saudi Arabia is not exactly a paragon of democracy or a hotbed of individual liberty and freedom.
And President Reagan's "Escrow Account" for the military portion of the aid package introduces a new dimension to the dilemma. But by holding on to the escrow purse strings himself, he assumes the part of a hungry wolf guarding the sheep. As a result, this administration's motives in Central America remain unclear.
So then, the rationale of our actions finally must fall to maintaining regional stability. But, we must understand the sad fact that regional stability does not necessarily equal regional democracy. Without question, having stable neighbors is in the best interests of the U.S. people. The question then becomes, are guns and grenades the only way to achieve stability.
Perhaps, this time, if the U.S. can take its finger off the trigger long enough, everyone can find a way to greet each other while working toward that elusive dream of all people — Peace.
Van jenneke for the editorial board
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
Other Voices
The issue of homosexuality isn't new, and it isn't going to go away. Our society should be able to face this very real issue. However, this does not appear to be the case in Lawrence or other Kansas communities.
Discrimination can't be condoned
The Lawrence City Commission voted not to amend a city ordinance that would prohibit discrimination in employment, housing and public accommodation on the basis of sexual orientation.
One commissioner went so far as to admit that discrimination does exist — discrimination so serious it came in the form of death threats to homosexuals. However, because no proof could be found that discrimination exists in such an area, a difficult effect, such an agreement to be passed, he said.
Kansans need to take a firm stand. When leaders fail to abolish discrimination in employment, housing and public accommodations, they are in effect condoning some discrimination.
It is a poor excuse to vote against such an amendment simply because it is politically unpopular, particularly in an area such as Lawrence. Universities are places to promote new ideas and teach tolerance for opposing views. The community surrounding such an institution should reflect this.
Kansas State Collegian Kansas State University
News staff
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Stephen Wade...Photo editor
Richard Stewart...Graphics editor
Tom Eblem...General manager, news adviser
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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 columns 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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K A N S A N
MAILBOX
Add-drop is no 'high'
Barbara M. Paris' letter in the Jan. 21 Kansan inflicted me because Paris implied that students at the University of Kansas only want it their way.
I am a senior majoring in communications and was supposed to graduate in May. However, due to the University's lack of resources, I cannot get in the classes I need and consequently will graduate one year late.
The add-drop period is used by many students, including me, for the purpose of getting into a class that was previously closed. This add-drop period is preceded with the student spending the first week of class pleading with the instructor to open a spot. Paris' suggestion that students "achieve some kind of high" standing in lines all day is also ridiculous. The fact is that we are enraged that we must stand in long lines to get into a class that was already closed during the regular enrollment period.
Danny Abrams Skokie,Ill.,senior
Ignorance is appalling
I agree with Paris' suggestions about how we must cope with this situation until we obtain adequate funding to hire more teachers. Until that time, Paris should not be appalled, but rather should respond positively to "gimmes." "I want you" or "I gotta have," for that is one of the few options students have to get into a class. Maybe a little patience and understanding of the students' problems could be shown by them, so that they are less lesson in life I have learned here is that you don't always get what you want, when you want it, the way you want it.
After reading your story and looking at the adjoining picture on the front page of the Jan. 20 issue of the Kansan, I find myself appalled at ignorance that still permeates a "liberated" society. We live in a country which is supposed to embody the ideals of the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. I suppose we should amend this so it reads the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness as long as it is all right with city commissioners Sandra Praeger, Bob Schumm and Lawrence mayor Mike Amyx. It is amazing to me how an
amendment to the human rights ordinance which would guarantee protection from discrimination by sexual orientation could not pass.
Lawrence is a good city in which to live. The people here are generally fair-minded and honest; yet that some of this city's most respected citizens have displayed their blunt prejudice on a matter of social importance disproves this. I sincerely hope this important issue is one that will appear before our generally close-minded City Commission again, even repeatedly, until it is passed.
Regarding the photograph of the two women hugging which adjoins the article, I find it a bit ironic. Should two women be allowed to hug in public in Lawrence? I am a white, heterosexual male who will not judge the sexual orientation of others until God contacts me personally to do so. I would like to thank and applaud city commissioners Dennis Constance and Mike Rundle for their courage and willingness to stand up for an ideal that this country has prided itself in for over 200 years: "That all men are created equal." I believe this to be true, regardless of race, sex, color, nationality, religion, age, ancestry, handicap OR sexual orientation.
Scott C. Reeves Olathe sophomore
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Continued from p. 1
"It's like everybody in the world had 10 books checked out and returned them all at once," said Shively, library assistant.
Shively said the book barrage began about the time her student helpers cut back on work to study for finals. During the Christmas break, between semesters Shively had only two assistants to reshelve books.
There are 17 work-study employees reshelving books now.
As Shively and her crew work to whittle down the pile of books, another term is getting under way books are starting to circulate again.
"It seems like what progress we make, we're immediately dumped on with returns," Shively said.
addition to having to reshelve
books from last semester. Shively must shelve 5,000 to 6,000 new books that come to the library each month and a large number of old books sent to be re-bound.
Shively isn't sure when things will get back to normal, but she is already sure of one thing: She will burst her budget again this year.
During fiscal year 1987, Shively was budgeted enough money to pay for 9,000 hours of rescheduling work. She finished the year 355 hours over budget. To correct the problem, she was allocated 9,200 hours for the current fiscal year. But during the first half, she used 54 percent of her apportionment, and that was before the books piled up.
Shively said she depended totally on students in the work-study program in her lab.
"Because I depend on work-study,
I have to take what I get," Shively
as if she were a student.
It isn't easy keeping workers in the
"Part of the problem is, it's hard work ... and it can be pretty boring, too. I've had people quit after two hours here ... the ones that stick with it are tremendous," she said.
stacks. Shively said.
Shively said the library staff was trying to help her reshelve books.
"They came and helped one day," Shivley said, "and boy, we got a lot done."
Simmons said she had worked nine years at the library and that each year, as the fall semester ended, a flood of books swept in. In 1979, the backlog was cleared by January, Simmons said. This year, the rush won't end until early February.
it is not a situation I like at all." Simmons said. "I wish someone would come up with a suggestion of how to handle it."
Shively is perplexed also. "I don't know what would be a lasting solution, other than giving me more money," she said.
Meese
Continued from p.1
needed either by the bureau or the (Justice) Department."
The FBI issued a statement Wednesday acknowledging that it had investigated the Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador, or CISPES, a group opposed to U.S. involvement in Central America. But the FBI said it was looking for "alleged criminal activi-
attorney Margaret Ratner said the FBI investigations violated the First and Fourth Amendments to the Constitution, which guarantee freedoms of speech and assembly and the right to be secure from unreasonable searches and seizures.
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Friday, January 29, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Former Sandinistas laud aid to contras
By Elaine Woodford
Kansan staff writer
U. S. aid to the contras didn't escalate the civil war in Nicaragua but instead pushed the Nicaraguan government to talk peace with the contras, two former Sandinista army officers said yesterday.
"It's like the carrot on a stick before a donkey," said one of the officers, Mariano Montealegre, former vice commander of the Sandinista Air Force.
Montealegre and Carlos Rondon, a former Sandinista revolutionary, spoke to about 15 people at the Skyline Room of the All Seasons Motel, 2309 Iowa St. Their visit was sponsored by the Ad-Hoc Coalition of Kansans for a Free Nicaragua.
Rondon said he became a political activist at the age of 8. A native of Managua, he joined others in 1959 to protest the massacre of students who were participating in a protest march. He later joined the FSLN, an organization that gave root to the current Marxist Sandinista government.
The war in Nicaragua is not a conflict between the United States and the Soviet Union, Montalegreau said, but a war on ignorance and poverty.
"I became involved with the Sandinistas because I wanted to make Nicaragua a better country." he said.
But both men became disillusioned with the Sandinistas when the Marxist members of the group took power.
"The Marxists were repressing the Indians in the Northern territories. They were supported and directed by the Cuban officials, who were leveling entire villages and killing men, women and children," said Montealegre, who fled to Costa Rica in 1981.
Rondon and Montealeagre said the people of Nicaragua were the ones who were paying the high price of international involvement, the price of human lives.
"The revolution in Nicaragua is a fact, it is a highly politicized country. We don't want to annihilate the Sandinistas, we're killing each other," Rondon said. "We want the Sandinistas to join us and form a democracy."
Both men were hopeful that the peace talks between the Sandinistas and contras would bring about new reforms.
Rondon said that although the leaders of the Sandista government claimed to be revolutionaries, they still lived in the grand style of the former Nicaraguan officials. Rondon also referred to information quoted in the New York Times that gave the figures of President Daniel Ortega's Swiss bank account.
A. R. G. W.
Carlos Randon, former Sandinista revolutionary, speaks in the Skyline Room at the All Seasons Motel, 2309 Iowa St., about problems facing Nicaragua. The Ad-hoc Coalition of Kansans for a Free Nicaragua sponsored last night's speech.
KU to raise funds for multiple sclerosis
By Donna Stokes
Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas will rise up against multiple sclerosis Monday with a balloon launch on the east side of Wescoe Hall.
The Lawrence City Commission on Tuesday declared February "Bust MS Month." Students Against Multi-Sclerosis plans a series of activities.
The balloon launch is the kickoff of a month of activities to raise money for multiple sclerosis research and education. Multiple sclerosis is a neurological disease that has no cure.
SAMS is a national student movement designed to increase public awareness of MS and establish long-term fund-raising and volunteer support for the National Multiple Sclerosis Society. Students at more than 200 college campuses across the country participate.
Larry Brown, KU SAMS honorary chairman, will help launch the balloons at 12:20 p.m., along with several basketball players, Kansas City Comets players and other KU coaches. They will release 500 to 1,000 balloons, said Andy Draper, co-chairman of KU SAMS.
On Wednesday, SAMS will seek donations before the KU-Oklahma basketball game. Volunteers will be stationed outside Allen Field House and campus buildings that day to collect money and distribute material about the disease.
"We want to make sure students understand what multiple sclerosis
is," Shelley Hansel, SAMS co-chairman, said. "It's also an awareness drive."
From Feb. 8 to Feb. 12, SAMS will ask the University to participate in the national "Skip-a-Meal for MS" program.
In the program, students, or student living groups on campus, choose a designated meal to skip, and a portion of the cost of that meal is donated to the National Multiple Sclerosis Society.
"We hope that fraternities, sororities and scholarship halls will donate the amount of money that would go to together a certain meal." Hansel said.
On Thursday, contestants for SAMS Rock-a-Like will make their first official appearance at Gam-
mons, 1601 W. 23rd St. and Johnny's Up and Under, 401 N. Second St. They will perform Feb. 10 at Gammons.
In the contest, people dress up like their favorite rock star and perform
Students can vote for the contestants Feb. 17 at Johnny's Up and Under by placing a dollar in a can for their favorite contestant.
In addition to money raised from the votes, each contestant will sell sweatshirts and beer mugs.
Bullwinkles, 1344 Tennessee St.. will offer "Monday Night Mug Madness" every Monday beginning in February. Students can buy a SAMS 12-oz. mug for $2 and get 50-count draws after that. The mug fund-raiser could last until spring, Draper said.
Students skeptical about Koop's plan for AIDS testing
hate to see this take place.'
By Jeff Suggs
Phillip Huntingstier, associate professor of health, education and recreation, said he was not in favor of the plan. Huntingstier, who teaches a course on HIV infection to doctors, said the AIDS tests were too unreliable.
Some KU students and faculty are skeptical about U.S. Surgeon General C. Everett Koop's plan to test every student of one major university for AIDS this spring. They think it just won't do the job of gauging the incidence of AIDS on campuses.
Koop announced Wednesday that he planned to use AIDS tests to determine the incidence of the disease among young adults.
Kansan staff writer
"It itens to me, that education is the key. Even if they get the statistics, what do the statistics mean when the tests are fallible?"
Liz Tolbert, director of Gay and Lesbian Student Services of Kansas, agreed with Hunsinger. She said educating people about AIDS was more important.
"Education has proven to be more important," Doerit said. "When people know what's safe, they do it."
Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare, said testing students for AIDS at only one university would not provide a realistic picture of the extent of AIDS among young adults.
"Until they have better testing," he said, "I'd
campus AIDS task force, said random testing of college students across the country would be more
"Establishing a kind of base line of exposure in the college and university population would be interesting information." Dailev said.
Mike Johnson, Topeka freshman, also said testing one university would not be a good measure
Dailey, who was a member of the Lawrence
Suzi McClain, Sabetha senior, said she thought the testing would do some good.
"It would not be a very accurate test at all," Johnson said.
President's proposals for more student aid to help few, some say
By Rebecca J. Cisek
"I don't see anything wrong with it," McClaim said. "I think it would be interesting to see what the results of the test would be."
Kansan staff writer
In his State of the Union address Monday night, Reagan called for the creation of College Savings Bonds, which would allow families to begin saving early for their children's college education. Interest earned on the bonds would be tax-free.
President Reagan's proposals to increase Pell Grants and institute new College Savings Bonds probably won't help needy students much. KU financial aid officials said Wednesday.
Reagan also proposed raising the Pell Grant from $2,100 to $2,200 for the 1988-1989 school year and to $2,500 for the 1989-1990 school year. Grants are for low-income students.
Jeff Weinberg, associate director of student financial aid, said that any increases in financial aid were always positive for students.
Dallas Martin, president of the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators in Washington, D.C., said he was glad that Reagan had suggested the increase. The association has been pushing for the change for several years.
But he said that the proposed increase in the tell Grant wouldn't violate his own rules.
"In terms of the increase in the cost of living, it's not significant," he
The savings bond program would have a minimal effect in helping students because it would affect only part of the population. Weinberg said.
He said that families that had the means to save would be helped since they wouldn't have to pay taxes on the interest the bonds earned. The bonds would encourage families to save for higher education. Currently, families are penalized when they try to save because of the taxes on savings interest.
Weinberg said that the increase in the Pell Grant would affect several hundred KU students next fall. Congress probably would adopt the Pell Grant increase because of the program's popularity, he said.
But the bonds would not affect families with the greatest financial need. he said.
"Most students' parents are not able to save in this day and age." Weinberg said.
Martin said that the concept of saving bonds was a good one and that families should be encouraged to save.
But, he said, the bonds wouldn't do much to help current generations of us.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, January 29, 1983
7
Second AIDS virus found U.S. blood supplies secure
Nation/World
The Associated Press
NEWARK, N.J. — Public health officials moved yesterday to ally fear that a New Jersey hospital's diagnosis of a second AIDS virus in the United States could lead to a new epidemic of the deadly disease.
Blood supplies are safe and there is no evidence that the virus, HIV-2, has spread beyond the West African woman diagnosed with the disease at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, officials said.
Dr. Gary Noble, who is deputy director of the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta and who is in charge of the case, said the diagnosis of the woman, who
he identified as a native of the West African nation of Cape Verde, was the first confirmed case of HIV-2 in the United States. She was diagnosed in December, he said.
"There is no immediate peril to the blood banks in the United States," said Dr. Stanley H. Weiss, a former investigator for the National Cancer Institute and now a professor of preventive medicine and community health at the university.
The virus, discovered $2\frac{1}{2}$ years ago in West Africa and later found in Europe, is known as human immunodeficiency virus, type 2, or HIV-2 for short. That distinguishes it from the original AIDS virus, HIV-1.
Canadian court nullifies abortion law
The Associated Press
TORONTO — The Supreme Court of Canada struck down the nation's restrictive abortion law in a split decision yesterday, ruling it unconstitutional and a violation of a woman's right to control her own body.
tion-on-demand for Canadian women.
The 5-2 ruling vindicated abortion crusader Dr. Henry Morgentaler of Toronto, who has been fighting in the courts for 18 years to secure abor-
"Bravo for the Supreme Court of Canada! Bravo for the women of Canada!" Morgentale told reporters in Ottawa, where the verdict was announced. "It's a victory for reproductive freedom across this country."
But the anti-abortion movement vowed to fight on by urging Parliament to rewrite the law.
Nicaragua-contra peace talks begin
Roman Catholic seminary in the San Jose suburbs.
The Associated Press
SAN JOSE, Costa Rica — Nicaragua's leftist government and contra rebels began their first face-to-face peace talks yesterday, bringing sharply contrasting objectives to a
The talks opened after President Reagan requested $36.25 million more in aid for the rebels, whom the United States finances and trains.
Gunfire ends polygamist standoff
MARION, Utah — A quick burst of gunfire yesterday ended a tense, 13-day standoff between a polygamist clan and police, killing an officer and seriously wounding the group's ringleader, who was suspected of bombing a Mormon chapel.
The Associated Press
The shooting erupted just after dawn when police who had secretly infiltrated the clan's compound used a trained dog to try to isolate Addam Swapp and his brother from the log
In the exchange of shots, the dog's police handler was shot in the abdomen and Swapp fell in the snow with bullet wounds in the arm and chest, said John T. Nielsen, state public safety director.
house they had left moments before, officials said.
"In the succeeding, following moments after the gunfire, the agents moved in an armored personnel carrier to evacuate those who were wounded and they came under
extremely heavy gunfire from the residence " he said
revenge against the church and state for the 1979 police slaying of polygamist patriarch John Singer. He told others that he sought an armed confrontation to trigger Singer's resurrection.
However, the shots ended moments later and the clan's four other adults and nine children filed from the house in two groups with their arms raised above their heads.
The siege had begun within hours of the predawn bombing Jan. 16 of the Mormon Church's chapel a half mile from the compound. That night, police talked by telephone with Swapp, who said the bombing was
Nielsen said the decision to seize Swapp, 27, on federal warrants was made after a family friend delivered to police Wednesday afternoon Swapp's response to a letter from Gov. Norm Bangerter pleading with him to surrender.
Hart speaks out against his opponents
The Associated Press
Gary Hart ridiculed his Democratic presidential rivals for misguided "old politics" and complained of endless scrutiny from the media yesterday, while a congressional investigator renewed the call for George Bush to tell all on arms to
Fighting sagging poll numbers, Hart raised the pitch of his criticism of fellow Democrats in an Iowa speech in which he said they avoided specifics by repeating only vague phrases, chanting "Massachusetts miracle" and "presidential leadership" like mantra.
In Washington, House Iran-Contra Committee Chairman Lee Hamilton, D-Ind., said the vice president's role in the sale of U.S. missiles to Iran remained unclear and would be an issue until Bush answered the questions that follow him.
issue right now for the vice president to tell us exactly what his reservations were and how vigorously he expressed them," Hamilton said on CBS "This Morning."
"It seems to me it's a legitimate
He said he saw no evidence that Bush opposed the weapons deal and "the evidence is just the opposite."
News Roundup
COURT NOMINEE DECISION: The Senate will vote Wednesday on the Supreme Court nomination of Anthony M. Kennedy, Majority Leader Robert Byrd's office announced yesterday. The vote will follow about one hour of floor speeches. No senator has announced opposition to the Sacramento, Calif., federal appellate judge.
tions from executives of a now-bankrupt company, the Kansas City Star reported yesterday. The Dole campaign said it had no knowledge of improper contributions.
WALDHEIM FACES INVESTIGATION: President Kurt Waldeim met the commission investigating his alleged links to Nazi war crimes yesterday after it allowed him an advance look at the questions he faced. Allegations against Waldeim have been widely reported since March 1986, when Austrian and U.S. media and
DOLE CONTRIBUTIONS QUESTIONED: The 1868 Senate campaign of Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole received thousands of dollars in what may have been illegal campaign contribu-
the world Jewish Congress revealed he was in the Balkans as a German army lieutenant.
RIGHTS BILL PASSED: In Washington, the Senate yesterday passed a civil rights bill restoring broad federal protection against discrimination four years after the Supreme Court imposed severe limits on the scope of the laws. The 75-14 vote in favor of the Civil Rights Restoration Act came after the Senate approved an amendment that effectively repealed 1975 regulations designed to prevent discrimination against women who have abortions or want them.
ON CAMPUS...please see pg.2
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Friday, January 29, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
.
Country remembers Challenger
The Associated Press
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Space workers preparing for resumption of shuttle flights paused to pay silent tribute yesterday to the seven astronauts who died two years ago in the fiery Challenger disaster. It was one of many remembrances around the country.
Tour buses stopped, cafeteria lines halted, and hundreds of engineers, technicians and other workers poured out of buildings at 11:38 a.m.
the moment when Challenger lifted off Jan. 28, 1986.
Flags around the Kennedy Space Center were lowered to half-staff, while workers stood silent for 73 seconds, the length of the fatal Challenger flight. The air was chilly, the sky clear, a grim reminder of the frigid conditions that contributed to the space shuttle's destruction.
At the Johnson Space Center in Houston, workers held a quiet, 73-second observance, and officials at
the marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., encouraged workers to observe the anniversary in their own way.
In Concord, N.H., students at Concord High school paused at the beginning of classes to remember Christa McAuliffe, their city's social sciences teacher who died in the shuttle explosion. She was aboard as NASA's first citizen-in-space and was to have taught lessons from orbit to schools around the country.
At McAulife's grave overlooking the New England city, flowers lay atop the black marble marker; deep snow partially obscured the inscription.
In Washington, Sen. John Glemn,
D-Dhoio, the first American to orbit
the Earth, in 1962, issued a statement
in which he said, "We owe it to the
Challenger astronauts to pursue an
aggressive space program. Their
sacrifice will have meaning only if
we learn from it and move forward."
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, January 29; 1988
Jacque Janssen, arts/features editor
9
Arts & Entertainment
An L.A. Wave rolls in to K.C. Local station's format change brings new age to local radio
Ruth Jacobson/KANSAN
New-age music recreates dreamy scenes with such album titles as "Western Spaces," "Natural States" and "The Velocity of Love."
Kansan staff writer
By Jeff Suggs
In the late 1970s, a new kind of music established itself in the United States. With its aggressive sounds, performers such as the Sex Pistols, Elvis Costello and Talking Heads brought together a movement known in its early stages as new wave.
Welcome to the mellow sounds of the Wave.
This movement offered an alternative to listeners who had grown tired of album rock radio darlings such as Boston and the Electric Light Orchestra.
Since its beginning in Los Angeles last February, the Wave format, with its combination of new age, light pop music and a major radio markets like a high tide.
Now, there is a different wave of music in the United States that is offering an alternative to album rock radio, but it has about as much in common with new wave as Karen Carpenter did with Johnny Rotten.
The image is a monochrome photograph depicting a serene landscape with a large tree reflected in the water. The trees are tall and slender, with dense foliage, and their reflections create a mirror-like effect on the surface of the lake. The sky is overcast, suggesting a cold or cloudy day. The overall mood of the image is calm and tranquil.
That tide has rolled into the Kansas City area.
In July, KZZC-FM 98.9, a radio station based in Leavennorth, traded in the old hits of Elvis Presley and the Rolling Stones and changed its call letters to KCWJ, the Wave. The station was an oldies station and, before that, a top-40 station known as ZZ-90.
It changed its format because the audience wasn't there, said program director Todd Chase.
However, Chase said the new format was bringing in more listeners. He said the station, which is going through an ownership change, had done very well for not having a high-profile media campaign.
He said the Wave was for people who wanted a different type of music that could be heard.
"It's for a non-mainstream audience," Chase said. "It's the kind of music for people who are sick of
mainstream music."
Chase said that he would like to appeal to a wide audience but that statistics had shown people with upper incomes enjoy the format.
"It's not a totally mass-av
product," Chase said.
But calling the Wave a new-age
format is a misnomer, Chase said.
"The new-age part seems to get everyone's attention," he said, "though we play it only 20 percent of the time."
The Wave started at KMET-FM, a major rock station in Los Angeles. It surprised many of its listeners last February when it announced that it was changing formats. It fired its disc jockeys, became automated and changed its call letters to KTWV, the Wave.
But there are some detractors of the Wave format. Music critics have been harping on this brand of laidback tunes since the Wave was created in February.
In a week's time, the station went from playing Bruce Springsteen and Led Zeppelin to playing David Sanborn, Dionne Warwick, Andreas Vollenweider and Kitaro. It also retained rock performers such as Sting and Steely Dan. It was quite a change for a station that was one of the pioneers of album rock.
Robert Hilburn, pop music critic for the Los Angeles Times, is one writer who hasn't been a big fan of the Wave. He said he didn't like listening to Wave stations and was depressed that the format was gaining popularity.
"My impression of it is this vacuous background music." Hilburn
The rising popularity of the Wave, though, is bringing increased record sales to music that hasn't been played on a national scale.
Rich Schmidt, director of national promotion for Windham Hill Records, said he thought that the
Schmidt, whose company specializes in new-age music, thinks the Wave has affected record sales for artists such as Sanborn and Larry Carlton.
Wave format raised people's consciousness about his company's records.
"I think that the artists that have most benefited are the fusion artists that have been around 10 to 15 years," Schmidt said.
Managers of local record stores also said that the Wave made record buyers more aware of that kind of music.
Steve Wilson, manager of Kief
Discount Records and Stereo Supply.
2100 West 25th St., said the Wave helped increase new-age record sales in a general way.
Peter Gray, manager of Penny Lane Records and Tapes, 844 Massachusetts, said that "New Age has always been real strong. It's been a pretty stable market."
Gray said the lack of song identification on the Wave kept many customers from knowing what artist they wanted to buy. But the station, Gray said, influences people to search for new records.
"I'll tell you this," he said, "I have people come in the store and say I heard this on the Wave."
New alternatives playing at KJHK get mixed reviews
By Jeff Suggs
Kansan staff writer
Last Tuesday. KJHK-FM 90.7 launched its new format.
"I'm pleased with the change, myself," Nash said. "The emphasis is on the new stuff."
Dave Nash, a disc jockey for the student-run radio station, is happy about the change. He actually gets to play "Pleased to Meet Me" by the Replacements, an album that was released last spring but was virtually ignored by the station.
That's essentially what has happened to the format this semester at KJHK.
In the past, DJs got to play most of what they wanted to. Depending on the DJ's taste, he could play hard-core punk or older records throughout his whole shift. This, said Brad Schwartz, station manager, and Lon Payne, program director, attracted a cult following, but it didn't bring in new listeners.
"We found we were alienating our potential listeners," Schwartz said.
IDEA FOR KANSAN MAGAZINE STORY
To bring in the more listeners, the station stopped the free-for-all habits of the DJs, and created a new format. Schwartz and Payne said the station's format would play a variety of new and recent alternative music, along with some older classics.
KJHK's newer music will be based partly on charts by College Media Journal and Rockpool magazine, leaders in determining what's hot and what isn't in college radio. KJHK, however, said Schwartz and Payne, wouldn't accept the charts as gospel. The station will have the final decision to determine whether a certain album will fit into its format.
Payne said the newer material would be played at an average of twelve songs an hour, with the rest being reserved for classic materi-
Playing new material, Nash
said, is what radio is all about.
"You hear something new," he said, "it can make you go out and buy it."
In the past, the college charts have been dominated by such recording artists as R.E.M., the Replacements and the Cure.
But, Schwartz said, new releases by bands such as these were shunned by past KJHK DJs as being too commercial for the station to play. That philosophy also has been changed.
A band such as R.E.M. Schwartz said, may be creeping toward major band status, but it doesn't mean the station has to turn its back on it. Payne pointed out that the station played records by R.E.M. and the Cure before they were popular.
There are some people who aren't crazy about the format change. Christie Fleek, a former DJ at the station, said basing KJHK's playlist on Rockpool and CMJ charts would allow the stage to play bands such as Gene Lopes Jezabel and Swing Sister出
Fleek said that many college stations across the country were basing their playlists on the college charts, which prevented many bands on independent labels from being played on college radio.
Schwartz said that if a band they'd supported for some time hit a song on the top 40, that band wouldn't necessarily be cut from the station's format.
Just because a song is somewhat commercial, Nash said, it doesn't mean it's a bad song.
Schwartz said he hoped that more people would listen to the station.
"We want to make sure to do what we're set to do," he said. "And that is to appeal to the students of the University of Kansas."
Arts and Entertainment
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10
Friday, January 29. 1988 / University Daily Kansar
Ki-aikido is mind over body
Art stresses little force
By Christine Martin
Kansan staff writer
Relax
Rehearsal Focus on a center of energy. Concentrate on timing, rhythm and control.
You have just learned the principles of ki-aikido, a Japanese martial art.
Koichi Kasiwaya, chief instructor of the KiSociety International USA in Kansas City, Mo., demonstrated the art of ki-aikido yesterday afternoon in a martial arts class at Robinson Gymnasium.
Andrew Tusabi, who has a black belt in ki-aiiko, has taught the class at the University of Kansas for three semesters. He said that unlike other
martial arts, which use force alone as a defense, ki-aikido uses the coordination of mind and body as a defense. It is also useful as a method for self-improvement in everyday life, he said.
Tsubaki is a KU professor of East Asian languages and culture and a professor of theater and media arts.
Kaiwisa said that one's ki, which means energy in Japanese, must be trained by combining physical and mental energy.
"Big body does not mean strong mind." Kaiwasiya said as his 6-foot tall assistant tried with both hands to bend Kaiwasiya's outstretched arm.
The assistant couldn't bend it.
Kasiwaya explained that although
he was smaller than his assistant, he was stronger because he concentrated on a center of energy, which he imagined as a small point in his abdomen. Coordinating mind and body allows people to do things they couldn't do with muscle alone, he said.
Kasiwaya's three assistants pretended to attack him in the demonstration; and, using ki-aiikido, Kasiwaya calmly and smoothly flipped each one to the floor.
Ki-ai-kido is used only for self-
defense. Kasiwaya said.
"Extend your ki, think positive, and find a way not to fight," Kasiwava said.
Tsubaki said, "Force never meets force in ki-aiikid. Self-defense is accomplished without violence. Muscle strength and force are not
significant, so ki-akiko is useful for women and men of any size."
Michael Torrey, Fairfax, Va., junior, takes the class. He said he enjoyed ki-aikido because it was different than judo, a Japanese martial art that uses force.
"It's gentle," Torrey said. "You're not out to hurt the guy, you're just trying to inflict the minimum amount of pain to get him to stop messing with you."
Mel Smith, Lawrence resident,
practiced ki-aiikido with Kasiwaya in
the demonstration. Smith organized
the Aikido Club, which teaches the
art of ki-aiikido. The eight-member
club meets Tuesdays and Thursdays
at 207 Robinson.
It is really gentle but also really powerful," Smith said. "The more you use, the more you have."
Warm weather, spring fever to continue
By a Kansan reporter
Although area cross-country ski reports were grim yesterday, students had no trouble finding outdoor activities to fill the warmest afternoon yet this year.
this year. The National Weather Service in Topka expects temperatures to reach 60 to 65 degrees and warm weather to continue through the weekend.
A high pressure zone in Texas and Oklahoma is producing a southerly flow of warm air, a weather service spokesman said.
service spokesman said.
The high yesterday was 58 degrees. "That makes it the warmest day yet this year," the spokesman said.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, January 29, 1988
Sports
11
Brown looks for team leader
By Elaine Sung
Kansan sports writer
Kansas coach Larry Brown needs a leader for his team right now, but all he sees in his players' eyes is fear.
"The most frustrating thing for me is when I see fear on a kid's face when he steps up to the line," he said. "That should be the most exciting time."
he pointed out that rival Kansas State has already found its leader in sophomore guard Steve Henson.
No leader has emerged from the team yet, something that worries Brown far more than just losing a lead in a crucial game.
he entorces what (Lon) Kruger asks them to do," Brown said. "They all play their roles.
all play them out.
"Saturday is a big, big, big game.
We need to have something good happen. But we can't wait for it to happen; we've got to do something about it."
about 16.
Kansas and K-State tip off at 3:10 tomorrow in Allen Field House. The game will be broadcast on KSNT-TV, Channel 27, and KMBC-TV, Channel 9.
9. The Wildcats, 11-4 overall, are coming off a 68-60 victory over Colorado in Boulder on Wednesday night.
That boosted their conference
to 3-0, putting them at the top
of the Big Eight as the only remaining undefeated team.
The Jayhawks, 12-6 overall, are on the downslide after suffering two straight losses on the road. They were dealt a harsh blow in the conference race when Nebraska defeated them 70-68 on a last-second jump shot in Lincoln.
Kansas is now tied with Missouri and Oklahoma State for fifth place in the Big Eight with a record of 1-2.
Adding to the pressure of tomorrow's matchup is the home winning streak, now at 55 games. Kansas also will break the record for consecutive conference home victories this weekend if it wins. Kansas and K-State are tied for the record at 23 games.
The rivalry between the two teams began in 1907. Kansas leads the series 128-82 and has won the last 10 meetings.
"The crowd certainly will have a lot to do with it," Brown said. "Our fans have not allowed us to get beat."
Kansas won last year's game at home 84-67, but in Manhattan, the teams went at it for two overtimes before the Jayhawks won 80-75.
Game 19
Kansas
Jayhawks
COACH: Larry Brown
Record: 12-6 (1-2)
KU
Leading the Wildcats is senior forward Mitch Richmond, who averages over 23 points and nearly seven rebounds a game.
STATE
Kansas State
Wildcats
COACH: Lon Kruger
Record: 11-4 (3-0)
PROBABLE STARTERS
F-24 Chris Piper 6'8" 4.3 PPG
F-21 Milton Newton 6'4" 8.1
C-25 Danny Manning 6'10" 23.4
G-12 Liza Livingston 6'0" 3.5
G-14 Kevin Prichard 6'3" 10.6
F-23 Mitch Richmond 6'5" 23.3
C-44 Charles Bledsoe 6'7" 8.4
C-44 Fred McCoy 6'7" 10.8
G-14 Will Scott 6'2" 11.5
G-12 Steve Henson 6'1" 7.1
COVERAGE: Game Time 3:10 Tomorrow Jan. 30 at Allen Fieldhouse. The contest will be broadcast along the KSN-TV Network, Channel 27 in Topeka and KMBC-TV Channel 9.
Radio: KLZR105.9, KJHK 9FM.
KANSAN graphic
"We've got to make sure that if Richmond's going to score, he has to earn his points," Brown said.
k-State junior Fred McCoy, a 6-foot-7 forward who averages 11 points and six rebounds a game, will have the task of guarding Jayhawk pre-season All-American forward Danny Manning.
ment," K-State coach Lon Kniger said. "I'm not sure there is a way to stop Manning. He will have his hands full."
For Brown, the major concern now is changing his players' attitudes.
"We did some good things against Notre Dame and Nebraska," he said.
"But we didn't step up and act like we wanted to win."
"That's obviously a tough assign-
Swim teams travel to Iowa for a dual
By Tom Stinson
Kansan sports writer
The Kansas men's and women's swim teams face another challenge this weekend as they take on Iowa State in Ames tomorrow afternoon.
Coach Gary Kempf said that the Jayhawks needed to bounce back after lopsided losses to Southern Methodist.
"Both teams need to win this," Kempf said. "We got slapped at SMU, and Iowa State got slapped by Nebraska last week. So it'll come down to whoever bounces back."
Both the Kansas teams beat the Cyclones last year in Lawrence, and the men won by only one point, 57-56.
"Their women are climbing the ladder to success, and we're struggling right now. I'm really impressed with their women. They're a good young team."
The meet will feature two of the country's best swimmers, Kansas
Glenn Tramml and Iowa State's Eric Hansen Hansen won three individual events at last year's Big Eight Championships and was named the meet's Most Valuable Performer. Tramml is ranked second in the country in the 100-yard backstroke.
Kempf said that he didn't know if the two would compete against each other this weekend. At last year's conference meet, Hansen beat Trammel in the 100-yard backstroke, which was the only event in which they swam together.
Kempf said that spinner Dennis Bennett and distance freestyleter John Woodworth were also swimming well for the Cyclones. For their women, freshmen Donna Braun and Jennifer Adams were performing well. Kempf also said that Iowa State's men's and women's divers were excellent.
Coach airs views at FacEx meeting
"We had a heart-to-heart talk on what we need to do," he said. "Mentally we're doing fine, but physically we're not. But I still have the world of confidence in them."
The Jayhawk women are struggling, Kempf said, but they are beginning to come around.
By a Kansan reporter
Kansas men's basketball coach Larry Brown said he felt great after a meeting Tuesday afternoon with members of Faculty Executive Committee.
"Just based on my meeting with them, they listened to what I said. They understood me," he said at a press conference yesterday.
Faculty members said after the Tuesday meeting that they wanted to look into programs to help student athletes offered at other schools, but offered no commitments or a timetable.
Mel Dubnick, associate professor of public administration, had invited Brown to the meeting in an effort to discuss the issues on hand instead of fighting it out in the press.
"We finally see it's not a narrow issue of Larry Brown mouthing off about the faculty," Dubnick said.
"1
Larry Brown basketball coach
Just based on my meeting with them, they listened to what I said. They understood me.'
Forward Marvin Branch, who is a transfer from Barton County Community College in Great Bend, was declared academically ineligible two weeks ago.
The incident prompted some
remarks from Brown that stirred up protests from faculty at the University.
"My honesty gets me in trouble sometimes," Brown said. "I'm a coach. I'm not here to change policy."
Brown said he was not looking for an easy way out for the athletes but was merely asking the University to consider programs that exist at other schools.
"When they are on the court, I never try to ask them to make it easier," he said. "But when we take them into the school, we have the responsibility to give them the same chance as the average student. We're not asking the University to sacrifice what it has tried so hard to achieve in academic integrity."
Late free throws help Wake upset Tar Heels
The Associated Press
GREENSBORO, N.C. — Wake Forest's David Carlyle led a second-half comeback that was capped by Sam Ivy's two free throws with 3 seconds remaining as the Demon Deacons upset third-ranked North Carolina 83-80 last night.
Trailing by as many as 14 points early in the second half, Wake Forest used a three-point shot barrage to cut a 54-43 deficit to 56-52 with 13:35 remaining. Carlyle hit the first two three-pointers, and Cal Boyd capped the spree with two more. Boyd added another three-point basket with 9:59 left to bring the Demon Deacons within 3 at 64-61.
A 12-2 run covering more than three minutes gave Wake Forest a 73-71 edge. Ralph Kitley capped the rally with two free throws with 4:04 left.
Ranzino Smith hit a three-point basket to tie the score at 77 with 2:22 left, but Wake Forest responded with two free throws by Carlyle and a
short jumper by Todd Sanders.
seconds left to bring North Carolina within 81 mi, and Rick Fox blocked a shot from the baseline with 25 seconds left. But the Tar Heels failed to capitalize when Pete Calcutt was called for traveling.
Carlyle had 21 points, 18 in the second half. Ivy and Boyd scored 18 points each for Wake Forest, which snapped a 12-game losing streak in the series and raised its record to 7-9 overall and 2-4 in the Atlantic Coast Conference.
Wake Forest took charge by controlling the boards at both ends, outrebounding the Tar Heels 33-21. The Deacons gained a big advantage on the boards when North Carolina's J.R. Reaf doubled out with 7:02 left.
Smith and Reid had 19 points each to lead North Carolina, 14-3 and 3-2.
Ivy, fouled by Fox, hit both ends of a bonus to seal the upset.
K-State transfer to play against former teammates for first time
Keith Stroker
Kansan sports writer
For Kansas guard Cheryl Jackson, tomorrow night's game against Kansas State is special.
Jackson transferred to Kansas from K-State two seasons ago, and she will face her former Wildcats teammates for the first time tomorrow. It is a test she is looking forward to.
"I have a lot of energy built up after tonight's game," the 5-foot-7 senior said, referring to the team's overtime victory Wednesday night against Oklahoma State. "I'm ready to play right now. Most of the players there now weren't there when I was, but I still really want to win this one bad."
PROBABLE STARTERS
PROBABLE STARTERS
Kansas Jayhaws
Coach: Marian Washington PPG
F-34 Mason Shoerstroh 5'8" 5'11"
C-22 Lisa Bass 5'11" 6'15"
C-24 Sandy Shaw 6'0" 11'6"
G-11 Sha Bradby 5'7" 9.4"
G-11 Cheryl Jackson 5'7" 5.0
Kansas State Wildcat 7-10,0-5
Coach: Matilda Mossman PPG
F-33 Diana Miller 5'11" 9.7"
F-34 Maurice Tawler 5'9" 13.8
C-34 Stephanie Boli 5'11" 9.1
G-21 Pam Fiene 5'9" 7.7
G-35 Amy Stephens 5'7" 5.6
11
JOEBA
23
Kansas, 12-6 overall and 2-3 in the Big Eight Conference, plays host to cross-state rival K-State, 7-10 overall and 0-5 in the conference, at 7 p.m. tomorrow in Allen Field House.
Jackson, a reserve guard,
started against the Cowgirls on
Wednesday night, mainly to offset
the quickness of Oklahoma State
point guard Liz Brown. Jackson
scored eight points and held Brown
to four. Jayhawks coach Marian
Washington said that Jackson had
an excellent job.
K-State played Oklahoma State in Stillwater on Jan. 12 in the opening game of the Big Eight Conference season, losing 87-64. Lady Cats coach Matilda Mossman said that her team was outplayed the entire game and that they learned a good lesson from it.
A game like the one with K-State is very important, especially for the seniors, Washington said. She said that even though the Wildcats were not playing well, they would be ready for Kansas.
Kansas guard Cheryl Jackson will be going against former teammates tomorrow when the Jayhawks play Kansas State.
"In a rivalry like Kansas and Kansas State, almost anything can happen," Washington said. "Our team really wants to win bad, especially the seniors. Kansas State is struggling right now, and I'm really surprised. They have a
tradition of great basketball, and we have to be ready to play."
we have the Wildcats are one of the few teams to hold a significant lead over the Jayhawks, leading 29-14 in the series. Last season, Kansas won two of the three games
between the schools, losing 71-65 in overtime at Manhattan but winning 68-63 at Lawrence and 85-51 in the Big Eight Tournament championship at Salina.
K-State is led by Janet Madsen averaging 13.8 points a game.
Redskins searching for a way to shut down elusive Elway
The Associated Press
"No," said Washington's defensive coordinator, he didn't expect the Redskins would get the eight sacks on Denver's John Elway in Sunday's Super Bowl that they got on Minnesota's Wade Wilson in the NFC championship game.
SAN DIEGO — Richie Petitbon answered the question with the patience of someone who has been listening for more than 30 years in pro football.
"I don't mean to say this the wrong way," Petitbon said. "Wade Wilson's a good quarterback. But he's not in the same class with John Elway."
Hints the questions.
How can the Redskins minimize
"You know going in that he's going to be on the move," said Charles Mann, who combined with Dexter Manley, presents Elway with as quick a defensive end tandem as he has faced in his five NFL seasons. We know for sure that our teaming is going to be hanging out chasing him.
Elway's scrambling ability and keep him from scoring between 27 and 40 points a game, as he has done almost all season. In short, how do you play defense against Elway?
The answer: You don't. You try to outscore him.
The Redskins have been working hard in practice.
Players described Wednesday's workout as one of the hardest-hitting
ever. "Guys were getting hit out of bounds." Mann said. "I mean, those were our own teammates."
One common method of containing Elway is the "spy" system. This involves assigning a defender, usually a linebacker, to shadow Elway and then attack when the elusive quarterback breaks out of the pocket. The objective is to bring him down or force him to hurry his pass.
Although Petitbih and coach Joe Gibbs were not tipping their hand, that is not likely to happen Sunday.
"A lot of teams do it," Gibbs said.
"The problem with it is that it takes a man out of your defense, either out of the pass coverage or out of your pass rush. I've seen some of the best
What Washington is more likely to do is to use its size advantage over the Denver offensive line to pressure Elway and keep him in the pocket rather than give him the five or six seconds he normally finds when he scrambles. That usually allows Mark Jackson, Ricky Nattiel, Vance Johnson or Steve Sewell to get open downfield.
chasing him, like Lawrence Taylor, and not catch him or bring him down."
The Redskins also have the advantage of using a four-man defensive line, an alignment Denver sees little of in the AFC, where the 3-4 is more common.
One possibility might be to use the
"Our success," said Elway, "will probably depend on how we handle them up front."
Mann and Manley differ on how that play will develop.
that pay. "I know only one speed." Manley said. "That's to go full speed right for the quarterback.
speed of Manley and Mann to contain Elway on the outside and hope that 295-pound Dave Butz and 270-pound Darryl Grant can overpower 265-pound guards Stefan Humphries and Keith Bishop to keep Elway from running up through the middle.
"I don't think you can do that," said Mann, who emerged from the shadow of his loquacious teammate to make the Pro Bowl for the first
time this year. I don't say you can't play against Elway, but it has to be reckless controlled abandon."
The shotgun formation, installed by Denver at midseason, adds another dimension to their offense, allowing Elway to hand off to running backs Sammy Winder and Gene Lang. Since most NFL teams only use this formation in obvious passing situations, it's a look that few teams have seen.
But Denver has used it more than half the time in winning eight of their last nine games. The Broncos have averaged 28 points a game during those nine games, including 34 and 38 in playoff wins over Houston and Cleveland.
---
12
Friday, January 29, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Men's tennis team starts long road trip
By Tom Stinson
Kansan sports writer
By Tom Stinson
Kansas spoke writer
The Kansas men's basketball team knows the pride and pressure of maintaining a home-court winning streak. Kansas' men's tennis team knows the feeling of breaking such a streak.
Last year, the men's tennis squad defeated nationally-ranked Northeast Louisiana 5-4 on the Indians' home floor in Monroe. That victory snapped a 56-match winning streak for the Indians.
"They weren't happy campers after that match." Coach Scott Perelman said. "They definitely will be gunning for us this time."
The Jayhawks will meet 20thranked Northeast Louisiana tomorrow in Little Rock, Ark., for the first
time since last year's upset. Tonight Kansas plays Arkansas-Little Rock, who beat the Jayhawks 5-4 last year.
"We've got our bands full this weekend," Perleman said. "Arkansas-Little Rock is a very solid team and Northeast Louisiana is nationally-ranked again this year."
Although the Jayhaws had a pair of impressive victories last weekend, Perelman was concerned about the men's first road matches. Kansas will stay on the road until the March 9 match against Southwest Missouri State.
"As the season progresses, I get more concerned about the men getting tired," Perelman said. "It's a new experience to go on the road with such a young team. I'd love to have these two teams at home."
Kansas defeated Ball State and nationally ranked Minnesota at home last weekend.
Playing singles for the Kansas men will be senior Larry Pascal, junior Jim Secrest, sophomores Chris Walker and Craig Wildey, and freshmen John Falbo and Jeff Gross. The doubles teams will be Walker and Wildey, Falbo and Pascal, and Secrest and Gross.
The Jayhawks women's team opens its spring season at 7 tonight against Southern Illinois at Edwardsville and Wood Valley Bucket Club in Topeka.
Siu-Edwardsville is the defending NCAA Division II National Champion and is returning five of their top six players.
"Their credentials are excellent."
women's coach Eric Hayes said.
"Their No. 1 doubles team is the best in the nation. They are a very solid team."
"They want new blood," Hayes said. "They're tired of playing each other."
Hayes said that the women were ready for new competition because they had been recently playing team challenge matches to determine their lineu.
In singles, Kansas will play seniors Tracy Treps and Marie Hibbard, juniors Jeanette Jonsson and Susie Berglund, and freshmen Michele Balsom and Mindy Pelz. The doubles teams will be Treps and Jonsson, Hibbard and Berglund, and Balsom and freshman Stacy Stotts.
Michigan defeats Illinois in Big Ten battle
The Associated Press
ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Glen Rice scored 23 points, and eighth-ranked Michigan ran out to a 16-point halftime lead, cruising to a 76-4 Big Ten victory over No. 13 Illinois last night.
The victory improved the Wolver-
overall and the Fitzgerald lily fell to
4-3 and 14-5 before a sellout crowd of 13,609 at Crisler Arena.
Ken Battle, the Illini's leading scorer, didn't start because of disciplinary reasons. Battie, who was averaging 16.2 points, was finally put into the game by Coach Lou Henson with 7:37 remaining in the half and Illinois trailing 18-13. He finished with just
three points in 27 minutes of playing time
After Battle entered the game, Michigan, with six points from Gary Grant and five from Rice, went on a 21-10 run and led 39-23 at intermission.
The Illini, behind the shooting of Nick Anderson, opened the second
half with a 27-17 run that cut the Wolverines' lead to six with 8:40 to go. That was as close as Illinois would get, however, as Michigan dominated in defensive rebounding
Anderson finished with 23 points, scoring 15 in the second half. Lowell Hamilton had 15 points, and Glynn Blackwell added 11.
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No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
NAME ___
ADDRESS
DATE ___
842-1212
Any 2 or more pizzas
842-1212
$1'00 OFF
$1 00 OFF
Any Pizza Ordered
11 a.m.-4 p.m.
NAME ___
ADDRESS .
DATE ___
NAME ___
ADDRESS
DATE
Expires 5/31/88
The Palace Cards & Gifts
3 Days Only
Winter
Price Thaw
50% off Large
Selection of
T-Shirts, Calendars,
Otagiri, off-the-wall
Alarm, Avanti Stuffed
Animals, Fun Feet Slippers,
and assorted toys, games,
and gift items!
FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY SKILLS PROGRAM
Techniques to help students with
Mon. Sat. 9:30 to 5:30 * Sun. 1-5 * Thursday until 8:30
843-1099 * In Downtown * 8th and Mass.
- reading * listening * writing
* speaking * testing * mental block
Tuesday, February 2
7:00 to 9:00 p.m.
300 Strong Hall
ALL STRONG HILLS
SAC
Presented by the Student Assistance Center.
AΔΠ
PRODUCTIONS
presents
☆ A
NIGHT
OF 62 ☆
STARS
Initiation 1-30-88
Valentine's Day
At a loss for words? Listen here.
The University Daily Kansan is proud to announce our annual "Valentine's Day Classified Section" on Friday Feb. 12th. It's the perfect way to say it all to your Valentine.
Here's how it works. For the very special price of five dollars you can send a one of a kind personal ad to your Valentine. The special section will feature a colorful red heart border. All you have to do is fill out the form below and drop it by or mail it to the Kansan. We'll do the rest. On Friday Feb. 12th they'll be no guessing about how you feel
- Kanan Valentine's Day Special
* Friday Feb. 19th
Address
- Deadline Wednesday Feb. 10th
Name___ Phone no.
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| | | | |
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--words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words.
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Please print your ad one word per box, 20 words maximum.
Valentine's Day Classified Form
Address
(phone number published only if included below)
University Daily Kansan
Ads must be prepaid and must follow Kansan Policy.
Make checks payable to: Valentines Day
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
66045
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANCAN
KANSAN
--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.
- Policy
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.
Tear sheets are NOT provided for classified advertisements. Found ads are free for three days, no more than 15 words.
- Prepaid Order Form Ads
Just MAIL in the classified form order with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Daily Kansan.
- Deadlines
Deadlines
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
001 announcements 300 for sale 500 helpanted 800 services offered
002 entertainment 310 auto sales 700 personal 900 lighting
003 travel 600 restaurants 400 advertising 800 signage
Classified Mail Order Form
name ___ phone no ___
Address ___
(phone number published only if included below)
Please print your ad one word per box:
Please print your ad one word per box.
ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Date ab begins ___
Total days in paper ___
Amount paid ___
Classification ___
Make checks payable to:
University Daily Kansan
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
University Daily Kansan / Friday, January 29, 1988
13
Carl Lewis angers officials in Britain
The Associated Press
LONDON — British track and field officials reacted angrily yesterday to statements by U.S. star Carl Lewis that drug use had led to athlete deaths in Britain.
The British Amateur Athletics Board said that Lewis' comments were unsubstantiated. The board reiterated that it knew of no British athletes whose deaths had been linked to drugs.
Lewis, a vocal opponent of drug use in sports, said in a BBC Television interview Wednesday night that British and U.S. athletes had died from using drugs intended to boost their sports performance.
"We are supposed to be trying to catch people on drugs; and in many cases, they are not (caught)." Lewis said. "We are not talking about just iterations of this kind, and in the United States, and that is being overlooked."
Tony Ward, a spokesman for the British board, said that Lewis, who won four gold medals in the 1984 Olympics, had a good idea when he called for independent drug tests. He also told other factors made that impossible.
"In an ideal world, we would welcome complete independent testing, so no accusations could be leveled at the spies who are with us; we are in an ideal world."
As in previous allegations he has made on the same subject, Lewis did not identify the athletes involved or cite his sources in the interview.
Efforts to reach Lewis for further comment were unsuccessful. He was not registered at a London hotel
In the BBC interview, Lewis said that athletes often told promoters they would attend track meets only if they were not tested for drugs. Independent drug testing is the only way to stop this, Lewis said.
where he was reported to be staying;
his manager, Joe Douglas, was registered there, but calls to his room were not answered and messages were not returned.
"We have to realize that we have to get an independent agency to handle drug testing because it is not being dealt with fairly," he said. "People in competitions are on drugs and not getting caught, and there is a big problem there. The testing situation is in poor shape and it needs to be cleaned up. It's something that's been going on for a long time. It's sad and frightening."
Tests conducted by the International Amateur Athletics Federation found only women's 1,500-meter bronze medalist Sandra Gasser with drugs in her system at the world championships. She was suspended for two years for steroid use.
"I don't believe there was only one athlete." Lewis said in a separate interview with the Times of London. "I knew there were funny things going on because every time I was tested, I was whisked off after the competition, whereas other people sat around for a couple of hours before they were tested."
Lewis also repeated charges first made last September that many of the gold-medal winners at last summer's World Track and Field Championships in Rome were using drugs.
Classified Ads
ANNOUNCEMENTS
CPS, RECORDS, POSTERS and MORE! The
MID AFRICA RECORD
Nashville Sun. January 14, 2015. Over 50
dealers set the record for great prices. Don't
mout out! 10:5 at the HOLDONE.
COMMUTERS. Self Serve Car Pool Exchange
Main Lobby, Kansas Union
MASSAGE FOR YOUR VALENTINES! Why bother with messy chocolate or dead flowers when a message gift certificate makes your 'sweetie feel loved and revitalized? No, when it feels like Lawrence Massage! The answer 841-9626 to order yours. Remember, Apothedites loves massage.
COTTON TIGHTS
SALE
$10.00
THE BEACH HOUSE
GIFTS & ACCESSORIES
9 EAST 8TH
749-0334
TUTORS List your name with us. We refer
inquiries to you. Student Assistance Center
READING FOR COMPLEXION AND SPEED WORKSHOP Thursdays, February 4, 11 & 19 - 8pm materials fee $15. Register for a 48-hour at the Student Assistance Center. 121 strong.
NEED A BIDE/IDIRER? Use the Self Serve Car
Purchase, Nate Leibey, Kansas Union
WANT TO HIRE A TUTOR? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 128
ENTERTAINMENT
T. G. I. F.
50¢
A GAME
ALL WEEKEND
THE KANSAS UNION
JAY BOWL
864-3545 LEVEL ONE
BET INTO THE GROOVE Metropolis Mobile Sound. Superior sound and lighting. Professional club and radio DJ. Hot spots. Maximum Party Thrust. 841.7063
"EXHILARATING"
Jeffrey Lyons, UNNSEAK PREVIEWS, PBS-TV
JEAN de
FLORETTE
PG
ORION HALL
COLLEGE
* 4:30 7:00 9:30
Not Showing Saturday
Sun., 4:30 7:00
642
Mass
LIBERTY
HALL
749
1912
LIBERTY
HALL VIDEO
Check Us Out First!
Milkshake $10.00
playre $3.00
Fri-Sun, lagen $2.00, playre $5.00
plus $1.00 at the time
646 MASS. 913/749-1972
IF YOUR REQUEST is Lawrence's Best and
dont doffear it. Music and灯光 for any
work, 614-1855.
614-1855
M J F A MOVES AND FLASHBIRF FOTO. The perfect combo. Quality party favors and fast party pics. Call 843-8770 or 841-4349 to book your next party.
MUSIC***** MUSIC***** MUSIC***** MUSIC
Red Audio House - Mobile Party music, 8-track
studio, P.A. and lights, Maximum Audio Wizard.
Call Brad 749-1275.
LAWRENCE COMMUNITY THEATRE presents Wild Bill by John Clifford
FOR RENT
CALL THIS NUMBER: 843-208-6000. Great spot
at the microwave. MICROWAVE, dishwasher, fireplace,
or oven.
Jan. 28,29,30 ... 8 pm
Jan. 31 ... 2:30 pm
Feb. 5,6 ... 8 pm
Feb. 7 ... 2:30 pm
843-7469
FOR SALE
Space Available In House Low Rent. Good Living Conditions 1632 Kentucky 749-1920
Large one bedroom furnished apartment available, $120 per month, plus electricity. Very close to campus in old apartment building undergrowing extensive improvements. Call
Carpeted studio apartment at 945 Missouli. Bay window, dressing room. 749-1064 eyes
Efficiency Apt for rent. 175/ mo. utilities incl. 5 min wait at reception 149/ mo. can be put in cabin. 169/ mo. after 149/ pm.
Clean Rooms & 2 room suite $125 *170.50 Star*
Kitchens, Bathrooms, & Utilities, walking
distance to campus. 842-273-773 Leave message.
Completely furnished with modern loca-
tional areas, all energy efficient
and designed with you in mind. Call
841-1212, 841-325, or 749-2415. Mastercraft
1982 Datsun 235X Turbo B1R & Grt two pwr
vehicles, beautiful car, can seat 84 - 71765,
caspestable, car美容店 84 - 71765.
Duplex, one bedroom, within walking distance of KU, low utilities. $265/Mo. #847-4708
Female roommate wanted to share 1 l/2 story townhouse with other females. Ten years of experience, dishwasher, A/C, 1/2 bushel plus. Located close to campus next to bus route. Low rent. Use and use. Mail 843-364-5041.
491-7926
MASTERCRAFT offers highly furnished
and varied sizes, all great locations!
Designed with the K.U. student in mind. Call
412-1212, 412-3255 or 740-4236.
Wanted. female roommate to share furnished
alternate. 417-270, no utilities. Private room. 841-6194
73 Crestine Home : 1.2' x 10.2' BCR. Extra insulation throughout, new plumbing, completely reconditioned. 316-237-4522 after 5:30 p.m, or inquire 420 North St. 6, Lawrence.
House near KU and shopping, off street parking.
Available now. 8447230 or 8447250, day 81, 94914
day 82.
Female roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom.
Near campus, 19/81 us/ults. 749-389.
Two bedroom apt. on bap route reduced rent 200
month. Must rent ASAP. 842-8203.
M.F. Roommate needed to share two bedrooms
M.F. Roommate needed to share two bedrooms
$717/MW, 1/2 utilities and deposit. Call
(314) 555-8900.
1979 Gibson Les Paul, 1977 Salomon sx-16i skull
bests. Offer. 749-1757, ask for Bill
Female roommate, preferably quiet and non smoker, need to share 2 bedroom apt. with female Grad. student at Spanish Crest Apt. 2012 W7th on bus route 1853 + mplus activities. swimming pool and laundry room. call 843-9424 and ask for Elizabeth or Spanish Crest Apts. at 841-6688
Female roommate wanted to share 1/2 story townhouse with other female roommates. Roommate has micro, dishwasher, AC, 1/2 bath plus. Located close to campus to bus route 8, rent and use.缸434-5043
Female roommate need for luxurious 2-bed-
dingham Place Don't miss out! Call
841-8429
Sublease. Spacious 1 Bedroom Apt KU Bus Route.
Equipment. Equip. room location.
Vehicle. Rental. ID # 2643 - loves travel!
Brand New Genets 4K 54k goldtump watch appraised $1900. Must sell. Best offer 83-7252. Jeremy Canon Typestar-6 Electronic Typewriter w/ accessories $800 value asking $30 call Joe at cate.com
Computer table. (3) oak kitchen chairs, dorm refrigerator, large reflector telescope, telespoon tripod, old English wingback rocker, large humidifier, and walnut and Mary chair
Roommate needed to share spacious 4 bedroom house w/wauna. Move in immediately and pay no rent for February $275 per month for March, April and May. 841-8472 Dove or 844-6143 Fiat.
An absolutely Awesome Array of Antiques, collectibles and neat stuff we have: hardback and 1/2 price paperbacks, full line of new comic books, the first edition of Pantheon, Indian goods, indian, and costume jewelry (giltter and good staff), the right vintage clothes or any occaption, fine art prints, miniatures, fictia, and the best selection of antique furniture in the area. Quintella Fries Market, 811 New Hampshire, Open Sat, & Sun
Tyr cooperative living SUNFLOWER HOUSE
740-8617 for Ann, Bomb, or Tom.
Sunflower House has private rooms, low rates and a great location. Call evenings.
Apple II C with color monitor, 5 months old, has Register CF No. F690_96f4d71
For Sale: 150 GB keyboard and set bench table. Also
set of set of tibbums bells: $60. Call
943-107 for details.
For Sale. Denon Tuner/T/ Amp 40 watts per channel, Denon tuner tape / wmicron controller control.
For Safe 2 bedroom Mobile home. Stave -
air conditioner $4000 - {1624-9248}
-
Sublease. Duplex two bedroom, 1 bath, 1804
$395; two baths, $900; 2 block E of Nassauville, 841-3972.
ply wood shells. Two heavy duty sturdy
IBM Electronic 75 typewriter with 16K memory
$225 Excellent condition, we're replacing it with a modern model and works with our computer. For more details visit www.westernstudio.com/180 Naisimh Dr., between 8-4:30 843-8559 KU Basketball tickets at 843-6492 Leave
Macintosh Plus Computer with 2 800K disk
räum, 4500, 830-316.
**** MOTHBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE
Monday 10 a.m. p.m. Tues-Sat 10 a.m. p.m. 312
KU Basketball tickets. Call 843-6492 Leave
message.
Snow skis. K2 710 Salamis 10 mm with salmonion
74 binding tags, 150. Also Bauer bockey skates, fit
size 9 $50, Days 864-391. Max. Eyes 746-343.
Large
Rock-n-roll. Thousands of used and rare albums, including works by Robert Rausch, Quentin Rauri's Fruit Market, 811 New Hampshire Street, and more.
Spacious mobile home. Top Quality. Large bedrooms and kitchen. 16 by 21 living room. Extra storage sheds and exercise room. Privacy. Free Wi-Fi. Not rent. than available. Call 749-3532.
Student Basketball tickets. Diane 746-5942
YAMAHA RR 300 Stereo Receiver new $140
Zenith 158 Computer, monitor, monitor 64K, 2 drives, mouse, desktop publication PC Painstick, basic
AUTO SALES
1973 VW Bug. Reconditioned engine. Less than
20,000 miles and new radians on back. Very
premium. $2,000.
1976 Chevy Malibu 110 B, A/C, Cassette, AM-FM,
New Transmission, $450 KO. Call Luke 8418
1979 Honda Accord, 5 pcd, Hatch. New tires,
battery, starter. Dependible, $1.20 or best offer
1980 Buck Skylark Limited. Red 55,000 miles, Larry.
Make offer. Buy 842-2136 Larry.
1984 Chevette Chevette, AM/FM Cassette, AC,
Blue. Blu. 720-6150 highway miles, 4 speeds, run
time 38 minutes.
1983 Merger of Macon县 based on excision mint seen
1982 Chevy Cavalier CL Type 10, automatic, AC
2002 Chevy Camaro CL Type 10, automatic, AC
1885 Chevrolet Cavalier D24 $9,675; Camaro Izc- Z12.947, Monte Carlo as $13.358, 1888 Ford MK II as $10.295, Tustin Trucks as $49.191, 1888 Mercury Cougar XR19.855, 1888 Pontiac Fiero Coupe $46, Firebird $8.922, Trans AM $12.501. FACTORY warranties apply. You choose options you color at $83.449.
BERTONE X19/9-1984, 358. Excellent condition.
BERTONNE X19/9-1984, 941-609 weekdays.
817-442 weeks
817-442 weeks
75 Toyota Celica for sale. Original owner. Still
working. Fully insured. Daycare hours:
22/31–05/31 (Topeka) during business
week.
MGB Convertible '78, great shape no rust,
low mileage, low money $250 or best
Greg 78
Car won call. Main repair service on foreign cars. Start Aaron at 841-4629.
Datasun B120 1975, 86k Ml, 4p, runs beaut. New
tire, battery atl., 70¢ OBU, cash only. 42k
battery.
MEDICAL SOCIAL WORKER needed. Be a part of a home health team. Part time, Flexible MSSU. Give one year health experience require Call Duggan County Visiting Nurses Assist 843-738 E-303
Red Hot Bargains! Drug dealers' cars, boats,
planes, planes... Buyers. Builders.
www.RedHotBargains.com 5-787-6000 sct-9795
HELP WANTED
Found. Golden Retriever Male on 14:48 13th and Vermont. Call 842-3587 for ages 2yrs old
psy师 wanted for recently relocated west coast band. Reliability, congenitality and a commitment to Rock and Roll a team. Equipment a plus, but we have bass gig. 749-7373 after 2 p.m.
PCSTAL JOB! $20.64 Start! Prepare Now! Clerk Claims CD-8044.144 Extended Exam. PCSTAL JOB! $44.44 Extend.
**Artist** *Artist* **Artist** *Artist* **Artist** *Artist* *Artist* *Artist* *Artist* *Artist* *Artist* *Artist* *Artist* *Artist* *Artist* *Artist* *Artist* *Artist* *Artist* *Artist* *Artist* *Artist* *Artist* *Artist* *Artist* *Artist* *Artist* *Artist*
*Challenges* *Call for details* 91/12
Wescoe Friday afternoon. Please call 644-6011:
Lost: A kisses leather band watch. If found please
contact us.
LOST-FOUND
GOVERNMENT JOBS $10.040-$59.250/yr. New
current Federal List. N/A. Use 1.9758
for current Federal List.
Consultant positions for Small Business Development Center are available. Positions are paid on a weekly basis, as much or as little as you like. Seniors and graduate students needed in the areas of business, engineering, law, and computer science. If interested, apply at 342 E. Summerfield Hall, 841-7557.
Found: St. Charles High school class ring - 1883
@ 843-7352 early p.m. to identify
Monday thru Friday - 1 to 5 p.m. BabySitter;
Mon-Thu-Fri - 10 a.m.-5 p.m. One block South of Campus. Call 841-3657.
E. R. Clerk, part-time position in Admissions for an emergency room clerk. Hours are 2:48 p.m.-5:00 p.m., with holiday. High School Diploma or equivalent. 6 required. High school diploma required. Testing test need to be completed at job service center before applying. Applicant must be a licensed social worker for the Personnel Department, Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
Qualified individuals earn up to $340/Fr. Fr./Sophs and $740/mr Jr/Sr years. Requirements: full time student, physically fit, willing to join the military program, Military Science Building, 844-3311
- sommelier Secretary; qualified applicants must possess good communication, typing (to wpm), and organizational skills with people. Word processing and personnel experience helpful, but not required. Will train in them.
RESORT HOTELS, Cruiselines, Airlines &
Amusement Parks
Assistance in internships and career
positions. For information & application; write
national College Recreation, P.O. Box 8074 Hillon
Needed Part-Time. Responsible care-giver for one-vacant a few days, week 841-936
Customized Monday Wednesday Friday 7-11 A.M.
Custodian Monday Tuesday Friday Dick Plamann 843-388-911
Mona thru Fri 843-388-911
Naismith Hall Dining Commons is now accepting applications for part-time employment. If interested, fill out an application at Naismith Hall's front desk
Director of Child Care Program, P/T afternoons.
Must have:
1. Master's degree in child development and office management skills. $60/Mo. Send resume and 2 letters of recommendation to Jan. Job number: 80519. Kitsa K. 60444. EOE
Rewarding Summer for sophomore and older college students in Colorado mountains woeing with the weather, wildlife, many outdoor programs. Write now; include program interests and goals. Sanborn
*Job List:* $20.06 $1 start | Prepare Now!
*Assess Job List:* Prepare New Exam
Workshop, 318-944-444 Ext 153
and organization skills and must enjoy working with people. Word processing and personnel ex-
perience helped. Salary not required. Will train in病人护理. Will take 6 hours. Hours are 36 per week. If you believe you fit this description and would like to join our Bay Park Law
Lawrence Memorial Hospital, 32 Main EOE
Summer Jobs! Two of Minnesota's finest summer youth camps, seek college age students to work as counselors. Employment is from June 15 to August 21. For an application and interview call (800) 764-3696.
Come See New City City and Work For Great Families, All Families Screened, Local Support Groups, Air Fare Paid, $150-$300 a week. One wear commitment.
Evening line person, part time. $3/50. Hr. Apply in person at Border bandido. 1820 W. 6th
FEMALE VOCALIST wanted for established
FEHMAN 749-340-784
NANNIES
Temporary production workers needed 20-40 hours per week and required sharpened skills. Applies to:
8.8; 8.3-10.0; 8.4-10.0; 9.1-10.0; W1
TENDER LOVING CARE NANNIES
P.O. Box 191, 215 Godwin Ave
Midland Park, NJ
201.848.0508
Wanted maintenance person to do cleaning for two restaurants. Must be available a 7 m to 11 a.m. m. F. Pervious experience desired. Startage wage $4/hr. Apply at 719 Massachusetts above
Warm caring people - who like children ages 3-5 are need at Head Start as volunteers for a minimum of 2 hours per day. M-F. Day care volunteers needed from 12:30-5:30. For more information please call (877) 698-4999.
MISCELLANEOUS
FREE BEAUTIFUL Long-Haired Cat (minimal shedding) to good home for a family dog inside when cold. Neutered / Mouser. Call 749-2585 eve & weekend #30 (Topelae) during work hours.
Total tape review course for all four parts of CPA exam for $400 or an offer. (New one is $500.) Used once to pass CPA exam on first try - call after 6 p.m. at p.i.t. 326-594-6984
PERSONAL
Andrew, I told you I was gonna do this murderer. I thought of fingerprinting. Think of New Year's. Think of fingerprinting. Think of Bank. Think of Bank. Think of Bank. Only three more days. Always Andreas. Always Andreas. P.S. Can't remember. February.
H. B. Blue Eyes, Stitch, Butthead, (yow KNOW you are) you. I forget to breath when I look at her. You are the most beautiful person, from Jack E, and gizards to Cougar ahead, letters from Paris, flannel sheets on the bed, this year with you has been better than great and so she is all wrapped up. Hey Everybody! Becca is 20' Call and wish her a Happy Birthday (864-7131). It has arrived, Becca '33 This belated Birthday is courtesy of your mom.
Jinka (AKA Hack, Jules, Burso) HAPPY BIRTHDAY! *At the time of birth, you are attacking.* *For fear of being attacked, nothing like a mouse on day while you tell the Gifte and Gkook story. You don't understand we love you* - Kondahl.
**KATY²** (with Gamma Phi swearshirt) in Met. "y"² in satin (red jacket) with Gamma Phi 94-8500
Cheri I LOVE YOU L.B.S.
cara tmeta Chi. Wanna dance again sometime?
Call me, Jennifer.
Happy 20th B-Day Sinnott "Girl"
FASHION BEGINNER
BUS. PERSONAL
$50 Value when presented toward new patient serie-
tal Exam. Dr. Johnson, Chiropratologist.
Spinal Exam
We love you,
Dawn, Amy, Stacia
Call fast! Win. Best roommates, Best Apartment. (Female, Orchard Corners for fall-
Discover recovery thru shared experience and mutual support.
Respond to calls at 1-800-722-4695, Mondays 7-8:30, Lawrence Memorial Hospital, 325 Main. For confidential information/contact person Wri Po Box 3482
Getting into shape for spring! Start taking care of your skin. Call Michelle 749-1695 for men and Women. Call Michelle 749-1695
Don't get mad, eat even! Send a bouquet of flowers to your host, holidays, holidays, or signifying the end. Each bouquet comes with a personal message. Pick-up or delivery is Reasonably Price. Call SWEET REVENGE $15.00
Interested in a summer job with the Federal
Department of Education, Call 864-3624
Placement Center for details. Call 864-3624
LOOKING FOR A ROOMMATE: Prefer a 6-blonde male with baby blue eyes. Must be intelligent, apontaneous, romantic, interesting, love Teddy Bears, and have red flannel PJ. Call me.
SPRING BREAK
MARK HV cosmetics can give you complimentary facial displays at your dorm activities, sororities, etc. Also individually Call 843-1277 for info and ask Forie.
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND **128**
NORTH PADRE/MUSTAN ISLAND **156**
DAYTON BEACH **99**
STREAMBOAT **87**
CANTON BEACH **124**
FORT WASHINGTON BEACH **126**
ORIHANO/DANWELL BEACH **132**
Miami BEACH **133**
HALTON HEAD ISLAND **131**
DON'T DELAY
1-800-321-5911
Sean, I'm sorry your goldfish died. Love, Tracy
She is a cute freshman named JULIE
you see her please say,
"I have a baby I love."
"Have a Baby I love."
"Jove loves truly yours."
"Have a Baby I love."
TURN SOME HEADS
85/person Hot Tub Rental 9 Tans
18/month for
Wet Bath Facilities $20
since 1980 EUROPEAN
Tan, Health, & Beauty
Two sexy maidens seeking vivacious well-
educated escorts for no-strings attached weekend.
Must have food service experience - Liz & Laurie
864.102.928 - REMOVABLE DENTURES!
Available Only at THE ETC SHOP
Boat House Row cotton and ragewow
The sweaters - a 100 year tradition
Elc. quality of design and design
Shop 732 Massachusetts
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-8621. Confidential help/free pregnancy
Want to win a cruise? Have a complementary facial with friends, Call Michele T.1659.
SERVICES OFFERED
AUTO REPAIR/ BODY WORK Foreign &
Domestic Burrow to bumper repair 841-570-560
Wass, your one hot fab babe. Can't wait until friday night. What a bargain! What about violent movies? I can see it. I'm watching it.
Become a Valentine always remembered, with a "HOLIDAY BOOK" and free consultation. Call 749-7207, Free conference at www.chestervalentines.org
DRIVENEED INFORMATION offered thru Midwest School, serving K.U. students (for 20 years), driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841.7749
provide
Hair CUTS 82 off with KU ID for the month of
February and February. Ask for experienced hair style,
Ann Reaney at Standing Ovation, 14 E.
Asp. 749-0771
HELP: Frustrated by red tape? Needing a movie or game time? Just don't know where to turn? Call the UNIVERSITY INFORMATION CENTER at 864-3506, 24hrs a day.
Job resumes that get results. Satisfaction
gauranted. Call 749-4464
KI PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ekchakro
processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W services.
PASSPORT $6.00. Art & Design Building.
Room 206, 864-4767
KI Photographic Services. Electrachome processing within 24 hrs. Complete B/W services.
Passport $6.00. Art and Design building, rm 206.
844-767-46
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $/hr, 845-9032
(p.m.)
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By GARY LARSON
124
Hibernating Eskimos
14
Friday, January 29, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
FBI actions bring criticism
Bv Michael Carolan
Kansan staff writer
Legal experts at the University of Kansas and civil libertarians had differing reactions about the constitutionality of the FBI surveillance of two men affiliated with KU in the early 1980s.
"If the conclusions are correct, then it was outrageous behavior by the FBI, and similar investigations should be unconstitutional," said Philip Kissam, professor of law. "I don't think any government agency should be used to enforce one side of that government's policy."
On Wednesday, the FBI released documents that showed it had conducted surveillance operations on several hundred U.S. citizens and groups opposed to the Reagan administration's policy in Central Ameri-
Kissam said that the facts about the surveillance were still skimpy but that if they were true, the Reagan administration should be condemned.
If civil laws were broken by the FBI, Kissam said that the FBI could cover its tracks as it did throughout the 1960s.
Dick Kurtenbach, executive director of American Civil Liberties Union of Kansas and Western Missouri, said that the FBI violated the citizens' right to advocate their political beliefs.
"Because the FBI didn't file charges after three years of surveillance, they were surveilling citizens for their ideologies," he said.
"The fact that we live in a democratic society and political activities are at the heart of it, and at the same time, the FBI is spying on our college
campuses, is completely absurd," he said.
He said that he was shocked at the revelations about FBI surveillance of organizations opposed to the Reagan administration's policy in Central America.
"It is ridiculous for the FBI to follow a couple of KU students around and waste taxpayers' money." Kurtenbach said.
David Gottlieb, professor of law and former Kansas ACLU president, said that if the allegations against the three were true, he found them surprising.
"We heard expressions from William Webster, who was he head of the FBI, that after the revelations of investigations done during Vietnam they wouldn't be in that business anymore," he said.
Scott Bloch. a Lawrence lawyer.
said that the FBI was probably aware that suspicious criminal activities existed at KU. He speculated that the FBI was interested in groups that sheltered illegal aliens from immigration and naturalization laws.
"I don't think there is anything else subversive about people opposed to our policy in Central America unless they were physically stopping our aid to the contras," he said.
Bloch said that the FBI could violate a citizen's privacy rights by using wiretaps or highly sophisticated photographic equipment.
"If the FBI would do so much that they create a imposition on our first right to speech and assembly, they would be violating our basic rights," he said. "The question is, does the FBI's activities keep us from exercising our rights?"
The Associated Press
Wichita minds
Hayden defends comment on city
TOPEKA — Gov. Mike Hayden said yesterday that he didn't expect any lingering bad feelings about his recent comments that the city of Wichita didn't send its brightest minds to the Legislature.
Members of the Sedgwick County delegation were angered by Hayden's statements Monday that the city tended to keep its brightest people at home. A few said the city's residents had been insulted.
Hayden made the remarks at a luncheon of the Society of Professional Journalists, Sigma Delta Chi. In response, State Rep. Theo Cribbs, D-Wichita, on Wednesday placed Hayden in the House's "Apple Committee," a device members use to poke
fun at each other. Hayden also was named an honorary member of the Sedwick County delegation.
"I appreciate being an honorary member of the Sedgwick County delegation." Hayden told reporters during a Statehouse news conference. "Any time we take ourselves too seriously, that's probably not good, and we've always got to look at things on the lighter side."
However, Hayden also said that he was not surprised by the delegation's reaction. He met with several of the lawmakers Tuesday, and the meeting reportedly grew heated at times.
"I think in reflection, given a little time, most of them will take it in the lighthearted way Sen. Morris did." Hayden said, referring to comments from State Sen. Bill Morris, R-Wichita.
Students decry FBI
Rv till less
Kansan staff writer
KU students reacted in anger and ambivalence, but they were not surprised that the FBI conducted surveillance at KU in the early 1980s. Many said they thought the incident was just another example of government paranoia.
"Do they really think that students are going to start a revolution in the country?" said Robert Woodward, Sulphur, La., junior.
According to documents released Wednesday, the FBI conducted extensive surveillance of hundreds of U.S. citizens who opposed the Reagan administration's policies in Central America. Those citizens include two men affiliated with the University of Kansas.
Woodard said he thought the surveillance was an example of the paranoia that had also taken place during the Nixon administration.
Rhonda Neugebauer, spokesman for Latin American Solidarity, said she thought the surveillance was an indication that there was a big problem with the Reagan administration.
"It shows that overzealous activities by government, such as those in the '60s and '70s, weren't effectively curbed," she said.
Many people said they weren't surprised by the FBI's actions.
he was one of the people under surveillance.
Charles Stansifer, director of KU's center for Latin American Studies, is the author of a book.
"I to go to Nicaragua often, so I wouldn't be surprised if the FBI tracked my movement," he said. "But I don't care."
Tom Crawford, Overland Park sophomore, said that although he didn't think student protests were subversive, he was sure the FBI had reasons for the investigation.
"The FBI works in mysterious ways in those kind of matters," he said.
Neugebauer said she was angry about the surveillance.
"I am outraged that a student group would ever even be questioned," she said.
Kate Barron, president of Latin American Solidarity, said she found the surveillance ironic.
"We're trying to fight for the rights of other countries, and this is so indicative of the rights we don't have in our own country," she said.
Barron also said she was unsure of how the surveillance would affect his students. She said she thought it could shrink more students to get involved.
But Neugebauer disagreed. She said she thought investigations such as this had a chilling effect on expression and all political organizing.
Kansan reporter Jeff Moberg contributed information to this story.
PETER SCHWARTZ
Stephen M. Schwebel, U.S. representative on the world court.
Mark Porter/KANSAN
World court's future cloudy, judge warns
By Kim Lightle
Kansan staff writer
The future strength and importance of the International Court of Justice in the world community is uncertain, a world court judge said yesterday.
Stephen M. Schwebel, who has been the U.S. representative on the court since 1891, spoke to about 70 people at Green Hall as part of the Edmund L. Page Jurist-in-Residence program.
Schwebel said problems with the court, which is the judicial arm of the United Nations, stemmed from a lack of recognition by many countries.
He said it was a troubling phenomenon that nations often would not appear before the court or abide by its decisions when a case was brought against it.
"It's true of nice states and nasty states . . .," he said. "There's not much difference. States don't like to be dragged into court."
Many people also are troubled by the lack of cases on the court docket since the 1970s, he said. Some years, the court hears as few as three cases.
The court has made concessions, through the use of special chambers, to encourage nations to bring cases before it. A special chamber allows a nation to exclude some members of the 15-member world court from a hearing, Schwebel said.
Some states are not attracted to the idea of submitting themselves to the full court because some justices represent nations that never submit cases to the court. That allows some nations to rule on matters disputes with other submitters ever submitting to others judgment themselves.
If countries fail to adhere to the court's judgment, the security council of the United Nations can consider enforcing the judgment.
Schweibel said he was pleased with comments made recently by Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, encouraging more frequent use of the court in deciding international disputes.
Whether the Soviet Union intends to abide by those sentiments, which may be the result of its policy of glasnost, or "openness," remains to be seen, he said.
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